Atoms and moles Flashcards

1
Q

What is empirical formula?

A

The simplest whole number ratio of atoms of each element in a compound.

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2
Q

What is molecular formula?

A

The actual number of atoms in each type of element in a molecule.
It is made up of a whole number of empirical units.

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3
Q

How do you calculate molecular formula?

A

Find the empirical mass.
Divide the molecular mass by the empirical mass.
Multiply the empirical formula by that number to find the molecular formula.

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4
Q

How can you calculate the mass of reactants when there is only one?

A

Mass of reactant A = mass of product - mass of reactant B.
Then you can find out the moles of each reactant used.

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5
Q

How do you calculate empirical formula from percentage compositions?

A

Turn the percentages into masses.
The masses to mole.
Divide each number of moles by the smallest number to give the ratio of elements.

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6
Q

How do you calculate molecular formula from empirical formula?

A

Molar mass / mass of empirical formula
This tells the factor you need to scale the empirical formula up by to get the molecular formula.

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7
Q

How do you calculate mass of product from reactant?

A

Write out the balanced equation for the reaction.
Use the molar ratio from the balanced equation to work out the number of moles of product that will be formed from this much reactant.
Calculate the mass of that many moles of product.

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8
Q

What is relative molecular mass?

A

Mr compares the mass of a molecule with the mass of an atom of carbon-12.
Add up the relative atomic masses of the elements making up the molecule.
Relative formula mass is the mass of a formula unit compared to an atom.

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9
Q

What do all salts have?

A

All solid salts consist of a lattice of positive and negative ions.
In some salts water molecules are incorporated in the lattice too.

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10
Q

What are hydrated salts?

A

A solid salt containing water of crystallisation.

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11
Q

What are anhydrous salts?

A

The salt doesn’t contain water of crystallisation in the lattice.

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12
Q

How do you calculate the formula of hydrated salts?

A

Find the mass of water lost by taking the mass of the anhydrous salt from the mass of hydrated salt.
Find the number of moles of water lost.
Find the number of moles of anhydrous salt produced.
Work out the ratio of anydrous salt to moles of water.
Scale so the ratio is in the form of 1:n and round the answer.

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13
Q

What assumptions are made for experimental formula of hydrated salts?

A
  • All of the water has been lost, when in reality some might remain inside the crystals. Heating until the mass does not change suggests no water remains.
  • No further decomposition, many salts decompose further when heated, which can be difficult to judge if there is no colour change.
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14
Q

What is reaction stoichiometry?

A

This tells you the ratios of reactants to products, i.e. how many moles of a product are formed from a certain number of moles of reactant.

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15
Q

What is percentage error?

A

Percentage error = uncertainty / reading x 100

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16
Q

What is theoretical mass?

A

The mass of product that should be formed in a chemical reaction.
It assumes no chemicals are lost in the process.

17
Q

How do you calculate theoretical mass?

A

Work out how many moles of the limiting reagent you have.
Use the equation to work out how many moles of product you would expect that much reactant to make.
Calculate the mass of that many moles of product.

18
Q

Why is actual yield always less than theoretical yield?

A

Sometimes not all the starting chemicals react fully.
Some chemicals are lost e.g. left on the filter paper or lost during transfers between containers.

19
Q

How do you calculate percentage yield?

A

Percentage yield = actual yield / theoretical yield x 100

20
Q

What is atom economy?

A

The proportion of reactant atoms that become part of the desired product in the balanced chemical equation.

21
Q

How is atom economy calculated?

A

% atom economy = molecular mass of desired product / sum of molecular masses of all product x 100

22
Q

What are addition reactions?

A

The reactants combine to form a single product.
The atom economy is 100% since no atoms are wasted.

23
Q

What are substitution reactions?

A

Some atoms from one reactant are swapped with atoms from another reactant.
This results in at least 2 products - the desired and by-products.
So atom economy is less than 100%.

24
Q

What are the environmental benefits of high atom economy reactions?

A

Reactions with low atom economies are less sustainable.
Many raw materials are in limited supply, so should be used efficiently to make them last.
It is better for the environment if less waste is produced.

25
Q

What are the economical benefits of high atom economy reactions?

A

A low atom economy means lots of waste produced.
It costs money to separate the desired product from the waste produced and more money to dispose of the waste products safely.
It’s a waste of money if a high proportion of expensive chemicals reactants end up useless product.

26
Q

What is a mole?

A

The amount of substance, number of particles.
It is given the symbol n.
One mole is 6.022 x 10^23 particles, this is Avogadro’s Constant NA

27
Q

What is the equation for finding the number of moles from particles?

A

Number of moles = number of particles / number of particles in mole (6.02x10^23).

28
Q

What is the difference in particles for moles?

A

1 mol of H = 1 mol of hydrogen atoms
1 mol of H2 = 1 mol of hydrogen molecules

29
Q

What is molar mass?

A

M, the mass of one mole of a substance.
Molar mass has the same numerical value as the relative molecular mass.
It is measured gmol^-1

30
Q

What is the equation for moles from mass?

A

Number of moles = mass of substance / molar mass.

31
Q

How do you convert between volume measurements?

A

Cubic centimetre (cm^3)
Cubic millilitre (mm^3) 1cm^3 = 1ml
Cubic decimetre (dm^3) or litre
1 dm^3 = 1000cm^3 = 1000ml = 1 litre.

32
Q

What is gas volume?

A

At room temperature and pressure (298k and 100kPa) molar gas volume is 24dm^3 mol^-1 or 24000cm^3 mol^-1.

33
Q

What is the gas volume equation?

A

Number of moles = volume in dm^3 / 24
or n = volume in cm^3 / 24000

34
Q

What is the ideal gas equation?

A

pV = nRT
p - pressure (Pa)
V - volume (m^3)
n - moles
R - 8.314 JK^-1 mol^-1 - gas constant
T - temperature (k) room temp is 298k

35
Q

How do you convert ideal gas values?

A

kPa x1000 = Pa
C° + 273 = K
cm^3 x10^-6 = m^3
dm^3 x 10^-3 = m^3

36
Q

What is the concentration of a solution?

A

How many moles of something are dissolved per 1 dm^3 of solution.
Units are mol dm^-3
A solution that has more moles per dm^3 than another is more concentrated.

37
Q

What is the equation for moles from concentration?

A

number of moles = concentration x volume cm^3
/ 1000
or n = concentration x volume dm^3

38
Q

What factors should be taken care of when using a gas syringe?

A

The plunger should move smoothly along the syringe, without getting stuck.
No gas can escape from the syringe.
The syringe is the correct size for the experiment - too large and it will be hard to read how much gas is produced, too small the plunger could be blown out the end.
This could release gas into the atmosphere.