Chemistry - Ch 3 Flashcards

1
Q

Stoichiometry

A

Area of study that examines the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions (from the Greek, stocheion “element” & metron “measure”)

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2
Q

Chemical equations

A

way to represent chemical reactions concisely

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3
Q

Reactants

A

starting substances in a chemical reaction

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4
Q

Products

A

substances produced in a chemical reaction

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5
Q

Coefficients

A

Numbers in front of a chemical formula

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6
Q

Combination reactions

A

2 or more substances react to form one product

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7
Q

Decomposition reaction

A

One substance undergoes a reaction to produce 2 or more other substances; common when heated

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8
Q

Combustion reactions

A

rapid reactions that produce a flame

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9
Q

Oxidation reactions

A

reactions that involve intermediate steps (like in the human body)

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10
Q

Quantitative significance

A

numbers in chemical formulas and chemical equations represent precise quantities

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11
Q

Formula weight

A

sum of the atomic weights of each atom in its chemical formula

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12
Q

Molecular weight

A

another name for formula weight if the chemical formula is that of a molecule

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13
Q

Formula units

A

because ionic substances exist as 3D arrays of ions, it’s inappropriate to call molecules; represented by the chemical formula of the substance (Ex. NaCl = 1 formula unit)

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14
Q

Percentage composition

A

percentage by mass contributed by each element in the substance; % element = (# atoms of that element)(atomic weight of each element)/(formula weight of the compound) x 100%

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15
Q

Mole (mol)

A

amount of matter that contains as many objects as the number of atoms in exactly 12g of isotopically pure Carbon12 (6.0221421 x 10^23)

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16
Q

Avogadro’s number (N subscript A)

A

6.0221421 x 10^23 (rounded = 6.02 x 10^23)

17
Q

The mass of a single atom of an element (in amu) is numerically _____ to the mass (in grams) of 1mol of that element

A

equal

18
Q

Molar mass

A

the mass in grams of one mole of a substance; the molar mass (in g/mol) of any substance is always numerically equal to its formula weight (in amu)

19
Q

The ratio of the number of moles in each element in a compound gives the _____ in a compound’s empirical formula

A

subscripts; percent to mass, mass to mole, divide by small (divide by smallest number of moles to find whole numbers), multiply til whole (mass % elements –> (assume 100g sample) grams of each element –> use molar mass to figure moles of each element –> calculate mole ratio (finds empirical formula)

20
Q

Whole number multiple formula

A

molecular weight/empirical formula weight

21
Q

Empirical

A

“based on observation and experiment”

22
Q

The coefficients in a balanced chemical equation indicate both the relative number of _____ in the reaction & the relative number of _______.

A

Molecules (formula units); moles

22
Q

Combustion analysis

A

experimental technique to determine empirical formulas; commonly used for compounds principally containing carbon and hydrogen as their component elements

23
Q

Limiting reactant/reagent

A

Reactant that is completely consumed in a reaction; limits the amount of product formed

24
Q

Theoretical yield

A

Quantity of product that is calculated to form when all of the limiting reactant reacts

25
Q

Actual yield

A

Amount of product obtained in a reaction

26
Q

Percent yield

A

Actual yield compared to theoretical; % yield = actual yield/theoretical yield x 100%