The Mole
The quantity of a substance is measured in metric units, called moles. A mole of a substance is
       the quantity of that substance that contains the same number of particles as Avagadro’s
       number.
       Avagadro’s number           6.023 · 1023  =        1 mol.
                                          -   atoms
                                           -   particles
                                           -   molecules
                                           -   formula units
                                           -   ions
       6.023 · 1023 is equal to 6.02300000000000000000.
UNIT   1:   STOICHIOMETRY                                                               PAGE   1   OF   13
Molar Mass
       Molar Mass is the mass of one mol of a substance. You determine molar mass using the atomic
       mass values in the periodic table.
       Example: What is the molar mass of Water – H2O?
                 Hydrogen  2 · 1.01 = 2.02
                 Oxygen  1 · 16.00 = 16.00
                                    = 18.02
                 Therefore, water (H2O) has a molar mass of 18.02 g.
UNIT   1:   STOICHIOMETRY                                                           PAGE   2   OF   13
Percent Composition of Molar Mass
       To find the percent composition of molar mass, simply take the total of each element.
       Example: take 117.3g of Potassium, divide it by the overall total of molar mass (212.27g), and
       then multiply it by 100. This is the percent composition of molar mass for whichever element you
       are solving for.
       K  3 · 39.00 = 117.30
       P  1 · 30.97 = 30.97
       O  4 · 16.00 = 64.00
       Total: 212.27g.
       K  117.30 ÷ 212.27 · 100 = 55.26%
       P  30.97 ÷ 212.27 · 100 = 14.59%
       O  64.00 ÷ 212.27 · 100 = 30.15%
       Ensure that all percent totals for each element equal a combined number of 100, or a number
       close to 100, and remember to round two places after the decimal.
UNIT   1:   STOICHIOMETRY                                                               PAGE   3   OF   13
The Empirical Formula
       The empirical formula shows the lowest whole number ratio of the elements in a compound (the
       simplest formula of a compound).
       1. When you are given the percent composition, you assume that the percentage is grams (g).
       So 14.9% = 14.9 grams.
       2. Convert the grams to mols.
                                                  1 mol
                                14.9 g of H   =            =   14.8 mols of H
                                                  1.01 g
       3. Find the ratio.
       Example: H14.8 O2.0
       4. Divide both sides by the lowest number that is visible. So 2.0 is the lowest number visible.
       Example: H14.8 ÷ 2.0
                  O2.0 ÷ 2.0
                  Total: H7.4 and O1
                  H7O is the final answer
       Things To Remember:
       •    You may have to multiply your “total” to obtain a final answer that does not have decimals.
UNIT   1:   STOICHIOMETRY                                                                 PAGE   4   OF   13
The Molecular Formula of a Compound
       The molecular formula, also known as the actual formula, describes the number of atoms of
       each element that make up a molecule.
       Molecular formula subscripts = n x Empirical formula subscripts. (n = 1, 2, 3...)
       Example: The empirical formula of ribose (sugar) is CH2O. In a separate experiment, using a
       mass spectrometer, the molar mass of ribose was determined to be 150 g/mol. What is the
       molecular formula of ribose?
       1. Find the molar mass.
       CH2O
       C -> 1 x 12.0 = 12.0
       H -> 2 x 1.01 = 2.02
       O -> 1 x 16.0 = 16.00
       Total: 30.02g.
       2. Divide the molar mass by the molar mass that you've found.
       150 g/mol ÷ 30.02 g/mol = 5 (rounded)
       3. Multiply the answer you obtain from Step 2, with the compound formula given.
       Molecular Formula = (CH20)x5 = C5H10O5
       C5H10O5 is the final answer, and is also known as the molecular formula of Ribose (sugar).
       Things to Remember:
       •    If a percent is given in the question, simply use the Empirical Formula before going into the
            steps given above for the Molecular Formula of a Compound.
UNIT   1:   STOICHIOMETRY                                                                  PAGE   5   OF   13
Stoichiometric Calculations
       Stoichiometry is the solution of problems involving specific quantities of substances. When
       substances react, a chemical equation is used to describe the change. The symbols and
       formulas indicate what substances are involved in the change. The coefficients in the equation
       provide a mole ration. The mole ratio tells us how many moles of one particular substance are
       used up in the reaction.
       Example: How many grams of oxygen would be needed to react with 60g of carbon to produce
       carbon dioxide?
       1. Write your equation.
       O2 + C  CO2
       2. Balance your equation.
       O2 + C  CO2
       3. Decide the known and unknown quantities.
       O2 + C  CO2
       Xg    60g
       You know that you are looking for the amount of grams of Oxygen that would be needed to react
       with 60 g of Carbon, so you know that Oxygen is the unknown quantity, while Carbon is the
       known quantity.
       4. Convert your grams to mols (if needed).
       5. Do the mole-mole ratio.
       Answer from Step 4 = Coefficient of unknown quantity ÷ Coefficient of known quantity
UNIT   1:   STOICHIOMETRY                                                                PAGE   6    OF   13
                                              1 mol of O2
                            5 mols of C   =                 =   5 mols of O2
                                              1 mol of C
       6. Convert mols to grams.
UNIT   1:   STOICHIOMETRY                                                      PAGE   7   OF   13
Limiting Reactants (Reagents)
       In most chemical reactions, only one of the reactants is completely consumed. Any reactant
       which is not completely used up is present in excess.
       Example: Suppose that 14g of Fe and 12g of S are available for reaction. How many grams of
       Iron (II) Sulfide are produced?
       1. Write out the chemical equation and balance it. To do this, look at what the problem is telling
       you.
       In this formula, it is saying that you have 14g of Fe and 12g of S, so:
       Fe + S
       It is also telling us that Iron (II) Sulfide is produced, so:
       Fe + S  FeS
       When a question says that it has “produced” something, it simply means that that chemical
       formula is on the right side of the yield sign (). Similarly, to know what to write on the left side
       of the , which is Fe + S in this problem, you usually use the chemical formulas in which the
       problem tells you that one chemical is added to another, or that, one or more chemical is
       available, and together they produce another chemical.
       2. Find the known and unknown quantities.
       In this equation, you know that both Fe and S are known, and the unknown is FeS. So:
       Fe + S  FeS
       14g 12g       Xg
UNIT   1:   STOICHIOMETRY                                                                    PAGE   8   OF   13
Limiting Reactants (Reagents) Continued…
       3. Find the Limiting Reagent.
       Take each known chemical, in this case Fe and S, and convert their known grams to mols.
                                                    1 mole
                               14 g of Fe   =                 =        0.25 moles of Fe.
                                                     55.8 g
                                                    1 mole
                                12 g of S   =                 =    0.37 moles of S.
                                                    32.1 g
       Now that you have converted grams to moles you can find the Limiting Reagent.
                                            Fe:                   0.25
                                        (Limiting
                                       Reagent)                    1
                                                                  0.37
                                            S:
                                                                   1
       To find the Limiting Reagent, take the answer for each chemical formula that you’ve obtained in
       Step 3 and divide it by each of the chemical formulas coefficient. For instance: Fe + S  FeS,
       1 is the coefficient of Fe, as it is for S, so you divide by one. If the coefficient was 2, then you
       would divide by two, and so on.
       Now that you’ve divided each one, the chemical that has the smallest number is our Limiting
       Reagent. So in this case Fe is our Limiting Reagent.
       Things to Remember:
       •    Sometimes, you may be asked to find more than just the Limiting Reagent.
UNIT   1:   STOICHIOMETRY                                                                   PAGE   9   OF   13
Questions for Limiting Reactants (Reagents)
       1. How many grams of sulfuric acid can be prepared from 50g of sulfur dioxide, 15g of oxygen,
       and an unlimited quantity of water?
       2SO2 + O2 + 2H2O  2H2SO4
                                                            1 mole
                                50 g of SO2 =                               =       0.78 moles of SO2
                                                            64.1 g
                                                          1 mole
                               15 g of O     =                          =       0.47 moles of O
                                         2                                                        2
                                                          32.0 g
                                                 0.78
                                  SO2:                       =     0.39 (Limiting Rea gent)
                                                  2
                                                                 0.47
                                                  O:                        =       0.47
                                                      2
                                                                  1
       You’ve found the limiting reagent, now you must use Stoichiometry to complete the rest of the
       problem.
       You must find the mole-to-mole ratio, as shown above, to find how many moles of H204 there
       are. You will always use the Limiting Reagent (SO2) in the mole-mole ratio. So what you are
       looking for goes on the top, and the limiting reagent goes on the bottom, as shown below.
                                                            2 Moles H204
                          0.78 moles of SO        =                                   =    0.78 moles of H 0
                                             2                                                              2 4
                                                            2 Moles SO
                                                                                2
       Now, convert moles to grams.
                                                                   98.12 g
                              0.78 moles of H 0 =                                    =     76.5g of H 0
                                                   2 4                                                2 4
                                                                      1 mole
UNIT   1:   STOICHIOMETRY                                                                                         PAGE   10   OF   13
The Yield of a Chemical Reaction
       The Theoretical Yield is the maximum amount of a product that can form in a chemical, and
       assumes that all of the Limiting Reagents has reached to form the product, whereas the Actual
       Yield is the amount of a product that is “actually” or experimentally obtained from a chemical
       reaction.
                                                          Actual Yield
                                Percent Yield =                                  x 100%
                                                        Theoretical Yield
       Example: Suppose 7g of AgNO3 is added to a solution which contains an excess of dissolved
       KBr. If 7.32g of AgBr is obtained, what is the percent yield?
       AgNO3 + KBr  AgBr + KNO3
                                                   1 mole
                           7 g of AgNO    =                      =   0.04 moles of AgNO
                                      3                                                      3
                                                  169.91 g
                                                       1 mole AgBr
                      0.04 moles of AgNO3 =                                 =   0.04 moles of AgBr
                                                  1 mole of AgNO3
                                                           187.8g     =     7.51 g of AgBr
                            0.04 moles of AgBr     =
                                                           1 mole     (Theoretical Yield)
                                                         7.32
                                 Percent Yield =                 x 100% = 97.5%
                                                         7.51
UNIT   1:   STOICHIOMETRY                                                                            PAGE   11   OF   13
Gas Stoichiometry
       Gas Stoichiometry involves volumes of gases, with one mol of gas taking up a certain volume
       depending on the temperature and pressure.
       1. STP (Standard Temperature and Pressure: O°C and 101.3 kPa (1 mol of any gas occupies
       22.4 L of space).
       2. SATP (Standard Ambient Temperature and Pressure: 25°C and 100 kPA (1 mol of any gas
       occupies 24.8 L of space).
       Gas Stoichiometry is essentially the same thing as basic Stoichiometric calculations, with the
       exception of possibly adding a step, depending on what the problem is asking.
       Example: When 6.25 mols of butane burns with oxygen gas, what volume (in litres) of water
       vapour at SATP is produced?
       Unbalanced: C4H10 + O2 ---> CO2 + H20
       Balanced: C4H10 + 13O2 ---> 4CO2 + 5H20
       Find known and unknown quantities: C4H10 + 13O2 ---> 4CO2 + 5H20
                                                  6.25 mols                             XL
       There is no need to convert anything because you are working with mols; however, if it were
       6.25 grams, you would need to convert the grams to mols.
                                                  1 mol of H2O
                       6.25 mols of C4H10 =                          = 31.25 mols H2O
                                                 1 mol of C4H10
       This step, which in basic Stoichiometry is usually converting mols to grams, is different in Gas
       Stoichiometry; you are now converting mols to litres. The problem asks for SATP, so you know
       to use 24.8 L. If the question asked for STP the 24.8 L would be 22.4 L.
                                                     24.8 L
                              31.25 mols H2O =                   = 775 L of H2O
                                                     1 mol
UNIT   1:   STOICHIOMETRY                                                                    PAGE   12   OF   13
       Things to Remember:
       •    If two known quantities are present, then you must find the Limiting Reagent.
       •    You may need to convert litres to mols, and then mols to litres.
       •    If two unknown quantities are present, then simply do a mole-to-mole ratio with each of the
            unknown quantities with the known quantity.
UNIT   1:   STOICHIOMETRY                                                               PAGE   13   OF   13