Chemical Reaction
Chemical Reaction
Chemical Reaction
and
Stoichiometry
Equations for chemical reactions
➢ A chemical change occurs when a substance is converted into one or more
new substances.
➢ A chemical reaction always involves chemical change because atoms of the
reacting substances form new combinations with new properties.
➢ In chemistry, a chemical equation tells us the materials we need and the
products that will form in a chemical reaction
Writing a Chemical Equation
Suppose you work in a bicycle shop assembling wheels and frames into bicycles.
You could represent this process by a simple equation:
3. Check that the equation is balanced, for each type of atom in turn.
❖ a balanced equation, in order to have the same number of atoms for each
element in the reactants as in the products.
❖ In the balanced equation, there are whole numbers called coefficients in
front of the formulas.
Make sure you do not change any formulae.
Example :
➢ Hydrogen and nitrogen react to form ammonia, NH3.
The balanced equation is written as : 3H2(g) + N2(g) → 2NH3(g)
a. Identify the coefficient for H2, N2, and NH3 in the balanced equation.
3H2(g) + 1N2(g) → 2NH3(g)
b. Calculate the number of atoms for each element in the reactants and
products
3H2(g) + 1N2(g) → 2NH3(g)
3x2 1x2 2x1 2x3
6H 2N = 2N 6H
Question and Problem
01. Balance each of the following chemical equations:
a. Fe2O3(s) + CO(g) → Fe(s) + CO2(g)
b. Li3N(s) → Li(s) + N2(g)
c. Al(s) + HBr(aq) → AlBr3(aq) + H2(g)
d. Ba(OH)2(aq) + Na3PO4(aq)→ Ba3(PO4)2(s) + NaOH(aq)
e. As4S6(s) + O2(g) → As4O6(s) + SO2(g)
02. Write a balanced equation using the correct formulas and include conditions
(s, l, g, or aq) for each of the following chemical reactions:
a. Lithium metal reacts with liquid water to form hydrogen gas and aqueous
lithium hydroxide.
b. Solid phosphorus reacts with chlorine gas to form solid phosphorus
pentachloride.
c. Solid iron(II) oxide reacts with carbon monoxide gas to form solid iron and
carbon dioxide gas.
d. Liquid pentene (C5H10) burns in oxygen gas to form carbon dioxide gas
and water vapor.
e. Hydrogen sulfide gas and solid iron(III) chloride react to form solid
iron(III) sulfide and hydrogen chloride gas.
f. Solid sodium carbonate decomposes to produce solid sodium oxide and
carbon dioxide gas.
g. Nitrogen oxide gas reacts with carbon monoxide gas to produce nitrogen
gas and carbon dioxide gas.
h. Iron metal reacts with solid sulfur to produce solid iron(III) sulfide.
i. Solid calcium reacts with nitrogen gas to produce solid calcium nitride.
j. In the Apollo lunar module, hydrazine gas, N2H4, reacts with dinitrogen
tetroxide gas to produce gaseous nitrogen and water vapor
Thus,
1 mol of carbon-12 contains 6.02 X 1023 carbon-12 atoms
1 mol of H20 contains 6.02 X 1023 H2O molecules
1 mol of NaCI contains 6.02 X 1023 NaCl formula units
➢ The mass of 1 mole of an element or compound is its relative atomic mass
(Ar) or relative molecular mass (Mr) expressed in grams.
An amount of substance is measured in moles.
mass of substance
number of moles =
Mr
Stoichiometry
➢ The fundamental principle of chemical stoichiometry is that the
amount(moles) of a reaction product that forms is proportional to the
amount of a reactant that reacts.
➢ The stoichiometric coefficients indicate the number of molecules of each
reactant that reacts and the number of molecules of each product that forms.
➢ The stoichiometric coefficients also indicate the amount (moles) of each
reactant that reacts and the amount of each product that forms.
➢ The stoichiometric coefficients in a balanced chemical equation can be used
to obtain mole ratios. A mole ratio (stoichiometric factor) is a
proportionality factor that relates the amount of one substance in the
equation to the amount of another.
➢ Mole ratios are significant because we can use them to calculate the amount
of one reactant or product from the amount of another reactant or product
➢ For example, we can calculate the amount of N2, n(N2), produced when 0.400
mol N2H4 reacts fully with N2O4. The reaction is :
N2O4 + 2N2H4 → 3N2 + 4H2O
0.400 mol ~ 32 ∙0.400 mol
= 0.600 mol
Limiting reactant
➢ A limiting reactant is a reactant that is completely converted to products.
➢ Once the limiting reactant has all been converted to products there is none of
it left to react. Thus the limiting reactant limits the amounts of products that
form. Consequently, the amount(s) of product(s) formed is(are) always
determined (limited) by the initial amount of the limiting reactant.
Calculating Percentage Yield
➢ The amount of product made duringan experiment is called the experimental
yield.
➢ The amount you expect to make from your mathematical calculatations is
theoretocal yield
➢ Experimental yield is often significantly less than the theorerical yield.