1 / 21

Percentage Composition

If you have a box containing 100 golf balls and 100 ping pong balls, which type of ball contributes the most to the mass of the box? The same principle applies to finding the % composition of a compound. Different elements have different masses and this must be taken into consideration.

selena
Download Presentation

Percentage Composition

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. If you have a box containing 100 golf balls and 100 ping pong balls, which type of ball contributes the most to the mass of the box? The same principle applies to finding the % composition of a compound. Different elements have different masses and this must be taken into consideration. Percentage Composition

  2. Agenda • Day 52 - Percent Composition • Lesson: PPT- Percent Composition • Handouts: 1. Percent Composition Handout; 2. Percent Composition Worksheet • Text: 1. P. 284 - 288- Percent Composition • HW: 1. Finish all the worksheets; 2. P. 288 # 4

  3. Percent Composition (by mass) • Percent Composition (by mass): Identifies the elements present in a compound as a mass percent of the total compound mass. • The mass percent is obtained by dividing the mass of each element by the total mass of a compound and converting to percentage.

  4. How to find the percent composition of a compound: • Write a correct formula for the compound • Find the molar mass of the compound 3. Divide the total atomic mass of EACH ELEMENT by the molar mass 4. Multiply by 100 to convert your results to a percent 5. Since you have no significant figures to go by, express your answer to TWO decimal places with the % sign.

  5. What is the percent composition of each element in NH4OH? Molar mass

  6. Practice: • Find the percentage composition by mass of aluminum thiocyanate. • A student prepares a compound of tungsten chloride from 3.946 g of tungsten and 3.806 g of chlorine. Assuming the reaction goes to completion, calculate the percent composition. • How many grams of sodium will combine with 567.0 g of sulfur to form Na2S?

  7. Agenda • Day 53 - Simplest and True Formula • Lesson: PPT- Simplest and True Formula • Handouts: 1. Percent Composition Handout; 2. Empirical Formula Calculations; 3. Molecular Formula Calculations • Text: 1. P. 289-300- Simplest and True Formula • HW: 1. Finish all the worksheets; 2. P. 293 # 2 – 10; P. 300 # 2 pract. # 6,7

  8. Empirical Formulas • The simplest ratio of elements in a compound • It uses the smallest possible whole number ratio of atoms present in a formula unit of a compound • If the percent composition is known, an empirical formula can be calculated CompoundFormulaEmpirical Formula Hydrogen peroxide H2O2 OH Benzene C6H6 CH Ethylene C2H4 CH2 Propane C3H8 C3H8

  9. H H H H H H Na Na Na Na Cl Cl Cl Cl O O O O O O Simplest and molecular formulae Consider NaCl (ionic) vs. H2O2 (covalent) • Chemical formulas are either “simplest” (a.k.a. “empirical”) or “molecular”. Ionic compounds are always expressed as simplest formulas. • Covalent compounds can either be molecular formulas (I.e. H2O2) or simplest (e.g. HO) • Q - Write simplest formulas for propene (C3H6), • C2H2, glucose (C6H12O6), octane (C8H14) • Q - Identify these as simplest formula, molecular • formula, or both H2O, C4H10, CH, NaCl

  10. Answers Q - Write simplest formulas for propene (C3H6), C2H2, glucose (C6H12O6), octane (C8H14) Q - Identify these as simplest formula, molecular formula, or both H2O, C4H10, CH, NaCl A - CH2 A - H2O is both simplest and molecular C4H10 is molecular (C2H5 would be simplest) CH is simplest (not molecular since CH cannot form a molecule - recall Lewis diagrams) NaCl is simplest (It is ionic, thus it does not form molecules; it has no molecular formula) CH CH2O C4H7

  11. Empirical Formulas Calculations to find the simplest formula incorporate this rhyme: • % to mass • Mass to mole • Divide by small • Multiply till whole A chart form may help to organize work

  12. A compound contained 29.08 % Na, 40.58 % S, and 30.34 % O. Find the empirical formulae for this compound. 1.266 29.08/22.99 = 1.266 29.08 22.99 1 x 2 = 2 /1.266 = 1 1.266 40.58/32.06 = 1.266 32.06 40.58 1 x 2 = 2 /1.266 = 1 1.896 30.34/16.00 = 1.896 30.34 1.5 x 2 =3 16.00 /1.266 = 1.5 The formula is Na2S2O3 orSodium thiosulfate

  13. A 5.72 g sample of washing soda(Na2CO3 . xH2O) is heated to give 2.12 g of anhydrous Na2CO3. What is the simplest formula of the hydrated salt. 0.02 2.12/106 = 0.02 2.12 106 1 /0.02 = 1 0.2 3.60/18 = 0.2 18 3.60 10 /0.02 = 10 Hydrated salt = Anhydrous salt + H2O 5.72g = 2.12g + 3.60g orSodium carbonate decahydrate The formula is Na2CO3 . 10H2O

  14. A compound contained 40.0g C, 6.71g H, and 53.3g O. Find its empirical formula and the empirical formula mass. Empirical formula is CH2O The ratio of C to H to O is 1 to 2 to 1 Empirical formula mass = 12.01 + 2 (1.008) + 16.00 = 30.03 g/mol

  15. Mole ratios and simplest formula Given the following mole ratios for the hypothetical compound AxBy, what would x and y be if the mole ratio of A and B were: A = 1 mol, B = 2.98 mol A = 1.337 mol, B = 1 mol A = 2.34 mol, B = 1 mol A = 1 mol, B = 1.48 mol AB3 A4B3 A7B3 A2B3 If any result from Step 3 is a mixed number, you must multiply ALL values by some number to make it a whole number. Ex: 1.33 x 3, 2.25 x 4, 2.50 x 2, etc.

  16. Formulas for Compounds Empirical Formula • Smallest possible set of subscript numbers • Smallest whole number ratio • All ionic compounds are given as empirical formulas Molecular Formulas • The actual formulas of molecules • It shows all of the atoms present in a molecule • It may be the same as the EF or a whole- number multiple of its EF Molecular formula = nх Empirical formula

  17. Relating Empirical and Molecular Formulas n represents a whole number multiplier from 1 to as large as necessary Calculate the empirical formula and the mass of the empirical formula Divide the given molecular mass by the calculated empirical mass Answer is a whole number multiplier

  18. Example: Lactic acid has a molar mass of 90.08 g and has this percent composition:40.0% C, 6.71% H, 53.3% O What is the empirical and molecular formula of lactic acid? Assume a 100.0 g sample size - CH2O 1. Use Chart to find the Empirical Formula 2. Obtain the mass of the Empirical Formula 3. Obtain the value of n (whole number multiplier) 4. Multiply the empirical formula by the multiplier - 30.03 g/ mol Molecular formula = n х empirical formula ANS: C3H6O3 Molecular formula = 3 (CH2O)

  19. 1. What information must be known to determine a) the empirical formula of a substance? b) the molecular formula of a substance? 2. Determine the molecular formula for each compound below from the information listed. substancesimplest formulamolar mass(g/mol) a) octane C4H9 114 b) ethanol C2H6O 46 c) naphthalene C5H4 128 d) melamine CH2N2 126

  20. Question 1 • For the empirical formula we need to know the moles of each element in the compound (which can be derived from grams or %). For the molecular formula we need the above information & the molar mass of the compound

  21. 2. a) C8H18 (C4H9 = 57 g/mol, 114/57 = 2) b) C2H6O (C2H6O = 46 g/mol, 46/46 = 1) c) C10H8 (C5H4 = 64 g/mol, 128/64 = 2) d) C3H6N6 (CH2N2 = 54 g/mol, 126/42 = 3) Question 2

More Related