1 / 12

Highland Science Department Mass Relationships in Chemical Equations

Highland Science Department Mass Relationships in Chemical Equations. Highland Science Department Mass Relationships in Chemical Equations Mole Ratio: indicates the relationship between the number of moles of different chemicals used or produced in chemical reactions.

maya
Télécharger la présentation

Highland Science Department Mass Relationships in Chemical Equations

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. Highland Science Department Mass Relationships in Chemical Equations

  2. Highland Science Department Mass Relationships in Chemical Equations Mole Ratio: indicates the relationship between the number of moles of different chemicals used or produced in chemical reactions

  3. Highland Science Department Mass Relationships in Chemical Equations Mole Ratio: indicates the relationship between the number of moles of different chemicals used or produced in chemical reactions -comes from the coefficients of a balanced chemical equation

  4. Highland Science Department Mass Relationships in Chemical Equations e.g. N2(g)+H2(g) NH3(g)

  5. Highland Science Department Mass Relationships in Chemical Equations e.g. N2(g)+3H2(g) 2NH3(g)

  6. Highland Science Department Mass Relationships in Chemical Equations e.g. N2(g) + 3H2(g) 2NH3(g) mole ratios: 1 mol N2 or 3 mol H2 3 mol H2 2 mol NH3

  7. Highland Science Department Mass Relationships in Chemical Equations e.g. N2(g)+3H2(g) 2NH3(g) mole ratios: 1 mol N2 or 3 mol H2 3 mol H2 2 mol NH3 -knowledge of chemical equations and moles can be used to calculate mass relationships among the substances involved in a chemical reaction

  8. Highland Science Department Mass Relationships in Chemical Equations

  9. Highland Science Department Mass Relationships in Chemical Equations e.g. 1. How many moles of oxygen are required to react with 9.7 g of magnesium to produce magnesium oxide?

  10. Highland Science Department Mass Relationships in Chemical Equations e.g. 1. How many moles of oxygen are required to react with 9.7 g of magnesium to produce magnesium oxide? answer: 0.20 moles e.g. 2. How many grams of KClO3 must be decomposed to give 0.96g of oxygen?

  11. Highland Science Department Mass Relationships in Chemical Equations e.g. 1. How many moles of oxygen are required to react with 9.7 g of magnesium to produce magnesium oxide? answer: 0.20 moles e.g. 2. How many grams of KClO3 must be decomposed to give 0.96g of oxygen? answer: 2.5 g e.g. 3. If 6.80 g of ammonia is used in the following reaction, what mass of oxygen is required to consume all the ammonia? NH3 + O2 NO + H2O

  12. Highland Science Department Mass Relationships in Chemical Equations e.g. 1. How many moles of oxygen are required to react with 9.7 g of magnesium to produce magnesium oxide? answer: 0.20 moles e.g. 2. How many grams of KClO3 must be decomposed to give 0.96g of oxygen? answer: 2.5 g e.g. 3. If 6.80 g of ammonia is used in the following reaction, what mass of oxygen is required to consume all the ammonia? NH3 + O2 NO + H2O answer: 16.0 g

More Related