Using
english to calculate
Stoichiometry
is the basic chemical calculation that states quantitative relation of chemical
formulas and chemical equations. Here are the materials you need to know to
understand, from the concept of moles and molar masses, empirical formulas and
molecular formulas, basic stoichiometry of solutions and ideal gases, and the
writing and equalization of reactions, with examples of problems and
discussions.
A. CHEMICAL BASIC LAW
Chemistry
is a part of natural science that studies matter that includes the composition,
nature, and change of matter and energy that accompanies material changes.
Careful research on reagents and reaction products has spawned basic chemical
laws that show a quantitative or so-called stoichiometric relationship.
Stoichiometry comes from the Greek word, stoicheon which means element and
metrain which means measure. In other words, stoichiometry is a chemical
calculation involving the quantitative relation of substances involved in the
reaction. These basic chemical laws are the law of mass conservation, the law
of fixed comparison, the law of volume comparison, and the law of multiple
comparisons. The basic laws of chemistry are our foundation in studying and
developing the next chemistry.
1. The law of
conservation of the masses (LAVOISIER
LAW)
At
the beginning of the eighteenth century, chemists in their attempts to learn
the heat and burning found a very strange thing. For example, if wood is
burned, it will produce ash residue (solid) which is much lighter than the
original wood. However, if the metal is burned in the free air, it will produce
heavier oxide than the original metal. To answer the strangeness, chemists
developed a method of experimentation carefully by using chemical balances in
measuring the volume or mass of gases, liquids and solids that occur in
chemical reactions. Therefore, the mass of the reactants and the reaction
product can be measured carefully. The results of these experiments present the
facts to the observer and demand them into the formulation of the fundamental
law that describes the nature of chemistry. The basic law obtained is known as
the law of conservation of mass, which is as follows.
'' Mass can not be created nor destroyed in any material
change. ''
The basic legal facts of mass conservation have been
proven in 1756 by the Russian scientist M.V. Lomonosov. Perhaps because of
language problems, his work is not well known in Western Europe. Separately in
1783, a great French chemist Antoine Lavoisier did the same thing using a
chemical balance to show that the sum of the mass of chemical reactions was
equal to the amount of reactant mass.
Lavoisier conducts experiments by heating the
mrerkuri in a sealed flask filled with air. After a few days, a red substance
is formed that is mercury (II) oxide. The gas in the mass tube is reduced and
can no longer support the burning (the candle in the tube does not fire
anymore) and the animal will die if it is inserted into it. It shows that the oxygen
gas in the tube is gone. It is now known that the remaining gas is nitrogen,
while the oxygen from the air in the tube has run out with mercury.
Furthermore, Lavoisier takes the mercury oxide and heats it up so it breaks
down again. Then he weighed the mercury and the resulting gas. It turns out
that the combined mass is equal to the mass of mercury (II) oxide used
initially. Finally after several experiments and the results are the same,
Lavoisier states the law of conservation of mass that is as follows.
'' In every chemical reaction, the mass of
substances before and after the reaction is always the same. ''
Lavoisier
was the first to observe that chemical reactions are analogous to algebraic
equations.
Example:
S (s) + O2
(g) → SO2 (g)
1 mol of S reacts with 1 mole O2 to form 1 mole of
SO2. 32 grams of S reacts with 32 grams of O2 forming 64 grams of SO2. The
total mass of the reactants is equal to the mass of the resulting product.
H2 (g) + ½ O2
(g) → H2O (l)
1 mole of H2 reacts with ½ moles of O2 forming 1
mole of H2O. 2 grams of H2 reacts with 16 grams of O2 forming 18 grams of H2O.
The total mass of the reactants is equal to the mass of the product formed.
2. PROUST LAW OR COMPARATIVE LAW
In
1799 the French chemist Joseph Proust, through various experiments found a
provision that was validated by Proust's law, as follows.
"The mass ratio of the constituent elements is
always fixed, even if it is made in a different way"
At
that time Proust discovered that copper carbonate, both from natural and
synthetic sources in the laboratory, had a fixed arrangement.
To
determine the composition of a compound, we can describe an example of the
compound we have weighed, then the compounds are described into their elements.
Each compound-forming element we weigh, it was obtained a certain comparison.
If it is repeated, it will get the same comparison. Another method can also be
done, namely by weighing the mass of compounds formed from the compounds of
elements that each element is known mass. Of the many experiments on the
composition of elements in the compound, always produce the following
statement.
"A pure compound is always composed of fixed
elements with a fixed mass ratio."
Example:
S (s) + O2 (g) → SO2 (g)
The
ratio of mass S to mass of O2 to form SO2 is 32 grams S to 32 grams of O2 or 1:
1. This means that every gram of S just reacts with one gram of O2 forming 2
grams of SO2. If 50 grams of S is required, 50 graM O2 is required to form 100
gra-SO2.
H2 (g) + ½ O2 (g) → H2O (l)
The
ratio of mass of H2 to mass of O2 to form H2O is 2 gram H2 to 16 gram O2 or 1 2
8. This means, Every one gram of H2 is precisely bersiKsi with 8 gram O2 form 9
gram H2O. If provided 24 grams of O2, it takes 1 gram of H2 to form 27 grams of
H2O.
3. COMPARATIVE LAW
John
Dalton's interest in studying two elements that can form more than one compound
turns out to produce a conclusion called the law of multiple comparison:
'' If two elements can form more than one compound,
then the ratio of the mass of the one element, which is intertwined with
another particular element of its mass is a simple integer ''.
For example, copper with oxygen, carbon with oxygen,
sulfur with oxyeen, and phosphorus with chlorine. The mass ratio of the two
elements is as follows.
1. Copper and oxygen form two copper oxide
compounds.
Copper oxide copper oxygen copper: oxygen
I
88.8% 11.2% 1: 0.126
I
79.9% 20.1% 1: 0.252
2. Carbon and oxygen can form two compounds
Carbon + oxygen → Carbon monoxide (I)
Carbon + oxygen → Carbon diocide (II)
Carbon oxygen carbon compound: oxygen
I 42.8% 57.2% 1: 1.33
II 27.3% 72.7% 1: 2,67
3. Sulfur with oxigan can form two oxygen compounds,
namely sulfur oxide (I) and sulfur trioxide (II)
Sulfur oxygen sulfur compounds: oxygen
I 50% 50% 1: 1
II 40% 60% 1: 1,5
Up to now this law is still acceptable, but needs to
be corrected on simple numbers. If the comparison is a simple number (1, 2, 3,
4, 5) means the compound formula is also simple, such as H2O, CO2, and H2SO4.
However, now found compounds with large numbers, such as sucrose and
arachidonic acid.
4. COMPARATIVE LAW VOLUME
The
relationship between the volumes of the gases in a chemical reaction was
investigated by Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac in 1905. In the study it was found that
at a constant temperature and pressure, every single volume of oxygen gas would
react with two volumes of hydrogen gas yielding two volumes Water vapor, thus
the ratio between the volume of hydrogen, the volume of oxygen and the volume
of water vapor in sequence is 2: 1: 2. Another example: one volume of hydrogen
gas will react with one volume of chlorine gas yielding two volumes of hydrogen
chloride gas; The ratio of hydrogen volume, chlorine volume and volume of
hydrogen chloride sequence is 1: 1: 2. In the reaction between the nitrogen gas
and the hydrogen gas forming the ammonium gas, the volume ratio of the three
gases is 1: 3: 2 (N2: H2: NH3).
Based on the above description, it can be concluded
that:
"At the same temperature and pressure, the
ratio of reactant gas volume to the gas volume of the reaction product is a
simple integer (equal to the ratio of the reaction coefficient)"
Example:
N2 (g) + 3 H2 (g) → 2 NH3 (g)
The gas volume ratio is equal to the ratio of the
reaction coefficient. This means that every 1 mL of N2 gas exactly reacts with
3 mL of H2 gas to form 2 mL of NH3 gas. Thus, to obtain 50 L of NH 3 gas, it
takes 25 L of N2 gas and 75 L of H2 gas.
CO (g) + H2O (g) → CO2 (g) + H2 (g)
The gas volume ratio is equal to the ratio of the
reaction coefficient. This means that every 1 mL of CO gas reacts exactly with
1 mL of H2O gas to form 1 mL of CO2 gas and 1 mL of H2 gas. Thus, as much as 4
L of CO gas requires 4 L of H2O gas to form 4 L of CO2 gas and 4 L of H2 gas.
B. AVOGADRO LAW
Avogadro's
Law (Hypotes Avogadro, or Avogadro's Principle) is a gas law named after the
Italian scientist Amedeo Avogadro, who in 1811 proposed the hypothesis that:
Gases of the same volume, at the same temperature
and pressure, have the same number of particles.
That
is, the number of molecules or atoms in a gas volume does not depend on the
size or mass of the gas molecule. For example, 1 liter of hydrogen and nitrogen
gas will contain the same number of molecules, as long as the temperature and
pressure are the same. This aspect can be expressed mathematically,
Where:
V = is the volume of gas.
n = is the number of moles in the gas.
K = is a matching constant.
The
most important consequence of Avogadro's law is that the ideal gas constant has
the same value for all gases. That is, constants
Where:
P = is the gas pressure
T = is temperature
Has
the same value for all gases, independent of the size or mass of the gas
molecule. The Avogadro hypothesis is evidenced by the theory of gas kinetics.
One
mole of ideal gas has a 22.4 liters volume under standard conditions (STP), and
this number is often called the ideal gas molar volume. Real gases (non-ideal)
have different values.
Example: On the formation of H2O molecules
2L H2 (g) + 1L O2 (g) ® 2L H2O (g)
2 molecule H2 1 molecule O2 2 molecule H2O
Note:
If the volume and number of molecules of one
substance is known, then the volume and number of molecules of other substances
can be determined by using the equation:
and
Information :
V = volume of molecule (L)
X = number of particles (molecules)
C. MASS ATOM AND MASS MOLECULES RELATIVES
The
atom is a very small particle so that the atomic mass is also too small when
expressed in grams. Therefore, chemists create a way to measure the mass of an
atom, that is, by the relative atomic mass. The relative atomic mass (Ar) is
the ratio of the average mass of an atom by one-twelve times the mass of one
carbon-12 atom.
The
smallest unit of a substance can also be a molecule. The molecule is composed
of two or more atoms held together by chemical bonds. The relative molecular
mass (Mr) is the average mass ratio of a molecule with one-twelve times the
mass of one carbon-12 atom.
Ar Y = the average mass of 1 molecule Y / (1/12 x
mass 1 atom C-12)
In
the above formula used the atomic mass and average molecular mass. Why use
average atomic mass? Because elements in nature have several isotopes. For
example, carbon in nature has 2 stable isotopes of C-12 (98.93%) and C-13
(1.07%). If the abundance and mass of each isotope are known, the relative
atomic mass of an element can be calculated by the formula:
Ar
X = {(% isotope 1 x isotope mass 1) + (% isotope 2 x isotope mass 2) + ...} /
100
If
it is known that the relative atomic mass of each constituent element of a
molecule, its relative molecular mass is equal to the sum of the relative
atomic masses of all the molecular compounds of the atom. A molecule having the
formula AmBn means that in 1 molecule there are m atoms A and n atoms B. Thus
the relative molecular mass of AmBn can be calculated as follows.
Mr AmBn = m x Ar A + n x Ar B
D. CONCEPT MOL
In
reacting substances, many things we need to consider eg the form of substances
in the form of gas, liquid and solid. It is quite difficult for us to react the
substances in the three states of matter, in solid form by size in mass
(grams), in liquid form by volume of liquids in which there is a solvent and
there is a dissolved substance. Similarly, the gaseous material has a gas
volume size.
This
condition requires chemists to provide a new unit that can reflect the amount
of substances in various substances. Avogadro tries to introduce a new unit
called mole. The definition for 1 (one) mole is the number of substances
containing particles of 6.023 x 1023. This number is known as Avogadro Numbers
denoted by the letter N.
The
above diagram shows the equation which states the relationship of the number of
moles to the number of particles for atoms and molecules
Considering
the mass aspect of the substance, 1 mol of the substance is defined as the mass
of the substance corresponding to its relative molecular mass (Mr) or its
atomic mass (Ar).
For
1 mole of Carbon substance it has mass corresponding to Carbon atomic mass, it
is known from the periodic table that the mass of carbon atoms is 12 sma, so
that the mass of the substance is also 12 grams. For that 1 mole of matter we
can change into equation form:
Number of Moles (n)
Mass (m)
Volume Gas (V)
Number of Particles (X)
Mollification (M)
E. EMPIRICAL AND MOLECULUM FORMULAS
The
chemical formula of a substance can explain or state the relative amount of
atoms present in the substance. The chemical formula is divided into molecular
formulas and empirical formulas. The empirical formula is the simplest formula
of a compound. This formula only expresses the ratio of the number of atoms
present in the molecule.
The
empirical formula of a compound can be determined if one knows:
- mass and Ar each element
-% mass and Ar each element
- comparison of mass and Ar of each element
The
molecular formula of a substance describes the number of atoms of each element
in a single molecule of that substance. When the empirical formula is known and
Mr. is also known then the molecular formula can be determined.
Solubility (M)
Moarning
is a way of expressing the concentration (concentration) of the solution. Declares the number of moles of solute in each
liter of solution, or the number of mmol of solute in each mL of solution. Formulated:
For example: a 0.2 M NaCl solution means that in
each liter of solution there is 0.2 mol (= 11.7 g) NaCl or in each mL of
solution there is 0.2 mmol (= 11.7 mg) NaCl.
Dilution formula
V1.M1 = V2.M2
V1 = Volume before dilution (liter)
M1 = Molarity before dilution (M)
V2 = Volume after dilution (liter)
M2 = Molarity after dilution (M)
F. MOLALITY
The
molality mentions the mole ratio of the solute in kilograms of solvent.
Molality is expressed between the number of moles of solute and the mass in kg
of solvent. What is the symbol of the molality of matter? Molality is symbolized
by m
with
n = number of moles of solute
........................ (mole)
p = solvent mass
..................................... (kg)
m = molality
......................................... (mol Kg-1)
G. FRACTION MOL
The
mole fraction is a unit of concentration that expresses the ratio of the number
of moles of one of the solution components (the number of moles of solvent or
the number of moles of solute) to the total number of moles of the solution.
The mole fraction is symbolized by X. For example in a solution containing only
two components, namely substance B as a solute and A as a solvent, then the
fraction of mole A is symbolized XA and XB for the mole fraction of the solute.
or
With XA = solvent mole fraction
XB = mole fraction of solute
nA = number of moles of solvent
nB = the number of moles of solute
The amount of solvent mole fraction with solute is
equal to 1.
XA + XB = 1
How many grams of water vapor mass of 5.6 liters at STP (Ar H = 1, O = 16) ?
BalasHapusTo calculate how many grams of 5.6 liters of water vapor in the STP state (Ar H = 1, O = 16)
HapusWe have to find the mole and then connect it to the STP divided volume so that the equation can be written:
N = gr / mr = V / 22.4
Gr / 18 = 5,6 / 22,4 L
Gr = 18 x 5.6 / 22.4 = 4.5
boron in nature has two isotopes, the B-10 with an atomic mass of 10 amu as much has 20% and the B-11 with an atomic mass of 11 amu as much as 80%. what is the average mass of one atom B?
BalasHapusFor example the abundance of Cu-63 = x, then the abundance of Cu-65 = (100-x)
HapusThen look for the value of x by using the formula
Ar Cu = A1. P1 + A2.P2 / P1 + P2
63.5 = 63.x + 65. (100-x) / 100 = 63x + 6500 - 65x / 100 = -2x + 6500/100
6350-6500 = -2x
X = -150 / -2 = 75
Then the abundance of Cu-63 is 75% and the abundance of Cu-65 is 25%
count the number of particles of 2 grams of H2 gas (Ar H=1)?
BalasHapusTo calculate the number of particles of 2 grams of gas H2 (Ar H = 1)
HapusFirst we must know the moles of H2 gas mol = gram / mr.
n = gr / mr = 2 / 2x1 = 1
Then to calculate the number of particles then mole is multiplied by the avogadro number.
Number of particles = n x avogadro number = 1 x 6.02 x 10^23
So the number of H2 gas particles is 6.02 x 10^23