1 / 12

Chapter 3

Chapter 3. Atomic masses Average atomic mass Ex. What is the avg. atomic mass of a sample that is 69.09% 62.93 amu and 30.91% 64.93 amu? 0.6909(62.93amu) + 0.3091(64.93amu) = 63.55 amu. Mole Molar mass What is the mass of 3 moles of KOH? 3 n KOH x 56 g/n = 168 g = 200 g s.f.

alma-savage
Download Presentation

Chapter 3

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 3 • Atomic masses • Average atomic mass • Ex. What is the avg. atomic mass of a sample that is 69.09% 62.93 amu and 30.91% 64.93 amu? • 0.6909(62.93amu) + 0.3091(64.93amu) = 63.55 amu

  2. Mole • Molar mass • What is the mass of 3 moles of KOH? • 3 n KOH x 56 g/n = 168 g = 200 g s.f. • How many atoms are in 15 g of K? • 15 g x 1n/39.1g x 6.022x1023atoms/n = 2.3x1023 atoms

  3. Percent composition • Ex. • What is the percent comp. of H2O? • %H = 2.02 g / 18.02 g x 100 = 11.2 % • %O = 16.0 g / 18.02 g x 100 = 88.8 %

  4. Determining Formulas • Empirical Formula • Steps • Mass • Moles • Divide • Ex. 8 g of O and 32 g of S • 8 g O x 1n/16g = 0.5 n O / 0.5 n = 1 O • 32 g S x 1n/32g = 1.0 n S / 0.5 n = 2 S • S2O

  5. Molecular Formula • Ex. • S2O has a molar mass of 160 g/n, what’s the molecular formula • 160 g/n / 80 g/n = 2 so S2O becomes • S4O2 • If given percentages assume its out of 100 g and change the sign from % to g.

  6. Chemical Equations • Reactants  Products • Balancing • Ex.s • H2 + O2 H2O • 2H2 + O2 2H2O • C2H6 + O2 CO2 + H2O • C2H6 + 7/2O2 2CO2 + 3H2O • 2C2H6 + 7O2 4CO2 + 6H2O

  7. Stoichiometry • Mole ratio • 2H2 + O2 2H2O • 2n H2 / 1n O2 • 2n H2 / 2n H2O • 1n O2/ 2n H2O

  8. How much NaCl is formed from 23 g of Na and excess Cl2? • 2Na + Cl2 2NaCl • 23g Na x 1n/23g x 2n NaCl / 2n Na = 1n NaCl • If we wanted to go to mass we would have multiplied by the molar mass of NaCl.

  9. How much oxygen is needed to burn 15 g of CH4? • CH4 + O2→ CO2 + H2O • CH4 + 2O2→ CO2 + 2H2O • 15g CH4 x 1n / 16.05 g x 2n O2 / 1n CH4 • 1.9 n O2 if we want mass then use molar mass

  10. Limiting Reactant • Cheeseburgers • 24 buns, 20 patties, 48 slices of cheese • With reactions we have to prove which reactant runs out by doing a stoichiometry problem.

  11. How much water is produced from 10. g of H2 and 10. g of O2? • 2H2 + O2 2H2O • 10g H2 x 1n/2g x 1n O2/ 2n H2 x 32 g/n = 80 g O2 • O2 is the limiting reactant need 80g have 10g! • 10.g O2 x 1n/32g x 2n H2O/1n O2 x 18g/n= 11g H2O

  12. If we want to know the remaining reactant we just start with the limiting reactant and calculate the amount of reactant used. • 10.g O2 x 1n/32g x 2n H2/1n O2 x 2g/n= 1.25g H2 10 g – 1.25 g = 8.75 g of H2 left over • Percent Yield • actual / theoretical x 100 • If a lab using the previous example is conducted and only 5.0 g of water is produced what’s the percent yield? • 5.0 g / 11 g x 100 = 46 %

More Related