1 / 12

Warm-Up

Warm-Up. Write the formulas that go with the following names: Tricarbon Pentaoxide Osmium (III) Sulfide Magnesium Nitride Dinitrogen Tetraoxide. Chemistry: Empirical and Molecular Formulas. Unit Five, Day Six Kimrey 18 October 2012. Empirical Formula and Molecular Formula.

Télécharger la présentation

Warm-Up

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

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Warm-Up • Write the formulas that go with the following names: • TricarbonPentaoxide • Osmium (III) Sulfide • Magnesium Nitride • DinitrogenTetraoxide

  2. Chemistry:Empirical and Molecular Formulas Unit Five, Day Six Kimrey 18 October 2012

  3. Empirical Formula and Molecular Formula • Empirical formula is the simplest chemical formula • Ex. CH4 • Molecular formula is the chemical formula that can be reduced. • Molecular Formula- the formula for a compound in which the subscripts give the actual number of each element in the formulas it truly exists. • Ex. C2H8

  4. Notice two things: 1. The molecular formula and the empirical formula can be identical. 2. You scale up from the empirical formula to the molecular formula by a whole number factor.

  5. Calculating the empirical formula from the percent composition • Steps • Assume the percent = grams. • Convert each amount of grams to moles. • Divide each number of moles by the smallest number of moles. • If all the numbers are not whole numbers, multiple everything by a number that will get you a whole number. (This may take a few tries!) • The whole numbers become subscripts in the formula.

  6. Percent to mass • Mass to mole • Divide by small • Multiply ‘til whole

  7. Example • A compound is 32.38% sodium, 22.65% sulfur, and 44.99% oxygen. What is the empirical formula?

  8. Example 2 • A compound is 40.0% Carbon; 6.71% Hydrogen; 53.29% Oxygen. What is its empirical formula?

  9. Practice • 89.94% C; the rest is H • 56.34% P; 43.66% O   • 43.64% P; 56.36% O   • 40.9% C; 4.58% H; 54.5% O  

  10. Now, finding the molecular formula • Find the empirical formula • Calculate the molar mass (formula mass) • Divide the given mass of the substance by the molar mass • Multiply each subscript of the empirical formula by the answer to #3

  11. Example • You have 56.106 grams of a substance with an empirical formula of CH2. What is the molecular formula?

  12. CuSO4 ● 5H2O • MgSO4 ● 7H2O • SnCl2 ● 2H2O • Na2CO3 ● 10H2O

More Related