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Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

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Page 1: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations

CHE 123: General Chemistry IDr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D.

Saint Leo University

Page 2: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Overview

• Empirical vs. Molecular Formulas• Mass Percent• Determining Chemical Formulas

Page 3: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Empirical vs. Molecular Formulas

• Empirical Formula represents the simplest whole number ratio of atoms in a formula.

• Molecular Formula represents the true formula for a substance and is usually a multiple of the empirical formula.

Page 4: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Mass Percent

• Empirical Formulas are determined from mass percent data.

• To find the mass percent of an element use the following equation.

Mass % of X = (mass X / total mass of compound) x 100%

• The mass percentages for all elements in a compound must sum to 100.00%.

Page 5: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University
Page 6: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University
Page 7: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Mass Percent

• Find the mass % oxygen in sodium nitrate (NaNO3). Molar mass of NaNO3 is 85.07 g/mole.

Page 8: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University
Page 9: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Mass Percent• Given:

sodium nitrate NaNO3

Molar Mass = 85.07 g/mole

• Unknown: ? Mass % oxygen

• Relevant Information:

1 mole Na, 1 mole N, and 3 moles O are found in NaNO3

Mass Percent X = (mass X / total mass of compound) x 100%

Page 10: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Mass Percent

• Solution:

mass O = (3 mol x 16.00 g/mol) = 48.00 g

Total mass (NaNO3) = (1 mol x 23.00 g/mol) + (1 mol x 14.07 g/mol) + (3 mol x 16.00 g/mol) = 85.07 g

Mass % O = (48.00 g / 85.07 g) x 100% = 56.42% O

• Check: Answer is reasonable.

Page 11: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Mass Percent

• For additional practice, find the % Na and % N in sodium

nitrate.

Answers: 27.04% Na16.54% N

Page 12: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Determining Chemical Formulas

• To find an empirical formula, one would use the following method (Works Every Time).

Page 13: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Determining Chemical Formulas

Page 14: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Determining Chemical Formulas

• Example Problem

– 71.65% Cl Mol. Wt. = 98.96 g/mol– 24.27% C– 4.07% H

– Find the empirical & molecular formulas for this compound.

Page 15: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Determining Chemical Formulas

• The Traditional Approach

– Step 1: Assume 100.00 g sample

• We pick this sample size so that our percentage data will translate directly into mass in grams.

71.65% Cl 71.65 g Cl24.27% C 24.27 g C 4.07% H 4.07 g H

Page 16: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Determining Chemical Formulas

• The Traditional Approach

– Step 2: Convert mass values to moles (Axiom #3)

71.65 g Cl x ( 1 mol Cl / 35.45 g Cl) = 2.021 mol Cl

24.27 g C x ( 1 mol C / 12.01 g C) = 2.021 mol C

4.07 g H x ( 1 mol H / 1.008 g H) = 4.04 mol H

Page 17: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Determining Chemical Formulas

Page 18: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Determining Chemical Formulas

• Traditional Approach (Works Every Time)

– Step 3: Divide number of moles obtained from step 2 by smallest number of moles present. This gives the mole ratios for each component (look at this value as being the same thing as the number of atoms present).

Page 19: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Determining Chemical Formulas

• The Traditional Approach

– Step 3: Convert moles to mole ratios (# atoms)

2.021 mol Cl / 2.021 mol = 1.000 Cl atoms

2.021 mol C / 2.021 mol = 1.000 C atoms

4.04 mol H / 2.021 mol = 2.00 H atoms

Page 20: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Determining Chemical Formulas

Page 21: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Determining Chemical Formulas

• Traditional Approach (Works Every Time)

– Step 4: Examine values obtained from step 3. The mole ratios should be whole numbers. If you have whole numbers, then you have the subscripts for the empirical formula directly. If not, proceed to step 5.

• Note: Values like 2.98, 4.03, etc. translate into 3.00 and 4.00, respectively. Do not round numbers like 2.5, 3.67, 1.33, etc. to whole numbers.

Page 22: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Determining Chemical Formulas

• The Traditional Approach

– Step 4: Values are whole numbers, so we can now write the empirical formula

1.000 Cl atoms

1.000 C atoms Empirical Formula = CH2Cl

2.00 H atoms

Page 23: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Determining Chemical Formulas

Page 24: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Determining Chemical Formulas

• Traditional Method (Works Every Time)

– Step 5: If mole ratios are not whole numbers, then one must introduce a factor that will convert the mole ratios into whole numbers.

– Once you have found the whole number ratios, then the subscripts for the empirical formula are then known. Simply write out the empirical formula.

Page 25: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Determining Chemical Formulas

Page 26: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Determining Chemical Formulas

• To find a molecular formula, one would use the same procedure as the empirical formula with the following additional steps.

– Step 6: Once you have empirical formula, calculate the empirical molar mass (EMM).

Page 27: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Determining Chemical Formulas

• The Traditional Approach

– Step 6: Calculate Empirical Molar Mass (EMM)

Empirical Formula = CH2Cl

EMM = (1 x 12.01 g/mol) + (2 x 1.01 g/mol) + (1 x 35.45 g/mol) = 49.48 g/mol

Page 28: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Determining Chemical Formulas

• To find a molecular formula

– Step 7: Using the molecular weight (this must be given in problem), find the factor (x) that must be multiplied through to get molecular formula.

EMM (x) = Mol. Wt.

(Empirical Formula) (x) => Molecular Formula

Page 29: Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

Determining Chemical Formulas

• The Traditional Approach

– Step 7: Determine Factor (x)

EMM (x) = Mol. Wt.

49.48 g/mol (x) = 98.96 g/mol (x) = 2.000 = 2

Molecular Formula = (CH2CL) (2) => C2H4Cl2