โ† Back to Quantitative Chemistry

๐Ÿงช Amounts of Substances in Equations

Spec 5.3.2.2 ๐Ÿ“™ Higher
๐Ÿ“– In-Depth Theory

Molar Ratios from Balanced Equations

A BALANCED equation gives the MOLAR RATIO of reactants and products โ€” the coefficients show the ratio of moles.
Examples:
2Mg + Oโ‚‚ โ†’ 2MgO
Means: 2 mol Mg reacts with 1 mol Oโ‚‚ to produce 2 mol MgO.
Molar ratio Mg : Oโ‚‚ : MgO = 2 : 1 : 2.
Mg + 2HCl โ†’ MgClโ‚‚ + Hโ‚‚
Means: 1 mol Mg reacts with 2 mol HCl to produce 1 mol MgClโ‚‚ and 1 mol Hโ‚‚.
Nโ‚‚ + 3Hโ‚‚ โ†’ 2NHโ‚ƒ
Means: 1 mol Nโ‚‚ reacts with 3 mol Hโ‚‚ to produce 2 mol NHโ‚ƒ.
Key principle: the molar ratio in the balanced equation is always maintained, whatever the actual quantities used.

Calculating Masses Using Moles โ€” The Method

STANDARD METHOD for calculating masses in reactions:
Step 1: Write the balanced equation.
Step 2: Write the molar ratio from the equation.
Step 3: Convert given mass to moles: n = mass รท Mr.
Step 4: Use the molar ratio to find moles of the unknown substance.
Step 5: Convert moles back to mass: mass = n ร— Mr.
EXAMPLE:
How much magnesium oxide forms when 4.8 g of magnesium burns?
2Mg + Oโ‚‚ โ†’ 2MgO
Step 1: 2 mol Mg โ†’ 2 mol MgO (ratio 1:1)
Step 2: n(Mg) = 4.8 รท 24 = 0.2 mol
Step 3: n(MgO) = 0.2 mol (same ratio)
Step 4: mass(MgO) = 0.2 ร— 40 = 8.0 g

Percentage Yield

THEORETICAL YIELD: the maximum mass of product calculated from the equation.
ACTUAL YIELD: the mass actually obtained in the experiment.
Actual yield is always LESS than or equal to theoretical yield.
Why actual yield < theoretical yield:
Reaction may not go to completion (reversible reactions).
Side reactions produce unwanted products.
Product lost during transfer/purification.
Reactants may be impure.
PERCENTAGE YIELD:
% yield = (actual yield รท theoretical yield) ร— 100
EXAMPLE:
Theoretical yield of MgO = 8.0 g. Actual yield = 7.2 g.
% yield = (7.2 รท 8.0) ร— 100 = 90%
ATOM ECONOMY:
Atom economy = (Mr of desired products รท Mr of ALL products) ร— 100
High atom economy = less waste, more sustainable, more cost-effective.
Addition reactions have 100% atom economy (one product only).
โš ๏ธ Common Mistake

Always use the MOLAR RATIO from the balanced equation when converting between moles of different substances. If 2 mol of A produces 1 mol of B, then 0.4 mol of A produces 0.2 mol of B โ€” not 0.4 mol of B. The ratio comes from the COEFFICIENTS in the balanced equation.

๐Ÿ“ Variables
nAmount in moles (n) is measured in mol (mol)
mMass (m) is measured in grams (g)
MrRelative formula mass (Mr) is measured in ()
๐Ÿ“ Key Equations
n = m รท Mr
% yield = (actual yield รท theoretical yield) ร— 100
atom economy = (Mr desired products รท Mr all products) ร— 100
๐Ÿ“Œ Key Note

Balanced equation coefficients = molar ratios. Method: mass โ†’ moles (รทMr) โ†’ use ratio โ†’ moles โ†’ mass (ร—Mr). % yield = (actual รท theoretical) ร— 100. Atom economy = (Mr desired รท Mr all products) ร— 100. High atom economy = less waste.

๐ŸŽฏ Matching Activity โ€” Molar Ratios from Equations

Match each equation to the correct molar ratio statement. โ€” drag the symbols on the right to match the component names on the left.

2Mg + Oโ‚‚ โ†’ 2MgO
Drop here
Nโ‚‚ + 3Hโ‚‚ โ†’ 2NHโ‚ƒ
Drop here
Mg + 2HCl โ†’ MgClโ‚‚ + Hโ‚‚
Drop here
CaCOโ‚ƒ โ†’ CaO + COโ‚‚
Drop here
2 mol Mg reacts with 1 mol Oโ‚‚ โ€” Mg:MgO ratio is 1:1
1 mol CaCOโ‚ƒ produces 1 mol CaO and 1 mol COโ‚‚
1 mol Mg reacts with 2 mol HCl to produce 1 mol MgClโ‚‚ and 1 mol Hโ‚‚
1 mol Nโ‚‚ reacts with 3 mol Hโ‚‚ โ€” Nโ‚‚:NHโ‚ƒ ratio is 1:2
โšฝ FIFA Worked Examples
Mass Calculation from Equation

Calculate the mass of hydrogen produced when 1.2 g of magnesium reacts with excess HCl. Mg + 2HCl โ†’ MgClโ‚‚ + Hโ‚‚. Ar: Mg=24, H=1.

F

n = mass รท Mr; then use molar ratio; then mass = n ร— Mr

I

n(Mg) = 1.2 รท 24 = 0.05 mol. Ratio Mg:Hโ‚‚ = 1:1, so n(Hโ‚‚) = 0.05 mol. Mr(Hโ‚‚) = 2

F

mass(Hโ‚‚) = 0.05 ร— 2 = 0.1

A

0.1 g of hydrogen produced

๐ŸŽฏ Test Yourself
Question 1 of 2
1. Nโ‚‚ + 3Hโ‚‚ โ†’ 2NHโ‚ƒ. How many moles of NHโ‚ƒ are produced from 0.6 mol of Hโ‚‚?
2. The theoretical yield of a product is 25 g but only 20 g is obtained. What is the percentage yield?
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