Chap11 Stoichiometry

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The key takeaways from the document are stoichiometry, chemical reactions, limiting reactants, and percent yield.

During a chemical reaction, the color change of the solutions and the production of gases or precipitates provide evidence that a reaction is occurring.

The steps involved in solving a stoichiometric problem are: 1) Write the balanced chemical equation 2) Convert given substances to moles 3) Use mole ratios from the balanced equation 4) Convert calculated moles to grams.

Stoichiometry

BIG Idea Mass relationships


in chemical reactions confirm the
law of conservation of mass.

11.1 Defining Stoichiometry


MAIN Idea The amount of each
reactant present at the start of a
chemical reaction determines how
much product can form.

Carbon dioxide and water

11.2 Stoichiometric
Calculations
MAIN Idea The solution to every
stoichiometric problem requires a
balanced chemical equation.

11.3 Limiting Reactants


MAIN Idea A chemical reaction

stops when one of the reactants is


used up.

11.4 Percent Yield


MAIN Idea Percent yield is a
measure of the efficiency of a
chemical reaction.

ChemFacts
Green plants make their own food
through photosynthesis.
Photosynthesis occurs within
structures called chloroplasts in the
cells of plants.
The balanced chemical equation for
the photosynthesis is:
6CO 2 + 6H 2O C 6H 12O 6 + 6O 2
On a summer day, one acre of corn
produces enough oxygen (a product
of photosynthesis) to meet the
respiratory needs of 130 people.

366
CLIVE SCHAUPMEYER/AGSTOCKUSA/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY/Photo Researchers Inc.

Chloroplast

Start-Up Activities

LAUNCH Lab

Steps in Stoichiometric
Calculations Make the following
Foldable to help you summarize the
steps in solving a stoichiometric
problem.

What evidence can you observe


that a reaction is taking place?
During a chemical reaction, reactants are consumed as
new products are formed. Often, there are several telltale
signs that a chemical reaction is taking place.
Procedure
1. Read and complete the lab safety form.
2. Use a 10-mL graduated cylinder to measure
out 5.0 mL 0.01M potassium permanganate
(KMnO 4). Add the solution to a 100-mL beaker.
3. Clean and dry the graduated cylinder, and then use
it to measure 5.0 mL 0.01M sodium hydrogen
sulfite solution (NaHSO 3). Slowly add this solution
to the beaker while stirring with a stirring rod.
Record your observations.
4. Repeat Step 3 until the KMnO 4 solution in the beaker
turns colorless. Stop adding the NaHSO 3 solution as
soon as you obtain a colorless solution. Record your
observations.

STEP 1 Fold a sheet


of paper in half
lengthwise.

STEP 2 Fold in half


widthwise and then in half again.

STEP 3 Unfold and


cut along the folds of
the top flap to make
four tabs.

1.
2.

Analysis
1. Identify the evidence you observed that a chemical
reaction was occurring.
2. Explain why slowly adding the NaHSO 3 solution while
stirring is a better experimental technique than adding
5.0 mL of the solution all at once.
Inquiry Would anything more have happened if you
continued to add NaHSO 3 solution to the beaker? Explain.

STEP 4 Label the tabs


with the steps in stoichiometric
calculations.

3.
4.

&/,$!",%3 Use this Foldable with Section 11.2. As

you read this section, summarize each step on a tab and


include an example of the step.

Visit glencoe.com to:


study the entire chapter online

explore

take Self-Check Quizzes

use the Personal Tutor to work Example


Problems step-by-step

access Web Links for more information,


projects, and activities

find the Try at Home Lab, Baking Soda


Stoichiometry

Chapter 11 Stoichiometry 367

Section 11.1
1 1.1
Objectives
Describe the types of relationships
indicated by a balanced chemical
equation.
State the mole ratios from a
balanced chemical equation.

Review Vocabulary
reactant: the starting substance in a
chemical reaction

New Vocabulary
stoichiometry
mole ratio

Defining Stoichiometry
MAIN Idea The amount of each reactant present at the start of a
chemical reaction determines how much product can form.
Real-World Reading Link Have you ever watched a candle burning? You
might have watched the candle burn out as the last of the wax was used up.
Or, maybe you used a candle snuffer to put out the flame. Either way, when the
candle stopped burning, the combustion reaction ended.

Particle and Mole Relationships


In doing the Launch Lab, were you surprised when the purple color of
potassium permanganate disappeared as you added sodium hydrogen
sulfite? If you concluded that the potassium permanganate had been
used up and the reaction had stopped, you are right. Chemical reactions
stop when one of the reactants is used up. When planning the reaction
of potassium permanganate and sodium hydrogen sulfite, a chemist
might ask, How many grams of potassium permanganate are needed to
react completely with a known mass of sodium hydrogen sulfite? Or,
when analyzing a photosynthesis reaction, you might ask, How much
oxygen and carbon dioxide are needed to form a known mass of sugar.
Stoichiometry is the tool for answering these questions.
Stoichiometry The study of quantitative relationships between the
amounts of reactants used and amounts of products formed by a chemical reaction is called stoichiometry. Stoichiometry is based on the law
of conservation of mass. Recall from Chapter 3 that the law states that
matter is neither created nor destroyed in a chemical reaction. In any
chemical reaction, the amount of matter present at the end of the reaction is the same as the amount of matter present at the beginning.
Therefore, the mass of the reactants equals the mass of the products.
Note the reaction of powdered iron (Fe) with oxygen (O 2) shown in
Figure 11.1. Although iron reacts with oxygen to form a new compound, iron(III) oxide (Fe 2O 3), the total mass is unchanged.

Figure 11.1 The balanced chemical equation for this reaction between
iron and oxygen provides the relationships between amounts of reactants
and products.

368

Chapter 11 Stoichiometry

Charles D. Winters/Photo Researchers, Inc.

Interactive Table Explore


Relationships
balanced chemical equations
Table
at glencoe.com.
Derived from a
11.1
Balanced Chemical Equation

4Fe(s)

3O 2(g)

2Fe 2O 3(s)

iron

oxygen

iron(III) oxide

4 atoms Fe

3 molecules O 2

2 formula units Fe 2O 3

4 mol Fe

3 mol O 2

2 mol Fe 2O 3

223.4 g Fe

96.00 g O 2

319.4 g Fe 2O 3

319.4 g products

319.4 g reactants

The balanced chemical equation for the chemical reaction shown in


Figure 11.1 is as follows.
4Fe(s) + 3O 2(g) 2Fe 2O 3(s)
You can interpret this equation in terms of representative particles by
saying that four atoms of iron react with three molecules of oxygen to
produce two formula units of iron(III) oxide. Remember that coefficients in an equation represent not only numbers of individual particles
but also numbers of moles of particles. Therefore, you can also say that
four moles of iron react with three moles of oxygen to produce two
moles of iron(III) oxide.
The chemical equation does not directly tell you anything about the
masses of the reactants and products. However, by converting the
known mole quantities to mass, the mass relationships become obvious.
Recall that moles are converted to mass by multiplying by the molar
mass. The masses of the reactants are as follows.
55.85 g Fe
1 mol Fe
32.00 g O 2
3 mol O 2 _ = 96.00 g O 2
1 mol O 2

4 mol Fe _ = 223.4 g Fe

VOCABULARY
WORD ORIGIN
Stoichiometry
comes from the Greek words
stoikheion, which means element,
and metron, which means to
measure

The total mass of the reactants is: (223.4 g + 96.00 g) = 319.4 g


Similarly, the mass of the product is calculated as follows:
159.7 g Fe 2O 3
1 mol Fe 2O 3

2 mol Fe 2O 3 __ = 319.4 g
Note that the mass of the reactants equals the mass of the product.
mass of reactants = mass of products
319.4 g = 319.4 g
As predicted by the law of conservation of mass, the total mass of the
reactants equals the mass of the product. The relationships that can be
determined from a balanced chemical equation are summarized in
Table 11.1.

Reading Check List the types of relationships that can be derived from

the coefficients in a balanced chemical equation.


Section 11.1 Defining Stoichiometry 369

EXAMPLE Problem 11.1

Math Handbook

Interpreting Chemical Equations The combustion of propane (C 3H 8) provides


energy for heating homes, cooking food, and soldering metal parts. Interpret the
equation for the combustion of propane in terms of representative particles,
moles, and mass. Show that the law of conservation of mass is observed.
1

Analyze the Problem


The coefficients in the balanced chemical equation shown below represent both moles
and representative particles, in this case molecules. Therefore, the equation can be
interpreted in terms of molecules and moles. The law of conservation of mass will be
verified if the masses of the reactants and products are equal.
Known
C 3H 8(g) + 5O 2(g) 3CO 2(g) + 4H 2O(g)
Unknown
Equation interpreted in terms of molecules = ?
Equation interpreted in terms of moles = ?
Equation interpreted in terms of mass = ?

Solve for the Unknown


The coefficients in the chemical equation indicate the number of molecules.
1 molecule C 3H 8 + 5 molecules O 2 3 molecules CO 2 + 4 molecules H 2O
The coefficients in the chemical equation also indicate the number of moles.
1 mol C 3H 8 + 5 mol O 2 3 mol CO 2 + 4 mol H 2O
To verify that mass is conserved, first convert moles of reactant and product to mass
by multiplying by a conversion factorthe molar massthat relates grams to moles.
grams reactant or product
moles of reactant or product ___ = grams of reactant or product
1 mol reactant or product

44.09 g C 3H 8
1 mol C 3H 8 __ = 44.09 g C 3H 8

Calculate the mass of the reactant C 3H 8.

32.00 g O 2
5 mol O 2 _ = 160.0 g O 2

Calculate the mass of the reactant O 2.

44.01 g CO 2
3 mol CO 2 _ = 132.0 g CO 2

Calculate the mass of the product CO 2.

18.02 g H 2O
4 mol H 2O _ = 72.08 g H 2O

Calculate the mass of the product H 2O

44.09 g C 3H 8 + 160.0 g O 2 = 204.1 g reactants

Add the masses of the reactants.

132.0 g CO 2 + 72.08 g H 2O = 204.1 g products

Add the masses of the products.

204.1 g reactants = 204.1 g products

The law of conservation of mass is observed.

1 mol C 3H 8

1 mol O 2

1 mol CO 2

1 mol H 2O

Evaluate the Answer


The sums of the reactants and the products are correctly stated to the first decimal place
because each mass is accurate to the first decimal place. The mass of reactants equals
the mass of products, as predicted by the law of conservation of mass.

370

Chapter 11 Stoichiometry

Rounding
page 952

PRACTICE Problems

Extra Practice Pages 982983 and glencoe.com

1. Interpret the following balanced chemical equations in terms of particles, moles, and
mass. Show that the law of conservation of mass is observed.
a. N 2(g) + 3H 2(g) 2NH 3(g)
b. HCl(aq) + KOH(aq) KCl(aq) + H 2O(l)
c. 2Mg(s) + O 2(g) 2MgO(s)
2. Challenge For each of the following, balance the chemical equation; interpret the
equation in terms of particles, moles, and mass; and show that the law of conservation
of mass is observed.
a. ___Na(s) + ___H 2O(l) ___NaOH(aq) + ___H 2(g)
b. ___Zn(s) + ___HNO 3(aq) ___Zn(NO 3) 2(aq) + ___N 2O(g) + ___H 2O(l)

Mole ratios You have read that the coefficients in a chemical equation indicate the relationships between moles of reactants and products.
You can use the relationships between coefficients to derive conversion
factors called mole ratios. A mole ratio is a ratio between the numbers
of moles of any two of the substances in a balanced chemical equation.
For example, consider the reaction shown in Figure 11.2. In this
reaction, potassium (K) reacts with bromine (Br 2) to form potassium
bromide (KBr). The product of the reaction, the ionic salt potassium
bromide, is prescribed by veterinarians as an antiepileptic medication
for dogs and cats.

Personal Tutor For an online tutorial


on ratios, visit glencoe.com.

2K(s) +Br 2(l) 2KBr(s)


What mole ratios can be written for this reaction? Starting with the
reactant potassium, you can write a mole ratio that relates the moles of
potassium to each of the other two substances in the equation. Thus,
one mole ratio relates the moles of potassium used to the moles of bromine used. The other mole ratio relates the moles of potassium used to
the moles of potassium bromide formed.
2 mol K
2 mol K
_
and _
1 mol Br 2

2 mol KBr

Two other mole ratios show how the moles of bromine relate to the
moles of the other two substances in the equationpotassium and
potassium bromide.
1 mol Br 2
1 mol Br 2
_
and _
2 mol K

2 mol KBr

Figure 11.2 Potassium metal and


liquid bromine react vigorously to form
the ionic compound potassium bromide.
Bromine is one of the two elements that
are liquids at room temperature (mercury
is the other). Potassium is a highly reactive
metal.

Similarly, two ratios relate the moles of potassium bromide to the moles
of potassium and bromine.
2 mol KBr
2 mol KBr
_
and _
2 mol K

1 mol Br 2

These six ratios define all the mole relationships in this equation. Each
of the three substances in the equation forms a ratio with the two other
substances.
Reading Check Identify the source from which a chemical reactions

mole ratios are derived.


Section 11.1 Defining Stoichiometry 371
Division of Chemical Education, Inc., American Chemical Society

PRACTICE Problems

Extra Practice Page 983 and glencoe.com

3. Determine all possible mole ratios for the following balanced chemical
equations.
a. 4Al(s) + 3O 2(g) 2Al 2O 3(s)
b. 3Fe(s) + 4H 2O(l) Fe 3O 4(s) + 4H 2(g)
c. 2HgO(s) 2Hg(l) + O 2(g)
4. Challenge Balance the following equations, and determine the
possible mole ratios.
a. ZnO(s) + HCl(aq) ZnCl 2(aq) + H 2O(l)
b. butane (C 4H 10) + oxygen carbon dioxide + water

The decomposition of potassium chlorate (KClO 3) is sometimes


used to obtain small amounts of oxygen in the laboratory.
2KClO 3(s) 2KCl(s) + 3O 2(g)

VOCABULARY

The mole ratios that can be written for this reaction are as follows.

ACADEMIC VOCABULARY

2 mol KClO 3
2 mol KClO
_
and _3

Derive

2 mol KCl

to obtain from a specified source


The researcher was able to derive
the meaning of the illustration
from ancient texts.

3 mol O 2

2 mol KCl
2 mol KCl
_
and _
2 mol KClO 3

3 mol O 2

3 mol O 2
3 mol O 2
_
and _
2 mol KClO 3

2 mol KCl

Note that the number of mole ratios you can write for a chemical
reaction involving a total of n substances is (n)(n1). Thus, for reactions
involving four and five substances, you can write 12 and 20 moles ratios,
respectively.
Four substances: (4)(3) = 12 mole ratios
Five substances: (5)(4) = 20 mole ratios

Section 11.1

Assessment
Compare the mass of the reactants and the mass of the products
in a chemical reaction, and explain how these masses are related.

Section Summary

5.

Balanced chemical equations can be


interpreted in terms of moles, mass,
and representative particles (atoms,
molecules, formula units).

6. State how many mole ratios can be written for a chemical reaction involving
three substances.

The law of conservation of mass


applies to all chemical reactions.
Mole ratios are derived from the coefficients of a balanced chemical equation. Each mole ratio relates the
number of moles of one reactant or
product to the number of moles of
another reactant or product in the
chemical reaction.

372 Chapter 11 Stoichiometry

MAIN Idea

7. Categorize the ways in which a balanced chemical equation can be interpreted.


8. Apply The general form of a chemical reaction is xA + y B zAB. In the equation, A and B are elements, and x, y, and z are coefficients. State the mole ratios
for this reaction.
9. Apply Hydrogen peroxide (H 2O 2) decomposes to produce water and oxygen.
Write a balanced chemical equation for this reaction, and determine the possible
mole ratios.
10. Model Write the mole ratios for the reaction of hydrogen gas and oxygen gas,
2H 2(g) + O 2(g) 2H 2O. Make a sketch of six hydrogen molecules reacting with
the correct number of oxygen molecules. Show the water molecules produced.

Self-Check Quiz glencoe.com

Section 11.2
Objectives
List the sequence of steps used in
solving stoichiometric problems.
Solve stoichiometric problems.

Review Vocabulary
chemical reaction: a process in
which the atoms of one or more
substances are rearranged to form
different substances

Stoichiometric Calculations
MAIN Idea The solution to every stoichiometric problem requires a
balanced chemical equation.
Real-World Reading Link Baking requires accurate measurements. That is
why it is necessary to follow a recipe when baking cookies from scratch. If you
need to make more cookies than a recipe yields, what must you do?

Using Stoichiometry
What tools are needed to perform stoichiometric calculations? All stoichiometric calculations begin with a balanced chemical equation. Mole
ratios based on the balanced chemical equation are needed, as well as
mass-to-mole conversions.
Stoichiometric mole-to-mole conversion The vigorous reaction between potassium and water is shown in Figure 11.3. The balanced
chemical equation is as follows.

2K(s) + 2H 2O(l) 2KOH(aq) + H 2(g)

&/,$!",%3

Incorporate information
from this section into
your Foldable.

From the balanced equation, you know that two moles of potassium
yields one mole of hydrogen. But how much hydrogen is produced if
only 0.0400 mol of potassium is used? To answer this question, identify
the given, or known, substance and the substance that you need to
determine. The given substance is 0.0400 mol of potassium. The
unknown is the number of moles of hydrogen. Because the given substance is in moles and the unknown substance to be determined is also
in moles, this problem involves a mole-to-mole conversion.
To solve the problem, you need to know how the unknown moles of
hydrogen are related to the known moles of potassium. In Section 11.1,
you learned to derive mole ratios from the balanced chemical equation.
Mole ratios are used as conversion factors to convert the known number
of moles of one substance to the unknown number of moles of another
substance in the same reaction. Several mole ratios can be written from
the equation, but how do you choose the correct one?
Figure 11.3 Potassium
metal reacts vigorously with
water, releasing so much heat
that the hydrogen gas formed
in the reaction catches fire.

Section 11.2 Stoichiometric Calculations 373


Richard Megna/Fundamental Photographs, NYC

As shown below, the correct mole ratio, 1 mol H 2 to 2 mol K, has


moles of unknown in the numerator and moles of known in the denominator. Using this mole ratio converts the moles of potassium to the
unknown number of moles of hydrogen.
moles of unknown
= moles of unknown
moles of known __
moles of known
1 mol H
2 mol K

0.0400 mol K _2 = 0.0200 mol H 2


The following Example Problems show mole-to-mole, mole-to-mass,
and mass-to-mass stoichiometry problems. The process used to solve
these problems is outlined in the Problem-Solving Strategy below.

Problem-Solving Strategy
Mastering Stoichiometry
The flowchart below outlines the steps used to solve mole-to-mole,
mole-to-mass, and mass-to-mass stoichiometric problems.
1. Complete Step 1 by writing the balanced chemical equation
for the reaction.
2. To determine where to start your calculations, note the unit
of the given substance.
If mass (in grams) of the given substance is the starting
unit, begin your calculations with Step 2.
If amount (in moles) of the given substance is the
starting unit, skip Step 2 and begin your calculations
with Step 3.

3. The end point of the calculation depends on


the desired unit of the unknown substance.
If the answer must be in moles, stop after
completing Step 3.
If the answer must be in grams, stop after
completing Step 4.

Apply the Strategy


Apply the Problem-Solving Strategy to Example Problems 11.2, 11.3,
and 11.4.

Step 1

Start with a balanced equation.


Interpret the equation in terms of moles.

Mass of unknown substance


number of grams
1mol

Step 2

Convert from grams


to moles of the
given substance. Use
the inverse of the
molar mass as the
conversion factor.

no direct conversion

1mol
number of grams

Mass of given substance

moles of unknown
moles of given

Step 4
Convert from
moles of unknown
to grams of
unknown. Use the
molar mass as the
conversion factor.

Step 3

Moles of given substance


374

Chapter 11 Stoichiometry

Convert from moles of the given substance


to moles of the unknown substance. Use the
appropriate mole ratio from the balanced
chemical equation as the conversion factor.

Moles of unknown substance

EXAMPLE Problem 11.2


Mole-to-Mole Stoichiometry One disadvantage of burning
propane (C 3H 8) is that carbon dioxide (CO 2) is one of the products.
The released carbon dioxide increases the concentration of CO 2
in the atmosphere. How many moles of CO 2 is produced when
10.0 mol of C 3H 8 is burned in excess oxygen in a gas grill?
1

Analyze the Problem


You are given moles of the reactant, C 3H 8 and must find the moles of
the product, CO 2. First write the balanced chemical equation, then
convert from moles of C 3H 8 to moles of CO 2. The correct mole ratio
has moles of unknown substance in the numerator and moles of
known substance in the denominator.
Known
moles C 3H 8 = 10.0 mol C 3H 8

Outdoor Cooking

Math Handbook
Ratios
page 964

Unknown
moles CO 2 = ? mol CO 2
2

Real-World Chemistry

Solve for the Unknown


Write the balanced chemical equation for the combustion of C 3H 8.
Use the correct mole ratio to convert moles of known (C 3H 8) to
moles of unknown (CO 2).
10.0 mol
? mol
C 3H 8(g) + 5O 2(g) 3CO 2(g) + 4H 2O(g)
3 mol CO 2
Mole ratio: _
1 mol C 3H 8

3 mol CO 2
10.0 mol C 3H 8 _
= 30.0 mol CO 2
1 mol C 3H 8

Burning 10.0 moles of C 3H 8 produces 30.0 moles CO 2.


3

Evaluate the Answer


Because the given number of moles has three significant figures, the
answer also has three figures. The balanced chemical equation indicates that 1 mol of C 3H 8 produces 3 mol of CO 2. Thus, 10.0 mol of C 3H 8
produces three times as many moles of CO 2, or 30.0 mol.

PRACTICE Problems

Extra Practice Page 983 and glencoe.com

Gas Grills Using outdoor grills is


a popular way to cook. Gas grills
burn either natural gas or propane
that is mixed with air. The initial
spark is provided by a grill starter.
Propane is more commonly used
for fuel because it can be supplied
in liquid form in a portable tank.
Combustion of liquid propane
also releases more energy than
natural gas.

11. Methane and sulfur react to produce carbon disulfide (CS 2), a liquid
often used in the production of cellophane.
___CH 4(g) + ___S 8(s) ___CS 2(l) + ___H 2S(g)
a. Balance the equation.
b. Calculate the moles of CS 2 produced when 1.50 mol S 8 is used.
c. How many moles of H 2S is produced?
12. Challenge Sulfuric acid ( H 2SO 4) is formed when sulfur dioxide (SO 2)
reacts with oxygen and water.
a. Write the balanced chemical equation for the reaction.
b. How many moles of H 2SO 4 is produced from 12.5 moles of SO 2?
c. How many moles of O 2 are needed?
Section 11.2 Stoichiometric Calculations 375
Rhonda Peacher Photography

Stoichiometric mole-to-mass conversion Now, suppose you


know the number of moles of a reactant or product in a reaction and
you want to calculate the mass of another product or reactant. This is an
example of a mole-to-mass conversion.

EXAMPLE Problem 11.3

Math Handbook

Mole-to-Mass Stoichiometry Determine the mass of sodium chloride (NaCl),


commonly called table salt, produced when 1.25 mol of chlorine gas (Cl 2) reacts
vigorously with excess sodium.
1

Calculations with
Significant Figures
pages 952953

Analyze the Problem


You are given the moles of the reactant, Cl 2, and must determine the mass of the product,
NaCl. You must convert from moles of Cl 2 to moles of NaCl using the mole ratio from the
equation. Then, you need to convert moles of NaCl to grams of NaCl using the molar mass
as the conversion factor.
Known
moles of chlorine = 1.25 mol Cl 2

Unknown
mass of sodium chloride = ? g NaCl

Solve for the Unknown


1.25 mol
?g
2Na(s) + Cl 2(g) 2NaCl(s)

Write the balanced chemical equation, and


identify the known and the unknown values.

2 mol NaCl
Mole ratio: _
1 mol Cl 2

2 mol NaCl
1.25 mol Cl 2 _ = 2.50 mol NaCl

Multiply moles of Cl 2 by the mole ratio to get moles of NaCl.

58.44 g NaCl
2.50 mol NaCl _ = 146 g NaCl

Multiply moles of NaCl by the molar mass to get grams of NaCl.

1 mol Cl 2

1 mol NaCl

Evaluate the Answer


Because the given number of moles has three significant figures, the mass of NaCl also
has three. To quickly assess whether the calculated mass value for NaCl is correct,
perform the calculations in reverse: divide the mass of NaCl by the molar mass of NaCl,
and then divide the result by 2. You will obtain the given number of moles of Cl 2.

PRACTICE Problems

Extra Practice Page 983 and glencoe.com

13. Sodium chloride is decomposed into the elements sodium and chlorine
by means of electrical energy. How much chlorine gas, in grams, is obtained
from the process diagrammed at right?
14. Challenge Titanium is a transition metal used in many alloys because
it is extremely strong and lightweight. Titanium tetrachloride ( TiCl 4) is
extracted from titanium oxide ( TiO 2) using chlorine and coke (carbon).
TiO 2(s) + C(s) + 2Cl 2(g) TiCl 4(s) + CO 2(g)
a. What mass of Cl 2 gas is needed to react with 1.25 mol of TiO 2?
b. What mass of C is needed to react with 1.25 mol of TiO 2?
c. What is the mass of all of the products formed by reaction with 1.25 mol of TiO 2?

376 Chapter 11 Stoichiometry

Electric
energy

NaCl
2.50 mol

Na
Cl2 ? g

Stoichiometric mass-to-mass conversion If you were preparing to carry out a chemical reaction in the laboratory, you would need
to know how much of each reactant to use in order to produce the mass
of product you required. Example Problem 11.4 demonstrates how you
can use a measured mass of the known substance, the balanced chemical equation, and mole ratios from the equation to find the mass of the
unknown substance. The ChemLab at the end of this chapter will provide you with laboratory experience in determining a mole ratio.

EXAMPLE Problem 11.4

Math Handbook

Mass-to-Mass Stoichiometry Ammonium nitrate (NH 4NO 3), an important


fertilizer, produces dinitrogen oxide (N 2O) gas and H 2O when it decomposes.
Determine the mass of H 2O produced from the decomposition of 25.0 g of
solid NH 4NO 3.
1

Dimensional Analysis
page 956

Analyze the Problem


You are given a description of the chemical reaction and the mass of the reactant.
You need to write the balanced chemical equation and convert the known mass of the
reactant to moles of the reactant. Then, use a mole ratio to relate moles of the reactant to
moles of the product. Finally, use the molar mass to convert from moles of the product to
the mass of the product.
Known
mass of ammonium nitrate = 25.0 g NH 4NO 3

Unknown
mass of water = ? g H 2O

Solve for the Unknown


25.0 g
?g
NH 4NO 3(s) N 2O(g) + 2H 2O(g)
1 mol NH 4NO 3
25.0 g NH 4NO 3 __ = 0.312 mol NH 4NO 3
80.04 g NH 4NO 3

Write the balanced chemical equation, and


identify the known and unknown values.
Multiply grams of NH 4NO 3 by the inverse of
molar mass to get moles of NH 4NO 3.

2 mol H2O
Mole ratio: __
1 mol NH 4NO 3

2 mol H 2
0.312 mol NH 4NO 3 __
= 0.624 mol H 2O
1 mol NH 4NO 3
18.02 g H 2O
0.624 mol H 2O _ = 11.2 g H 2O
1 mol H 2O
3

Multiply moles of NH 4NO 3 by the mole ratio


to get moles of H 2O.
Multiply moles of H 2O by the molar mass to
get grams of H 2O.

Evaluate the Answer


The number of significant figures in the answer, three, is determined by the given moles of
NH 4NO 3. To verify that the mass of H 2O is correct, perform the calculations in reverse.

PRACTICE Problems
15. One of the reactions used to inflate automobile air bags involves
sodium azide (NaN 3): 2NaN 3(s) 2Na(s) + 3N 2(g). Determine the
mass of N 2 produced from the decomposition of NaN 3 shown at right.
16. Challenge In the formation of acid rain, sulfur dioxide (SO 2 ) reacts with
oxygen and water in the air to form sulfuric acid ( H 2SO 4). Write the
balanced chemical equation for the reaction. If 2.50 g of SO 2 reacts with
excess oxygen and water, how much H 2SO 4, in grams, is produced?

Extra Practice Page 983 and glencoe.com


N2 gas

100.0 g NaN3 ? g N2(g)

Section 11.2 Stoichiometric Calculations 377

Apply Stoichiometry

5. Set up a ring stand with a ring and clay triangle

How much sodium carbonate (Na 2CO 3) is produced when baking soda decomposes? Baking

6. Heat the crucible with a Bunsen burner, slowly

for heating the crucible.

soda is used in many baking recipes because it


makes batter rise, which results in a light and fluffy
texture. This occurs because baking soda, sodium
hydrogen carbonate (NaHCO 3), decomposes upon
heating to form carbon dioxide gas according to
the following equation.
2NaHCO 3 Na 2CO 3 + CO 2 + H 2O

at first and then with a stronger flame, for


78 min. Record your observations during the
heating.
7. Turn off the burner, and use crucible tongs to
remove the hot crucible.
WARNING: Do not touch the hot crucible with your
hands.
8. Allow the crucible to cool, and then measure
the mass of the crucible and NaHCO 3.

Procedure

Analysis

1. Read and complete the lab safety form.


2. Create a data table to record your experimental

1. Describe what you observed during the heating

data and observation.


3. Use a balance to measure the mass of a clean,
dry crucible. Add about 3.0 g of sodium hydrogen carbonate (NaHCO 3), and measure the
combined mass of the crucible and NaHCO 3.
Record both masses in your data table, and
calculate the mass of the NaHCO 3.
4. Use this starting mass of NaHCO 3 and the balanced chemical equation to calculate the mass
of NaHCO 3 that will be produced.

Section 11.2

of the baking soda.


2. Compare your calculated mass of NaHCO 3
with the actual mass you obtained from the
experiment.
3. Calculate Assume that the mass of Na 2HCO 3
that you calculated in Step 4 is the accepted
value for the mass of product that will form.
Calculate the error and percent error associated
with the experimentally measured mass.
4. Identify sources of error in the procedure that
led to errors calculated in Question 3.

Assessment

Section Summary
Chemists use stoichiometric calculations to predict the amounts of
reactants used and products formed
in specific reactions.
The first step in solving stoichiometric
problems is writing the balanced
chemical equation.
Mole ratios derived from the
balanced chemical equation are
used in stoichiometric calculations.
Stoichiometric problems make use of
mole ratios to convert between mass
and moles.

17.

MAIN Idea Explain why a balanced chemical equation is needed to solve a


stoichiometric problem.

18. List the four steps used in solving stoichiometric problems.


19. Describe how a mole ratio is correctly expressed when it is used to solve a
stoichiometric problem.
20. Apply How can you determine the mass of liquid bromine (Br 2) needed to react
completely with a given mass of magnesium?
21. Calculate Hydrogen reacts with excess nitrogen as follows:
N 2(g) + 3H 2(g) 2NH 3(g)
If 2.70 g of H 2 reacts, how many grams of NH 3 is formed?
22. Design a concept map for the following reaction.
CaCO 3(s) + 2HCl(aq) CaCl 2(aq) + H 2O(l) + CO 2(g)
The concept map should explain how to determine the mass of CaCl 2 produced
from a given mass of HCl.

378 Chapter 11 Stoichiometry

Self-Check Quiz glencoe.com

Section 11.3
1 1.3
Objectives
Identify the limiting reactant in a
chemical equation.
Identify the excess reactant, and
calculate the amount remaining after
the reaction is complete.
Calculate the mass of a product
when the amounts of more than one
reactant are given.

Review Vocabulary
molar mass: the mass in grams of
one mole of any pure substance

New Vocabulary
limiting reactant
excess reactant

Limiting Reactants
MAIN Idea A chemical reaction stops when one of the reactants
is used up.
Real-World Reading Link If there are more boys than girls at a school dance,
some boys will be left without dance partners. The situation is much the same for
the reactants in a chemical reactionexcess reactants cannot participate.

Why do reactions stop?


Rarely in nature are the reactants present in the exact ratios specified by
the balanced chemical equation. Generally, one or more reactants are in
excess and the reaction proceeds until all of one reactant is used up.
When a reaction is carried out in the laboratory, the same principle
applies. Usually, one or more of the reactants are in excess, while one is
limited. The amount of product depends on the reactant that is limited.
Limiting and excess reactants Recall the reaction from the
Launch Lab. After the colorless solution formed, adding more sodium
hydrogen sulfite had no effect because there was no more potassium
permanganate available to react with it. Potassium permanganate was a
limiting reactant. As the name implies, the limiting reactant limits the
extent of the reaction and, thereby, determines the amount of product
formed. A portion of all the other reactants remains after the reaction
stops. Reactants leftover when a reaction stops are excess reactants.
To help you understand limiting and excess reactants, consider the
analogy in Figure 11.4. From the available tools, four complete sets
consisting of a pair of pliers, a hammer, and two screwdrivers can be
assembled. The number of sets is limited by the number of available
hammers. Pliers and screwdrivers remain in excess.

Figure 11.4 Each tool set must have one hammer, so only four sets can be assembled.

Interpret How many more hammers are required to complete a fifth set?

Available tools

Sets of tools
Set 1

Set 2

Set 3

Set 4

Extra tools

Section 11.3 Limiting Reactants 379


Aaron Haupt

Before Reaction

After Reaction

Three nitrogen molecules


(six nitrogen atoms)

Three hydrogen molecules


(six hydrogen atoms)

Two ammonia molecules


(two nitrogen atoms, six hydrogen atoms)

Two nitrogen molecules


(four nitrogen atoms)

Figure 11.5 If you check all the atoms present before and after the reaction, you will find that
some of the nitrogen molecules are unchanged. These nitrogen molecules are the excess reactant.

Interactive Figure To see an animation


of limiting reactants, visit glencoe.com.

Figure 11.6 Natural rubber, which


is soft and very sticky, is hardened in
a chemical process called vulcanization.
During vulcanization, molecules become
linked together, forming a durable material
that is harder, smoother, and less sticky.
These properties make vulcanized rubber
ideal for many products, such as this caster.

Determining the limiting reactant The calculations you did in


the previous section were based on having the reactants present in the
ratio described by the balanced chemical equation. When this is not the
case, the first thing you must do is determine which reactant is limiting.
Consider the reaction shown in Figure 11.5, in which three molecules of nitrogen (N 2) and three molecules of hydrogen (H 2) react to
form ammonia (NH 3). In the first step of the reaction, all the nitrogen
molecules and hydrogen molecules are separated into individual atoms.
These atoms are available for reassembling into ammonia molecules,
just as the tools in Figure 11.4 are available to be assembled into tool
kits. How many molecules of ammonia can be produced from the available atoms? Two ammonia molecules can be assembled from the hydrogen atoms and nitrogen atoms because only six hydrogen atoms are
availablethree for each ammonia molecule. When the hydrogen is
gone, two unreacted molecules of nitrogen remain. Thus, hydrogen is
the limiting reactant and nitrogen is the excess reactant. It is important
to know which reactant is the limiting reactant because, as you have just
read, the amount of product formed depends on this reactant.
Reading Check Extend How many more hydrogen molecules would
be needed to completely react with the excess nitrogen molecules
shown in Figure 11.5?

Calculating the Product


when a Reactant Is Limiting
How can you calculate the amount of product formed when one of the
reactants is limiting? Consider the formation of disulfur dichloride
(S 2Cl 2), which is used to vulcanize rubber. As shown in Figure 11.6, the
properties of vulcanized rubber make it useful for many products. In
the production of disulfur dichloride, molten sulfur reacts with chlorine
gas according to the following equation.
S 8(l) + 4Cl 2(g) 4S 2Cl 2(l)
If 200.0 g of sulfur reacts with 100.0 g of chlorine, what mass of disulfur
dichloride is produced?
Calculating the limiting reactant The masses of both reactants
are given. First, determine which one is the limiting reactant, because the
reaction stops producing product when the limiting reactant is used up.

380 Chapter 11 Stoichiometry


Chris McElcheran/Masterfile

Moles of reactants Identifying the limiting reactant involves find-

ing the number of moles of each reactant. You can do this by converting
the masses of chlorine and sulfur to moles. Multiply each mass by a conversion factor that relates moles and massthe inverse of molar mass.
1 mol Cl
70.91 g Cl 2

2
= 1.410 mol Cl 2
100.0 g Cl 2 _

1 mol S
256.5 g S 8

8
= 0.7797 mol S 8
200.0 g S 8 _

Using mole ratios The next step involves determining whether the

two reactants are in the correct mole ratio, as given in the balanced
chemical equation. The coefficients in the balanced chemical equation
indicate that 4 mol of chlorine is needed to react with 1 mol of sulfur.
This 4:1 ratio from the equation must be compared with the actual ratio
of the moles of available reactants just calculated above. To determine
the actual ratio of moles, divide the number of available moles of chlorine by the number of available moles of sulfur.
1.410 mol Cl 2 available
1.808 mol Cl 2 available
__
= __
0.7797 mol S 8 available

Careers In chemistry
Pharmacist Knowledge of drug
composition, modes of action, and
possible harmful interactions with
other substances allows a pharmacist to counsel patients on their care.
Pharmacists also mix chemicals to
form powders, tablets, ointments,
and solutions. For more information
on chemistry careers, visit
glencoe.com.

1 mol S 8 available

Only 1.808 mol of chlorine is available for every 1 mol of sulfur, instead
of the 4 mol of chlorine required by the balanced chemical equation.
Therefore, chlorine is the limiting reactant.
Calculating the amount of product formed After determining the limiting reactant, the amount of product in moles can be calculated by multiplying the given number of moles of the limiting reactant
(1.410 mol Cl 2) by the mole ratio relating disulfur dichloride and chlorine. Then, moles of S 2Cl 2 is converted to grams of S 2Cl 2 by multiplying
by the molar mass. These calculations can be combined as shown.
4 mol S Cl
4 mol Cl 2

135.0 g S 2Cl 2
1 mol S 2Cl 2

2 2
_ = 190.4 g S 2Cl 2
1.410 mol Cl 2 _

Thus, 190.4 g S 2Cl 2 forms when 1.410 mol Cl 2 reacts with excess S 8.
Analyzing the excess reactant Now that you have determined
the limiting reactant and the amount of product formed, what about the
excess reactant, sulfur? How much of it reacted?
Moles reacted You need to make a mole-to-mass calculation to

determine the mass of sulfur needed to react completely with 1.410 mol
of chlorine. First, obtain the number of moles of sulfur by multiplying
the moles of chlorine by the S 8-to-Cl 2 mole ratio.
1 mol S
4 mol Cl 2

8
1.410 mol Cl 2 _
= 0.3525 mol S 8

Mass reacted Next, to obtain the mass of sulfur needed, multiply

VOCABULARY
SCIENCE USAGE V. COMMON USAGE
Product
Science usage: a new substance
formed during a chemical reaction
The sole reaction product was a
colorless gas.
Common usage: something produced
The cosmetics counter in the department store had hundreds of products
from which to choose.

0.3525 mol of S 8 by its molar mass.


265.5 g S 8
1 mol S 8

0.3525 mol S 8 _ = 90.42 g S 8 needed


Excess remaining Knowing that 200.0 g of sulfur is available and
that only 90.42 g of sulfur is needed, you can calculate the amount of
sulfur left unreacted when the reaction ends.

200.0 g S 8 available - 90.42 g S 8 needed = 109.6 g S 8 in excess


Section 11.3 Limiting Reactants 381

EXAMPLE Problem 11.5

Math Handbook

Determining the Limiting Reactant The reaction between solid white


phosphorus (P 4) and oxygen produces solid tetraphosphorus decoxide (P 4O 10).
This compound is often called diphosphorus pentoxide because its empirical
formula is P 2O 5.
a. Determine the mass of P 4O 10 formed if 25.0 g of P 4 and 50.0 g of oxygen
are combined.
b. How much of the excess reactant remains after the reaction stops?
1

Dimensional Analysis
page 956

Analyze the Problem


You are given the masses of both reactants, so you must identify the limiting reactant and
use it to find the mass of the product. From moles of the limiting reactant, the moles of
the excess reactant used in the reaction can be determined. The number of moles of the
excess reactant that reacted can be converted to mass and subtracted from the given
mass to find the amount in excess.
Known
mass of phosphorus = 25.0 g P 4
mass of oxygen = 50.0 g O 2

Unknown
mass of tetraphosphorus decoxide = ? g P 4O 10
mass of excess reactant = ? g excess reactant

Solve for the Unknown


Determine the limiting reactant.
25.0 g
50.0 g
?g
P 4(s) + 5O 2(g) P 4O 10(s)

Write the balanced chemical equation, and


identify the known and the unknown.

Determine the number of moles of the reactants by multiplying each mass by the
conversion factor that relates moles and massthe inverse of molar mass.
1 mol P 4
25.0 g P 4 _
= 0.202 mol P 4

Calculate the moles of P 4.

1 mol O 2
50.0 g O 2 _
= 1.56 mol O 2

Calculate the moles of O 2.

123.9 g P 4

32.00 g O 2

Calculate the actual ratio of available moles of O 2 and available moles of P 4.


1.56 mol O 2
7.72 mol O
_
= _2
0.202 mol P 4

Calculate the ratio of moles of O 2 to moles of P 4.

1 mol P 4

Determine the mole ratio of the two reactants from the balanced chemical equation.
5 mol O
Mole ratio: _2
mol P 4

Because 7.72 mol of O 2 is available but only 5 mol is needed to react with 1 mol of P 4, O 2
is in excess and P 4 is the limiting reactant. Use the moles of P 4 to determine the moles of
P 4O 10 that will be produced. Multiply the number of moles of P 4 by the mole ratio of P 4O 10
(the unknown) to P 4 (the known).
1 mol P 4O 10
0.202 mol P 4 _ = 0.202 mol P 4O 10
1 mol P 4

Calculate the moles of product (P 4O 10) formed.

To calculate the mass of P 4O 10, multiply moles of P 4O 10 by the conversion factor that
relates mass and molesmolar mass.
283.9 g P 4O 10
0.202 mol P 4O 10 __ = 57.3 g P 4O 10
1 mol P 4O 10

382

Chapter 11 Stoichiometry

Calculate the mass of the product P 4O 10.

Because O 2 is in excess, only part of the available O 2 is consumed. Use the limiting
reactant, P 4, to determine the moles and mass of O 2 used.
5 mol O
0.202 mol P 4 _2 = 1.01 mol O 2
1 mol P 4

Multiply the moles of limiting reactant by the mole


ratio to determine moles of excess reactant needed.

Convert moles of O 2 consumed to mass of O 2 consumed.


32.00 g O 2
1.01 mol O 2 _ = 32.3 g O 2
1 mol O 2

Multiply the moles of O 2 by the molar mass.

Calculate the amount of excess O 2.


50.0 g O 2 available - 32.3 g O 2 consumed = 17.7 g O 2 in excess

Subtract the mass of O 2 used


from the mass available.

Evaluate the Answer


All values have a minimum of three significant figures, so the mass of P 4O 10 is correctly
stated with three digits. The mass of excess O 2 (17.7 g) is found by subtracting two
numbers that are accurate to the first decimal place. Therefore, the mass of excess O 2
correctly shows one decimal place. The sum of the O 2 that was consumed (32.3 g) and
the given mass of P 4 (25.0 g) is 57.3 g, the calculated mass of the product P 4O 10.

PRACTICE Problems

Extra Practice Page 983 and glencoe.com

23. The reaction between solid sodium and iron(III) oxide is one in a series of reactions that
inflates an automobile airbag: 6Na(s) + Fe 2O 3(s) 3Na 2O(s) + 2Fe(s). If 100.0 g of Na
and 100.0 g of Fe 2O 3 are used in this reaction, determine the following.
a. limiting reactant
b. reactant in excess
c. mass of solid iron produced
d. mass of excess reactant that remains after the reaction is complete
24. Challenge Photosynthesis reactions in green plants use carbon dioxide and water
to produce glucose (C 6H 12O 6) and oxygen. A plant has 88.0 g of carbon dioxide and
64.0 g of water available for photosynthesis.
a. Write the balanced chemical equation for the reaction.
b. Determine the limiting reactant.
c. Determine the excess reactant.
d. Determine the mass in excess.
e. Determine the mass of glucose produced.

Connection

Biology

Your body needs vitamins, minerals, and elements in small amounts to facilitate normal metabolic reactions. A lack
of these substances can lead to abnormalities in growth, development,
and the functioning of your bodys cells. Phosphorus, for example, is an
essential element in living systems; phosphate groups occur regularly in
strands of DNA. Potassium is needed for proper nerve function, muscle
control, and blood pressure. A diet low in potassium and high in sodium might be a factor in high blood pressure. Another example is vitamin B-12. Without adequate vitamin B-12, the body is unable to
synthesize DNA properly, affecting the production of red blood cells.
Section 11.3 Limiting Reactants 383

Figure 11.7 With insufficient


oxygen, the burner on the left burns
with a yellow, sooty flame. The burner
on the right burns hot and clean
because an excess of oxygen is
available to react completely with
the methane gas.

Why use an excess of a reactant? Many reactions stop while


portions of the reactants are still present in the reaction mixture.
Because this is inefficient and wasteful, chemists have found that by
using an excess of one reactantoften the least expensive onereactions can be driven to continue until all of the limiting reactant is used
up. Using an excess of one reactant can also speed up a reaction.
Figure 11.7 shows an example of how controlling the amount of a
reactant can increase efficiency. Your lab likely uses the type of Bunsen
burner shown in the figure. If so, you know that this type of burner has
a control that lets you adjust the amount of air that mixes with the
methane gas. How efficiently the burner operates depends on the ratio
of oxygen to methane gas in the fuel mixture. When the air is limited,
the resulting flame is yellow because of glowing bits of unburned fuel.
This unburned fuel leaves soot (carbon) deposits on glassware. Fuel is
wasted because the amount of energy released is less than the amount
that could have been produced if enough oxygen were available. When
sufficient oxygen is present in the combustion mixture, the burner produces a hot, intense blue flame. No soot is deposited because the fuel is
completely converted to carbon dioxide and water vapor.

Section 1 1.3

Assessment

Section Summary
The limiting reactant is the reactant
that is completely consumed during
a chemical reaction. Reactants that
remain after the reaction stops are
called excess reactants.
To determine the limiting reactant,
the actual mole ratio of the available
reactants must be compared with the
ratio of the reactants obtained from
the coefficients in the balanced
chemical equation.
Stoichiometric calculations must be
based on the limiting reactant.

384

Chapter 11 Stoichiometry

Matt Meadows

25.

MAIN Idea Describe the reason why a reaction between two substances
comes to an end.

26. Identify the limiting and the excess reactant in each reaction.
a. Wood burns in a campfire.
b. Airborne sulfur reacts with the silver plating on a teapot to produce tarnish
(silver sulfide).
c. Baking powder in batter decomposes to produce carbon dioxide.
27. Analyze Tetraphosphorus trisulphide (P 4S 3) is used in the match heads of some
matches. It is produced in the reaction 8P 4 + 3S 8 8P 4S 3. Determine which of
the following statements are incorrect, and rewrite the incorrect statements to
make them correct.
a. 4 mol P 4 reacts with 1.5 mol S 8 to form 4 mol P 4S 3.
b. Sulfur is the limiting reactant when 4 mol P 4 and 4 mol S 8 react.
c. 6 mol P 4 reacts with 6 mol S 8, forming 1320 g P 4S 3.

Self-Check Quiz glencoe.com

Section 11.4
1 1.4
Objectives
Calculate the theoretical yield of
a chemical reaction from data.
Determine the percent yield for
a chemical reaction.

Percent Yield
MAIN Idea Percent yield is a measure of the efficiency of a
chemical reaction.

process: a series of actions


or operations

Real-World Reading Link Imagine that you are practicing free throws and
you take 100 practice shots. Theoretically, you could make all 100 shots. In
actuality, however, you know you will not make all of the shots. Chemical
reactions also have theoretical and actual outcomes.

New Vocabulary

How much product?

theoretical yield
actual yield
percent yield

While solving stoichiometric problems in this chapter, you might have


concluded that chemical reactions always proceed in the laboratory
according to the balanced equation and produce the calculated amount
of product. This, however, is not the case. Just as you are unlikely to
make 100 out of 100 free throws during basketball practice, most reactions never succeed in producing the predicted amount of product.
Reactions do not go to completion or yield as expected for a variety of
reasons. Liquid reactants and products might adhere to the surfaces of
their containers or evaporate. In some instances, products other than
the intended ones might be formed by competing reactions, thus reducing the yield of the desired product. Or, as shown in Figure 11.8, some
amount of any solid product is usually left behind on filter paper or lost
in the purification process. Because of these problems, chemists need to
know how to gauge the yield of a chemical reaction.

Review Vocabulary

Theoretical and Actual Yields In many of the stoichiometric calculations you have performed, you have calculated the amount of product produced from a given amount of reactant. The answer you
obtained is the theoretical yield of the reaction. The theoretical yield is
the maximum amount of product that can be produced from a given
amount of reactant.
A chemical reaction rarely produces the theoretical yield of
product. A chemist determines the actual yield of a reaction through
a careful experiment in which the mass of the product is measured.
The actual yield is the amount of product produced when the chemical
reaction is carried out in an experiment.
Figure 11.8 Silver
chromate is formed when
potassium chromate is added
to silver nitrate. Note that
some of the precipitate is left
behind on filter paper. Still
more of the precipitate is lost
because it adheres to the
sides of the beaker.

Section 11.4 Percent Yield 385


Matt Meadows

Percent yield Chemists need to know how efficient a reaction is


in producing the desired product. One way of measuring efficiency is
by means of percent yield. Percent yield of product is the ratio of the
actual yield to the theoretical yield expressed as a percent.

Percent Yield
actual yield
theoretical yield

percent yield = __ 100


The actual yield divided by the theoretical yield multiplied by 100 is the percent yield.

EXAMPLE Problem 11.6

Math Handbook

Percent Yield Solid silver chromate (Ag 2CrO 4) forms when potassium chromate
(K 2CrO 4) is added to a solution containing 0.500 g of silver nitrate (AgNO 3).
Determine the theoretical yield of Ag 2CrO 4. Calculate the percent yield if the
reaction yields 0.455 g of Ag 2CrO 4.
1

Percents
page 965

Analyze the Problem


You know the mass of a reactant and the actual yield of the product. Write the balanced
chemical equation, and calculate theoretical yield by converting grams of AgNO 3 to
moles of AgNO 3, moles of AgNO 3 to moles of Ag 2CrO 4, and moles of Ag 2CrO 4 to grams
of Ag 2CrO 4. Calculate the percent yield from the actual yield and the theoretical yield.

Known

Unknown

mass of silver nitrate = 0.500 g AgNO 3


actual yield = 0.455 g Ag 2CrO 4

theoretical yield = ? g Ag 2CrO 4


percent yield = ? % Ag 2CrO 4

Solve for the Unknown


0.500 g
?g
2AgNO 3(aq) + K 2CrO 4(aq) Ag 2CrO 4(s) + 2KNO 3(aq)
1 mol AgNO 3
0.500 g AgNO 3 __ = 2.94 10 -3 mol AgNO 3
169.9 g AgNO 3

1 mol Ag 2CrO 4
2.94 10 -3 mol AgNO 3 __ = 1.47 10 -3 mol Ag 2CrO 4
2 mol AgNO 3

Use molar mass to convert grams


of AgNO 3 to moles of AgNO 3.
Use the mole ratio to convert moles of
AgNO 3 to moles of Ag 2CrO 4.

331.7 g Ag 2CrO 4
1.47 10 -3 mol Ag 2CrO 4 __ = 0.488 g Ag 2CrO 4

Calculate the theoretical yield.

0.455 g Ag 2CrO 4
__
100 = 93.2% Ag 2CrO 4
0.488 g Ag CrO

Calculate the percent yield.

1 mol Ag 2CrO 4

Write the balanced chemical equation,


and identify the known and the unknown.

Evaluate the Answer


The quantity with the fewest significant figures has three, so the percent is correctly stated
with three digits. The molar mass of Ag 2CrO 4 is about twice the molar mass of AgNO 3, and
the ratio of moles of AgNO 3 to moles of Ag 2CrO 4 in the equation is 2:1. Therefore, 0.500 g
of AgNO 3 should produce about the same mass of Ag 2CrO 4. The actual yield of Ag 2CrO 4
is close to 0.500 g, so a percent yield of 93.2% is reasonable.

386

Chapter 11 Stoichiometry

PRACTICE Problems

Extra Practice Page 983 and glencoe.com

28. Aluminum hydroxide (Al(OH) 3) is often present in antacids to


neutralize stomach acid (HCl). The reaction occurs as follows:
Al(OH) 3(s) + 3HCl(aq) AlCl 3(aq) + 3H 2O(l). If 14.0 g of Al(OH) 3
is present in an antacid tablet, determine the theoretical yield of
AlCl 3 produced when the tablet reacts with HCl.
29. Zinc reacts with iodine in a synthesis reaction: Zn + I 2 ZnI 2.
a. Determine the theoretical yield if 1.912 mol of zinc is used.
b. Determine the percent yield if 515.6 g of product is recovered.
30. Challenge When copper wire is placed into a silver nitrate solution
(AgNO 3), silver crystals and copper(II) nitrate (Cu(NO 3) 2) solution
form.
a. Write the balanced chemical equation for the reaction.
b. If a 20.0-g sample of copper is used, determine the theoretical yield
of silver.
c. If 60.0 g of silver is recovered from the reaction, determine the
percent yield of the reaction.

Data Analysis lab


Based on Real Data 1, 2

Analyze and Conclude


Can rocks on the Moon provide an effective
oxygen source for future lunar missions?
Although the Moon has no atmosphere and thus
no oxygen, its surface is covered with rocks and
soil made from oxides. Scientists, looking for an
oxygen source for future long-duration lunar
missions, are researching ways to extract oxygen
from lunar soil and rock. Analysis of samples collected during previous lunar missions provided
scientists with the data shown in the table. The
table identifies the oxides in lunar soil as well as
each oxides percent-by-weight of the soil.
Think Critically
1. Calculate For each of the oxides listed in the
table, determine the mass (in grams) that
would exist in 1.00 kg of lunar soil.
2. Apply Scientists want to release the oxygen
from its metal oxide using a decomposition
reaction: metal oxide metal + oxygen. To
assess the viability of this idea, determine the
amount of oxygen per kilogram contained in
each of the oxides found in lunar soil.
3. Identify What oxide would yield the most
oxygen per kilogram? The least?
4. Determine the theoretical yield of oxygen
from the oxides present in a 1.00-kg sample
of lunar soil.

Data and Observations


Moon-Rock Data 1
Oxide

% Weight of Soil

SiO 2

47.3%

Al 2O 3

17.8%

CaO

11.4%

FeO

10.5%

MgO

9.6%

TiO 2

1.6%

Na 2O

0.7%

K 2O

0.6%

Cr 2O 3

0.2%

MnO

0.1%

1
Data obtained from: McKay, et al. 1994. JSC-1: A new lunar soil stimulant.
Engineering, Construction, and Operations in Space IV: 857866, American Society
of Civil Engineers.
2
Data obtained from: Berggren, et al. 2005. Carbon monoxide silicate reduction
system. Space Resources Roundtable VII.

5. Calculate Using methods currently available,


scientists can produce 15 kg of oxygen from
100 kg of lunar soil. What is the percent yield
of the process.

Section 11.4 Percent Yield 387

Percent Yield in the Marketplace


Percent yield is important in the cost effectiveness of many industrial
manufacturing processes. For example, the sulfur shown in Figure 11.9
is used to make sulfuric acid (H 2SO 4). Sulfuric acid is an important
chemical because it is a raw material used to make products such as
fertilizers, detergents, pigments, and textiles. The cost of sulfuric acid
affects the cost of many of the consumer items you use every day. The
first two steps in the manufacturing process are shown below.
S 8(s) + 8O 2(g) 8SO 2(g)
2SO 2(g) + O 2(g) 2SO 3(g)

Step 1
Step 2

In the final step, SO 3 combines with water to produce H 2SO 4.

Section 1 1.4

The first step, the combustion of sulfur, produces an almost 100% yield.
The second step also produces a high yield if a catalyst is used at the
relatively low temperature of 400C. A catalyst is a substance that speeds
a reaction but does not appear in the chemical equation. Under these
conditions, the reaction is slow. Raising the temperature increases the
reaction rate but decreases the yield.
To maximize yield and minimize time in the second step, engineers
have devised a system in which the reactants, O 2 and SO 2, are passed
over a catalyst at 400C. Because the reaction releases a great deal of
heat, the temperature gradually increases with an accompanying
decrease in yield. Thus, when the temperature reaches approximately
600C, the mixture is cooled and then passed over the catalyst again.
A total of four passes over the catalyst with cooling between passes
results in a yield greater than 98%.

Assessment

Section Summary
The theoretical yield of a chemical
reaction is the maximum amount of
product that can be produced from a
given amount of reactant. Theoretical
yield is calculated from the balanced
chemical equation.
The actual yield is the amount of
product produced. Actual yield must
be obtained through experimentation.
Percent yield is the ratio of actual
yield to theoretical yield expressed as
a percent. High percent yield is important in reducing the cost of every
product produced through chemical
processes.

388

Chapter 11 Stoichiometry

Gunter Marx Photography/CORBIS

SO 3(g) + H 2O(l) H 2SO 4(aq)

Step 3

Figure 11.9 Sulfur, such as these


piles at Vancouver Harbor, can be extracted from petroleum products by a chemical
process. Sulfur is also mined by forcing hot
water into underground deposits and
pumping the liquid sulfur to the surface.

31.

MAIN Idea Identify which type of yieldtheoretical yield, actual yield, or


percent yieldis a measure of the efficiency of a chemical reaction.

32. List several reasons why the actual yield from a chemical reaction is not usually
equal to the theoretical yield.
33. Explain how percent yield is calculated.
34. Apply In an experiment, you combine 83.77 g of iron with an excess of sulfur
and then heat the mixture to obtain iron(III) sulfide.
2Fe(s) + 3S(s) Fe 2S 3(s)
What is the theoretical yield, in grams, of iron(III) sulfide?
35. Calculate the percent yield of the reaction of magnesium with excess oxygen:
2Mg(s) + O 2(g) 2MgO(s)
Reaction Data

Mass of empty crucible

35.67 g

Mass of crucible and Mg

38.06 g

Mass of crucible and MgO (after heating)

39.15 g

Self-Check Quiz glencoe.com

Battling
Resistant Strains
The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), the
virus that causes AIDS, has proven to be among
the most incurable foes ever faced by modern
medical science. One reason for this is the viruss
remarkable ability to adapt. Resistant strains of
the virus appear quickly, rendering obsolete the
newest and most powerful AIDS drugs. Now
some researchers are using the viruss
adaptability as a way to fight it.

Selecting resistance PA-457 is a promising


new anti-HIV drug synthesized from betulinic
acid, an organic compound derived from some
plants, including the bark of birch trees. To find
out just what PA-457 does to HIV, known as the
drugs mechanism of action, researchers took
what might seem a strange step: they
encouraged samples of HIV to develop
resistance to PA-457.
Researchers subjected HIV samples to small
doses of PA-457. Using a low dose made it more
likely that some of the virus would survive the
treatment and possibly develop resistance.
Those viruses that survived exposure were
collected, and their genetic sequences were
examined. The surviving viruses were found to
have a mutation in the genes that control how
the virus builds a structure called a capsid,
shown in Figure 1.

Infectious Virus
Virus
budding out

Capsid protein
shield for
viral RNA

Normal

RNA core
Dead Virus
Protein shield
destroyed

Infected
human cell

Defective
RNA core

With PA-457

Figure 2 When treated with PA-457, the HIV capsid becomes


misshapen and collapses, resulting in the death of the virus.

Surprise attack This finding was surprising,


because it showed that, unlike most drugs,
PA-457 attacks the HIV structure, rather than
the enzymes that help HIV reproduce, as
illustrated in Figure 2. This makes PA-457
among the first of a new class of HIV drugs
known as maturation inhibitorsdrugs that can
prevent the virus from maturing during the late
stages in its development.
Slowing evolution The hope is that because
PA-457 and other maturation inhibitors attack
the HIV structure, resistance will be slower to
develop. Even so, maturation inhibitors will
likely be prescribed in combination with other
AIDS drugs that attack HIV at different stages of
its life cycle.
This practice, called multidrug therapy,
makes it harder for HIV to develop resistance
because any surviving virus would need to have
multiple mutationsat least one for each antiHIV drug. These mutations are less likely to
occur at the same time.

Chemistry
Research how scientists determine the safe dos-

Figure 1 In a normal HIV virus, the capsid forms a protective


coating around the genetic material.

ing level for an experimental drug. Discuss how a


drugs effectiveness must be balanced with its
potential toxicity and side effects. For more information on how a therapeutic dose is determined,
visit glencoe.com.

Chapter 11 Chemistry and Health 389


3D4Medicalcom/Getty Images

DETERMINE THE MOLE RATIO

Probeware Alternate CBL instructions can


be found at glencoe.com.

Background: Iron reacts with copper(II) sulfate


(CuSO 4). By measuring the mass of iron that reacts
and the mass of copper metal produced, you can
calculate the experimental mole ratio.

Question: How does the experimental mole ratio


compare with the theoretical mole ratio?

Materials
copper(II) sulfate pentahydrate (CuSO 45H 2O)
iron metal filings (20 mesh)
distilled water
150-mL beaker
100-mL graduated cylinder

hot plate
beaker tongs
balance
stirring rod
400-mL beaker
weighing paper

Safety Precautions
WARNING: Hot plates can cause burns. Turn off hot
plates when not in use. Use only GFCI-protected circuits.

Procedure
1. Read and complete the lab safety form.
2. Measure the mass of a clean, dry 150-mL beaker.
Record all measurements in a data table.
3. Place approximately 12 g CuSO 45H 2O into the
150-mL beaker, and measure the combined mass.
4. Add 50 mL of distilled water to the CuSO 45H 2O.
Place the mixture on a hot plate set at medium, and
stir until all of the solid dissolves (do not boil).
Using tongs, remove the beaker from the hot plate.
5. Measure about 2 g of iron filings onto a piece of
weighing paper. Measure the mass of the filings.
6. While stirring, slowly add the iron filings to the hot
copper(II) sulfate solution. Be careful not to splash
the hot solution.
7. Allow the reaction mixture to sit for 5 min.
8. Use the stirring rod to decant (pour off) the liquid
into a 400-mL beaker. Be careful to decant only the
liquidleave the solid copper metal behind.
9. Add 15 mL of distilled water to the copper solid, and
carefully swirl the beaker to wash the copper. Decant
the liquid into the 400-mL beaker.
10. Repeat Step 9 two more times.
11. Place the beaker containing the wet copper on the
hot plate. Use low heat to dry the copper.
390 Chapter 11 Stoichiometry
Matt Meadows

12. After the copper is dry, use tongs to remove the


beaker from the hot plate and allow it to cool.
13. Measure the mass of the beaker and the copper.
14. Cleanup and Disposal The dry copper can be
placed in a waste container. Moisten any residue that
sticks to the beaker, and wipe it out using a paper
towel. Pour the unreacted copper(II) sulfate and
iron(II) sulfate solutions into a large beaker. Return
all lab equipment to its proper place.

Analyze and Conclude


1. Apply Write a balanced chemical equation for the
reaction and calculate the mass of copper (Cu) that
should have formed from the sample of iron (Fe)
used. This mass is the theoretical yield.
2. Interpret Data Using your data, determine the
mass and the moles of copper produced. Calculate
the moles of iron used, and determine the wholenumber iron-to-copper mole ratio and percent yield.
3. Compare and Contrast Compare the theoretical
iron-to-copper mole ratio to the mole ratio you calculated using the experimental data.
4. Error Analysis Identify sources of the error that
resulted in deviation from the mole ratio given in
the balanced chemical equation.

INQUIRY EXTENSION
Compare your results with those of several other
lab teams. Create a hypothesis to explain any
differences.

Download quizzes, key


terms, and flash cards
from glencoe.com.

BIG Idea Mass relationships in chemical reactions confirm the law of conservation of mass.
Section 11.1 Defining Stoichiometry
MAIN Idea The amount of each
reactant present at the start of a
chemical reaction determines how
much product can form.

Vocabulary
mole ratio (p. 371)
stoichiometry (p. 368)

Key Concepts
Balanced chemical equations can be interpreted in terms of moles, mass, and
representative particles (atoms, molecules, formula units).
The law of conservation of mass applies to all chemical reactions.
Mole ratios are derived from the coefficients of a balanced chemical equation.
Each mole ratio relates the number of moles of one reactant or product to the
number of moles of another reactant or product in the chemical reaction.

Section 11.2 Stoichiometric Calculations


MAIN Idea The solution to every
stoichiometric problem requires a
balanced chemical equation.

Key Concepts
Chemists use stoichiometric calculations to predict the amounts of reactants
used and products formed in specific reactions.
The first step in solving stoichiometric problems is writing the balanced
chemical equation.
Mole ratios derived from the balanced chemical equation are used in
stoichiometric calculations.
Stoichiometric problems make use of mole ratios to convert between mass
and moles.

Section 11.3 Limiting Reactants


MAIN Idea A chemical reaction
stops when one of the reactants
is used up.

Vocabulary
excess reactant (p. 379)
limiting reactant (p. 379)

Key Concepts
The limiting reactant is the reactant that is completely consumed during a
chemical reaction. Reactants that remain after the reaction stops are called
excess reactants.
To determine the limiting reactant, the actual mole ratio of the available reactants
must be compared with the ratio of the reactants obtained from the coefficients
in the balanced chemical equation.
Stoichiometric calculations must be based on the limiting reactant.

Section 11.4 Percent Yield


MAIN Idea Percent yield is a
measure of the efficiency of
a chemical reaction.

Vocabulary
actual yield (p. 385)
percent yield (p. 386)
theoretical yield (p. 385)

Key Concepts
The theoretical yield of a chemical reaction is the maximum amount of product
that can be produced from a given amount of reactant. Theoretical yield is
calculated from the balanced chemical equation.
The actual yield is the amount of product produced. Actual yield must be obtained
through experimentation.
Percent yield is the ratio of actual yield to theoretical yield expressed as a percent.
High percent yield is important in reducing the cost of every product produced
through chemical processes.
actual yield
theoretical yield

Percent yield = __ 100

Vocabulary PuzzleMaker glencoe.com

Chapter 11 Study Guide 391

Section 11.1
Mastering Concepts
36. Why must a chemical equation be balanced before you

can determine mole ratios?


37. What relationships can be determined from a balanced

chemical equation?
38. Explain why mole ratios are central to stoichiometric

calculations.
39. What is the mole ratio that can convert from moles of A

to moles of B?
40. Why are coefficients used in mole ratios instead of

subscripts?
41. Explain how the conservation of mass allows you to

interpret a balanced chemical equation in terms of mass.


42. When heated by a flame, ammonium dichromate

decomposes, producing nitrogen gas, solid


chromium(III) oxide, and water vapor.

(NH 4)2Cr 2O 7 N 2 + Cr 2O 3 + 4H 2O
Write the mole ratios for this reaction that relate ammonium dichromate to the products.

47. When hydrochloric acid solution reacts with lead(II)

nitrate solution, lead(II) chloride precipitates and a


solution of nitric acid is produced.
a. Write the balanced chemical equation for the reaction.
b. Interpret the equation in terms of molecules and
formula units, moles, and mass.
48. When aluminum is mixed with iron(III) oxide, iron

metal and aluminum oxide are produced, along with a


large quantity of heat. What mole ratio would you use
to determine moles of Fe if moles of Fe 2O 3 is known?

Fe 2O 3(s) + 2Al(s) 2Fe(s) + Al 2O 3(s) + heat


49. Solid silicon dioxide, often called silica, reacts with

hydrofluoric acid (HF) solution to produce the gas


silicon tetrafluoride and water.
a. Write the balanced chemical equation for the reaction.
b. List three mole ratios, and explain how you would use
them in stoichiometric calculations.
50. Chrome The most important commercial ore of chro-

mium is chromite (FeCr 2O 4). One of the steps in the


process used to extract chromium from the ore is the
reaction of chromite with coke (carbon) to produce
ferrochrome (FeCr 2).

2C(s) + FeCr 2O 4(s) FeCr 2(s) + 2CO 2(g)


What mole ratio would you use to convert from moles
of chromite to moles of ferrochrome?
51. Air Pollution The pollutant SO 2 is removed from the

Figure 11.10

43. Figure 11.10 depicts an equation with squares repre-

senting Element M and circles representing Element N.


Write a balanced equation to represent the picture
shown, using smallest whole-number ratios. Write mole
ratios for this equation.

Mastering Problems
44. Interpret the following equation in terms of particles,

moles, and mass.

4Al(s) + 3O 2(g) 2Al 2O 3(s)


45. Smelting When tin(IV) oxide is heated with carbon

in a process called smelting, the element tin can be


extracted.

SnO 2(s) + 2C(s) Sn(l) + 2CO(g)


Interpret the chemical equation in terms of particles,
moles, and mass.
46. When solid copper is added to nitric acid, copper(II)

nitrate, nitrogen dioxide, and water are produced.


Write the balanced chemical equation for the reaction.
List six mole ratios for the reaction.
392

Chapter 11 Stoichiometry

air by in a reaction that also involves calcium carbonate


and oxygen. The products of this reaction are calcium
sulfate and carbon dioxide. Determine the mole ratio you
would use to convert moles of SO 2 to moles of CaSO 4.
52. Two substances, W and X, react to form the products Y
and Z. Table 11.2 shows the moles of the reactants and

products involved when the reaction was carried out.


Use the data to determine the coefficients that will balance the equation W + X Y + Z.
Table 11.2 Reaction Data
Moles of Reactants

Moles of Products

0.90

0.30

0.60

1.20

53. Antacids Magnesium hydroxide is an ingredient in

some antacids. Antacids react with excess hydrochloric


acid in the stomach to relieve indigestion.

___Mg(OH) 2 + ___HCl ___ MgCl 2 + ___H 2O


a. Balance the reaction of Mg(OH) 2 with HCl.
b. Write the mole ratio that would be used to determine
the number of moles of MgCl 2 produced when HCl
reacts with Mg(OH) 2.
Chapter Test glencoe.com

63. Esterification The process in which an organic acid

Section 11.2
Mastering Concepts
54. What is the first step in all stoichiometric calculations?
55. What information does a balanced equation provide?
56. On what law is stoichometry based, and how do the

calculations support this law?


57. How is molar mass used in some stoichiometric

calculations?
58. What information must you have in order to calculate

the mass of product formed in a chemical reaction?

and an alcohol react to form an ester and water is known


as esterification. Ethyl butanoate (C 3H 7COOC 2H 5), an
ester, is formed when the alcohol ethanol (C 2H 5OH)
and butanoic acid (C 3H 7COOH) and are heated in the
presence of sulfuric acid.

C 2H 5OH(l) + C 3H 7COOH(l)
C 3H 7COOC 2H 5(l) + H 2O(l)
Determine the mass of ethyl butanoate produced if
4.50 mol of ethanol is used.
64. Greenhouse Gas Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas

that is linked to global warming. It is released into the


atmosphere through the combustion of octane (C 8H 18)
in gasoline. Write the balanced chemical equation for
the combustion of octane and calculate the mass of
octane needed to release 5.00 mol of CO 2.
65. A solution of potassium chromate reacts with a solution

Figure 11.11

59. Each box in Figure 11.11 represents the contents of a

flask. One flask contains hydrogen sulfide, and the other


contains oxygen. When the contents of the flasks are
mixed, a reaction occurs and water vapor and sulfur are
produced. In the figure, the red circles represent oxygen,
the yellow circles represent sulfur, and blue circles represent hydrogen.
a. Write the balanced chemical equation for the reaction.
b. Using the same color code, sketch a representation of
the flask after the reaction occurs.

Mastering Problems
60. Ethanol (C 2H 5OH), also known as grain alcohol, can

be made from the fermentation of sugar (C 6H 12O 6).


The unbalanced chemical equation for the reaction is
shown below.

___C 6H 12O 6 ___C 2H 5OH + ___CO 2


Balance the chemical equation and determine the mass
of C 2H 5OH produced from 750 g of C 6H 12O 6.
61. Welding If 5.50 mol of calcium carbide (CaC 2) reacts

with an excess of water, how many moles of acetylene


(C 2H 2), a gas used in welding, will be produced?
CaC 2(s) + 2H 2O(l) Ca(OH) 2(aq) + C 2H 2(g)
62. Antacid Fizz When an antacid tablet dissolves in water,

the fizz is due to a reaction between sodium hydrogen


carbonate (NaHCO 3), also called sodium bicarbonate,
and citric acid (H 3C 6H 5O 7).

3NaHCO 3(aq) + H 3C 6H 5O 7(aq)


3CO 2(g) + 3H 2O(l) + Na 3C 6H 5O 7(aq)
How many moles of Na 3C 6H 5O 7 can be produced if one
tablet containing 0.0119 mol of NaHCO 3 is dissolved?
Chapter Test glencoe.com

of lead(II) nitrate to produce a yellow precipitate of


lead(II) chromate and a solution of potassium nitrate.
a. Write the balanced chemical equation.
b. Starting with 0.250 mol of potassium chromate,
determine the mass of lead chromate formed.
66. Rocket Fuel The exothermic reaction between liquid

hydrazine (N 2H 2) and liquid hydrogen peroxide (H 2O 2)


is used to fuel rockets. The products of this reaction are
nitrogen gas and water.
a. Write the balanced chemical equation.
b. How much hydrazine, in grams, is needed to produce
10.0 mol of nitrogen gas?
67. Chloroform (CHCl 3), an important solvent, is produced

by a reaction between methane and chlorine.

CH 4(g) + 3Cl 2(g) CHCl 3(g) + 3HCl(g)


How much CH 4, in grams, is needed to produce
50.0 grams of CHCl 3?
68. Oxygen Production The Russian Space Agency uses

potassium superoxide (KO 2) for the chemical oxygen


generators in their space suits.

4KO 2 + 2H 2O + 4CO 2 4KHCO 3 + 3O 2


Complete Table 11.3.
Table 11.3 Oxygen Generation Reaction Data
Mass
KO 2

Mass
H 2O

Mass
CO 2

Mass
KHCO 3

Mass
O2
380 g

69. Gasohol is a mixture of ethanol and gasoline. Balance

the equation, and determine the mass of CO 2 produced


from the combustion of 100.0 g of ethanol.

C 2H 5OH(l) + O 2(g) CO 2(g) + H 2O(g)


Chapter 11 Assessment 393

70. Car Battery Car batteries use lead, lead(IV) oxide, and

Mastering Problems

a sulfuric acid solution to produce an electric current.


The products of the reaction are lead(II) sulfate in solution and water.
a. Write the balanced equation for the reaction.
b. Determine the mass of lead(II) sulfate produced
when 25.0 g of lead reacts with an excess of lead(IV)
oxide and sulfuric acid.
71. To extract gold from its ore, the ore is treated with sodium

cyanide solution in the presence of oxygen and water.

4Au(s) + 8NaCN(aq) + O 2(g) + 2H 2O(l)


4NaAu(CN) 2(aq) + 4NaOH(aq)
a. Determine the mass of gold that can be extracted if
25.0 g of sodium cyanide is used.
b. If the mass of the ore from which the gold was
extracted is 150.0 g, what percentage of the ore is gold?
72. Film Photographic film contains silver bromide in gela-

tin. Once exposed, some of the silver bromide decomposes, producing fine grains of silver. The unexposed
silver bromide is removed by treating the film with
sodium thiosulfate. Soluble sodium silver thiosulfate
(Na 3Ag(S 2O 3) 2) is produced.

AgBr(s) + 2Na 2S 2O 3(aq)


Na 3Ag(S 2O 3) 2(aq) + NaBr(aq)
Determine the mass of Na 3Ag(S 2O 3) 2 produced if
0.275 g of AgBr is removed.

+
Ethyne

Hydrogen

+
Ethane

Ethyne

Figure 11.13

76. The reaction between ethyne (C 2H 2) and hydrogen (H 2)


is illustrated in Figure 11.13. The product is ethane

(C 2H 6). Which is the limiting reactant? Which is the


excess reactant? Explain.
77. Nickel-Iron Battery In 1901, Thomas Edison invented

the nickel-iron battery. The following reaction takes


place in the battery.

Fe(s) + 2NiO(OH)(s) + 2H 2O(l)


Fe(OH) 2(s) + 2Ni(OH) 2(aq)
How many mol of Fe(OH) 2 is produced when 5.00 mol
of Fe and 8.00 mol of NiO(OH) react?
78. One of the few xenon compounds that form is cesium

xenon heptafluoride (CsXeF 7). How many moles of


CsXeF 7 can be produced from the reaction of 12.5 mol
of cesium fluoride with 10.0 mol of xenon hexafluoride?

CsF(s) + XeF 6(s) CsXeF 7(s)


79. Iron Production Iron is obtained commercially by the

Section 11.3
Mastering Concepts
73. How is a mole ratio used to find the limiting reactant?
74. Explain why the statement, The limiting reactant is the

reactant with the lowest mass is incorrect.

reaction of hematite (Fe 2O 3) with carbon monoxide.


How many grams of iron is produced when 25.0 mol
of hematite reacts with 30.0 mol of carbon monoxide?

Fe 2O 3(s) + 3CO(g) 2Fe(s) + 3CO 2(g)


80. The reaction of chlorine gas with solid phosphorus (P 4)

produces solid phosphorus pentachloride. When 16.0 g


of chlorine reacts with 23.0 g of P 4, which reactant is
limiting? Which reactant is in excess?
81. Alkaline Battery An alkaline battery produces electrical

energy according to this equation.

Figure 11.12

75. Figure 11.12 uses squares to represent Element M and

circles to represent Element N.


a. Write the balanced equation for the reaction.
b. If each square represents 1 mol of M and each circle
represents 1 mol of N, how many moles of M and N
were present at the start of the reaction?
c. How many moles of product form? How many moles
of Element M and Element N are unreacted?
d. Identify the limiting reactant and the excess reactant.

394

Chapter 11 Stoichiometry

Zn(s) + 2MnO 2(s) + H 2O(l)


Zn(OH) 2(s) + Mn 2O 3(s)
a. Determine the limiting reactant if 25.0 g of Zn and
30.0 g of MnO 2 are used.
b. Determine the mass of Zn(OH) 2 produced.
82. Lithium reacts spontaneously with bromine to produce

lithium bromide. Write the balanced chemical equation


for the reaction. If 25.0 g of lithium and 25.0 g of bromine
are present at the beginning of the reaction, determine
a. the limiting reactant.
b. the mass of lithium bromide produced.
c. the excess reactant and the excess mass.
Chapter Test glencoe.com

93. Hydrofluoric acid solutions cannot be stored in glass

Section 11.4

containers because HF reacts readily with silica dioxide


in glass to produce hexafluorosilicic acid (H 2SiF 6).

Mastering Concepts
83. What is the difference between actual yield and theoreti-

cal yield?
84. How are actual yield and theoretical yield determined?
85. Can the percent yield of a chemical reaction be more

than 100%? Explain your answer.


86. What relationship is used to determine the percent yield

of a chemical reaction?

SiO 2(s) + 6HF(aq) H 2SiF 6(aq) + 2H 2O(l)


40.0 g SiO 2 and 40.0 g HF react to yield 45.8 g H 2SiF 6.
a. What is the limiting reactant?
b. What is the mass of the excess reactant?
c. What is the theoretical yield of H 2SiF 6?
d. What is the percent yield?
94. Van Arkel Process Pure zirconium is obtained using

87. What experimental information do you need in order to

calculate both the theoretical and the percent yield of


any chemical reaction?
88. A metal oxide reacts with water to produce a metal

hydroxide. What additional information would you


need to determine the percent yield of metal hydroxide
from this reaction?

the two-step Van Arkel process. In the first step, impure


zirconium and iodine are heated to produce zirconium
iodide (ZrI 4). In the second step, ZrI 4 is decomposed to
produce pure zirconium.

ZrI 4(s) Zr(s) + 2I 2(g)


Determine the percent yield of zirconium if 45.0 g of
ZrI 4 is decomposed and 5.00 g of pure Zr is obtained.
95. Methanol, wood alcohol, is produced when carbon

monoxide reacts with hydrogen gas.


Element A
Element B

Figure 11.14

CO + 2H 2 CH 3OH
When 8.50 g of carbon monoxide reacts with an excess
of hydrogen, 8.52 g of methanol is collected. Complete
Table 11.4, and calculate the percent yield.
Table 11.4 Methanol Reaction Data

89. Examine the reaction represented in Figure 11.14.

Determine if the reaction went to completion. Explain


your answer, and calculate the percent yield of the
reaction.

Mastering Problems
90. Ethanol (C 2H 5OH) is produced from the fermentation

of sucrose (C 12H 22O 11) in the presence of enzymes.


C 12H 22O 11(aq) + H 2O(g) 4C 2H 5OH(l) + 4CO 2(g)
Determine the theoretical yield and the percent yield of
ethanol if 684 g of sucrose undergoes fermentation and
349 g of ethanol is obtained.
91. Lead(II) oxide is obtained by roasting galena, lead(II)

sulfide, in air. The unbalanced equation is:

PbS(s) + O 2(g) PbO(s) + SO 2(g)


a. Balance the equation, and determine the theoretical
yield of PbO if 200.0 g of PbS is heated.
b. What is the percent yield if 170.0 g of PbO is obtained?
92. Upon heating, calcium carbonate (CaCO 3) decomposes

to calcium oxide (CaO) and carbon dioxide (CO 2).


a. Determine the theoretical yield of CO 2 if 235.0 g of
CaCO 3 is heated.
b. What is the percent yield of CO 2 if 97.5 g of CO 2 is
collected?
Chapter Test glencoe.com

CO(g)
Mass
Molar mass

CH 3OH(l)

8.52 g
28.01 g/mol

32.05 g/mol

Moles
96. Phosphorus (P 4) is commercially prepared by heating a

mixture of calcium phosphate (CaSiO 3), sand (SiO 2),


and coke (C) in an electric furnace. The process involves
two reactions.

2Ca 3(PO 4) 2(s) + 6SiO 2(s) 6CaSiO 3(l) + P 4O 10(g)


P 4O 10(g) + 10C(s) P 4(g) + 10CO(g)
The P 4O 10 produced in the first reaction reacts with an
excess of coke (C) in the second reaction. Determine
the theoretical yield of P 4 if 250.0 g of Ca 3(PO 4) 2 and
400.0 g of SiO 2 are heated. If the actual yield of P 4 is
45.0 g, determine the percent yield of P 4.
97. Chlorine forms from the reaction of hydrochloric acid

with manganese(IV) oxide. The balanced equation is:

MnO 2 + 4HCl MnCl 2 + Cl 2 + 2H 2O


Calculate the theoretical yield and the percent yield of
chlorine if 86.0 g of MnO 2 and 50.0 g of HCl react. The
actual yield of Cl 2 is 20.0 g.
Chapter 11 Assessment 395

Mixed Review

Think Critically

98. Ammonium sulfide reacts with copper(II) nitrate in a

104. Analyze and Conclude In an experiment, you obtain a

double replacement reaction. What mole ratio would


you use to determine the moles of NH 4NO 3 produced
if the moles of CuS are known?

percent yield of product of 108%. Is such a percent yield


possible? Explain. Assuming that your calculation is
correct, what reasons might explain such a result?

99. Fertilizer The compound calcium cyanamide

105. Observe and Infer Determine whether each reaction

(CaNCN) is used as a nitrogen source for crops. To


obtain this compound, calcium carbide is reacted with
nitrogen at high temperatures.

depends on a limiting reactant. Explain why or why not,


and identify the limiting reactant.
a. Potassium chlorate decomposes to form potassium
chloride and oxygen.
b. Silver nitrate and hydrochloric acid react to produce
silver chloride and nitric acid.

CaC 2(s) + N 2(g) CaNCN(s) + C(s)


What mass of CaNCN can be produced if 7.50 mol of
CaC 2 reacts with 5.00 mol of N 2?
100. When copper(II) oxide is heated in the presence of

106. Design an Experiment Design an experiment that can

be used to determine the percent yield of anhydrous


copper(II) sulfate when copper(II) sulfate pentahydrate
is heated to remove water.

hydrogen gas, elemental copper and water are produced.


What mass of copper can be obtained if 32.0 g of
copper(II) oxide is used?
101. Air Pollution Nitrogen oxide, which is present in

urban air pollution, immediately converts to nitrogen


dioxide as it reacts with oxygen.
a. Write the balanced chemical equation for the formation of nitrogen dioxide from nitrogen oxide.
b. What mole ratio would you use to convert from
moles of nitrogen oxide to moles of nitrogen dioxide?

107. Apply When a campfire begins to die down and

smolder, you can rekindle the flame by fanning the fire.


Explain, in terms of stoichiometry, why the fire again
begins to flare up when fanned.
108. Apply Students conducted a lab to investigate limiting

and excess reactants. The students added different


volumes of sodium phosphate solution (Na 3PO 4) to a
beaker. They then added a constant volume of cobalt(II)
nitrate solution (Co(NO 3) 2), stirred the contents, and
allowed the beakers to sit overnight. The next day, each
beaker had a purple precipitate at the bottom. The students decanted the supernatant from each beaker, divided it into two samples, and added one drop of sodium
phosphate solution to one sample and one drop of
cobalt(II) nitrate solution to the second sample. Their
results are shown in Table 11.5.
a. Write a balanced chemical equation for the reaction.
b. Based on the results, identify the limiting reactant
and the excess reactant for each trial.

102. Electrolysis Determine the theoretical and percent

yield of hydrogen gas if 36.0 g of water undergoes electrolysis to produce hydrogen and oxygen and 3.80 g of
hydrogen is collected.

Mass of Fe2O3 (g)

Mass of Fe2O3 Formed From Burning Fe


30
20
10

Table 11.5 Reaction Data for Co(NO 3) 2 and Na 3PO 4


0

10

15

20

25

30

35

Mass of Fe (g)

Volume
Na 3PO 4

5.0 mL

10.0 mL

purple
precipitate

no reaction

10.0 mL

10.0 mL

no reaction

purple
precipitate

15.0 mL

10.0 mL

no reaction

purple
precipitate

20.0 mL

10.0 mL

no reaction

purple
precipitate

Figure 11.15

103. Iron reacts with oxygen as shown.

Reaction
Reaction
Volume
with Drop of with Drop
Co(NO 3) 2
Na 3PO 4
of Co(NO 3) 2

Trial

4Fe(s) + 3O 2(g) 2Fe 2O 3(s)


Different amounts of iron were burned in a fixed
amount of oxygen. For each mass of iron burned, the
mass of iron(II) oxide formed was plotted on the graph
shown in Figure 11.15. Why does the graph level off
after 25.0 g of iron is burned? How many moles of
oxygen are present in the fixed amount?

396

Chapter 11 Stoichiometry

Chapter Test glencoe.com

Challenge Problem
109. When 9.59 g of a certain vanadium oxide is heated in

the presence of hydrogen, water and a new oxide of


vanadium are formed. This new vanadium oxide has a
mass of 8.76 g. When the second vanadium oxide
undergoes additional heating in the presence of hydrogen, 5.38 g of vanadium metal forms.
a. Determine the empirical formulas for the two
vanadium oxides.
b. Write balanced equations for the steps of the reaction.
c. Determine the mass of hydrogen needed to complete
the steps of this reaction.

Additional Assessment
Chemistry
116. Air Pollution Research the air pollutants produced

by combustion of gasoline in internal combustion


engines. Discuss the common pollutants and the
reaction that produces them. Show, through the use
of stoichiometry, how each pollutant could be
reduced if more people used mass transit.
117. Haber Process The percent yield of ammonia pro-

duced when hydrogen and nitrogen are combined


under ordinary conditions is extremely small.
However, the Haber Process combines the two gases
under a set of conditions designed to maximize yield.
Research the conditions used in the Haber Process,
and find out why the development of the process was
of great importance.

Cumulative Review
110. You observe that sugar dissolves more quickly in hot tea

than in iced tea. You state that higher temperatures


increase the rate at which sugar dissolves in water. Is this
statement a hypothesis or a theory? Why? (Chapter 1)

Document-Based Question

111. Write the electron configuration for each of the follow-

ing atoms. (Chapter 5)


a. fluorine
b. aluminum

c. titanium
d. radon

112. Explain why the gaseous nonmetals exist as diatomic

molecules, but other gaseous elements exist as single


atoms. (Chapter 8)
113. Write a balanced equation for the reaction of potassium

with oxygen. (Chapter 9)

Chemical Defense Many insects secrete hydrogen peroxide


(H 2O 2) and hydroquinone C 6H 4(OH) 2. Bombardier beetles
take this a step further by mixing these chemicals with a catalyst. The result is an exothermic chemical reaction and a
spray of hot, irritating chemicals for any would-be predator.
Researchers hope to use a similar method to reignite aircraft
turbine engines.
Figure 11.17 below shows the unbalanced chemical reaction

114. What is the molecular mass of UF 6? What is the molar

that results in the bombardier beetles defensive spray.

mass of UF 6? (Chapter 10)

Data obtained from: Becker, Bob. April 2006. ChemMatters. 24: no. 2.

%C
%H
%O 40.0

Percent by mass

52.2

50
40

53.3

54.5

+ H2O2

54.5

36.4

34.8

13.0

10
0

6.7

Ethanol

9.1

OH

C6H4(OH)2
Hydroquinone

C6H4O2
Benzoquinone

36.4

9.1

Formaldehyde Acetaldehyde Butanoic acid

Compound name

+ H2O + O2 + Energy
Catalyst

30
20

OH

Percent Composition of
Some Organic Compounds

Figure 11.16

115. Figure 11.16 gives percent composition data for several

organic compounds. (Chapter 10)


a. How are the molecular and empirical formulas of
acetaldehyde and butanoic acid related?
b. What is the empirical formula of butanoic acid?
Chapter Test glencoe.com

Figure 11.17

118. Balance the equation in Figure 11.17. If the

bombardier beetle stores 100.0 mg of hydroquinone


(C 6H 4(OH) 2) along with 50.0 mg of hydrogen peroxide (H 2O 2), what is the limiting reactant?
119. What is the excess reactant and how many milligrams

are in excess?
120. How many milligrams of benzoquinone will be

produced?
Chapter 11 Assessment 397

Cumulative

Standardized Test Practice


Multiple Choice
1. Stoichiometry is based on the law of
A. constant mole ratios.
B. Avogadros constant.
C. conservation of energy.
D. conservation of mass.
Use the graph below to answer Questions 2 to 5.
Supply of Various Chemicals
in Dr. Raitanos Laboratory

NaCl
700.0 g

Na2CO3
500.0 g
Ca(OH)2
300.0 g

AgNO3
100.0 g

KClO3
200.0 g

NaH2PO4
350.0 g

2NaH 2PO 4(s) Na 2H 2P 2O 7(s) + H 2O(g)


If 444.0 g of Na 2H 2P 2O 7 is needed, how much more
NaH 2PO 4 will Dr. Raitano have to buy to make
enough Na 2H 2P 2O 7?
A. 0.00 g
B. 94.0 g
C. 130.0 g
D. 480 g
6. Red mercury(II) oxide decomposes at high
temperatures to form mercury metal and oxygen gas.
2HgO(s) 2Hg(l) + O 2(g)

2. Pure silver metal can be made using the reaction


shown below.
Cu(s) + 2AgNO 3(aq) 2Ag(s) + Cu(NO 3) 2(aq)
How many grams of copper metal will be needed to
use up all of the AgNO 3 in Dr. Raitanos laboratory?
A. 18.70 g
C. 74.7 g
B. 37.3 g
D. 100 g
3. The LeBlanc process is the traditional method of
manufacturing sodium hydroxide. The equation for
this process is as follows.
Na2CO 3(aq) + Ca(OH) 2(aq) 2NaOH(aq) + CaCO 3(s)
Using the amounts of chemicals available in
Dr. Raitanos lab, what is the maximum number
of moles of NaOH that can be produced?
A. 4.05 mol
C. 8.097 mol
B. 4.72 mol
D. 9.43 mol
4. Pure O 2 gas can be generated from the decomposition of potassium chlorate (KClO 3):
2KClO 3(s) 2KCl(s) + 3O 2(g)
If half of the KClO 3 in the lab is used and 12.8 g of
oxygen gas is produced, what is the percent yield of
this reaction?
A. 12.8%
C. 65.6%
B. 32.7%
D. 98.0%
398

5. Sodium dihydrogen pyrophosphate (Na 2H 2P 2O 7),


more commonly known as baking powder, is
manufactured by heating NaH 2PO 4 to a high
temperature.

Chapter 11 Assessment

If 3.55 mol of HgO decomposes to form 1.54 mol


of O 2 and 618 g of Hg, what is the percent yield of
this reaction?
A. 13.2%
B. 42.5%
C. 56.6%
D. 86.8%
Use the diagram below to answer Questions 7 and 8.
PERIODIC TABLE
18

Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y

13 14 15 16 17

W W
Y
Y 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 W W
Y Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z W W
Y Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z W W
Y Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z W W

W
W
W
W
W

W
W
W
W
W

W
W
W
W
W

Y
W
W
W
W
W

Y Y Z Z Z
X X X X X X X X X X X X X X
X X X X X X X X X X X X X X

7. Which elements tend to have the largest atomic


radius in their periods?
A. W
C. Y
B. X
D. Z
8. Elements labeled W have their valence electrons in
which sublevel?
A. s
C. d
B. p
D. f
Standardized Test Practice glencoe.com

Short Answer

SAT Subject Test: Chemistry

9. Dimethyl hydrazine (CH 3) 2N 2H 2 ignites on


contact with dinitrogen tetroxide (N 2O 4).
(CH 3) 2N 2H 2(l) + 2N 2O 4(l)
3N 2(g) + 4H 2O(g) + 2CO 2(g)
Because this reaction produces an enormous
amount of energy from a small amount of reactants,
it was used to drive the rockets on the Lunar
Excursion Modules (LEMs) of the Apollo space
program. If 18.0 mol of dinitrogen tetroxide is consumed in this reaction, how many moles of nitrogen
gas will be released?

12. How much cobalt(III) titanate (CO 2TiO 4), in


moles, is in 7.13 g of the compound?
A. 2.39 10 1 mol
B. 3.10 10 -2 mol
C. 3.22 10 1 mol
D. 4.17 10 -2 mol
E. 2.28 10 -2 mol
Use the pictures below to answer Questions 13 to 17.
A.

D.

B.

E.

Extended Response
Use the table below to answer Questions 10 and 11.
First Ionization Energy of Period 3 Elements

Element

Atomic Number

1st Ionization
Energy, kJ/mol

Sodium

11

496

Magnesium

12

736

Aluminum

13

578

Silicon

14

787

Phosphorus

15

1012

Selenium

16

1000

Chlorine

17

1251

Argon

18

1521

C.

13. Hydrogen sulfide displays this molecular shape.


14. Molecules with this shape have four shared pairs of
electrons and no lone pairs of electrons.

10. Plot the data from this data table. Place atomic
numbers on the x-axis.

15. This molecular shape is known as trigonal planar.


11. Summarize the general trend in ionization energy.
How does ionization energy relate to the number of
valence electrons in an element?

16. Carbon dioxide displays this molecular shape.


17. This molecular shape undergoes sp 2 hybridization.

NEED EXTRA HELP?


If You Missed
Question . . .

Review Section . . . 11.1

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

11.2

11.2

11.4

11.3

11.4

6.3

5.3

11.2

6.3

6.3

10.3

8.4

8.4

8.4

8.4

8.4

Standardized Test Practice glencoe.com

Chapter 11 Assessment 399

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