Unit 2- Amount Of Substance Flashcards
Moles, titrations, yield and economy
1
Q
How to use Avogadro constant
A
- equivalent to 1 mole of a substance (6.022×10^23)
- No. Particles = No.moles × Avogadro constant
2
Q
Calculating moles
A
- Mass in g ÷ Mr
- molar ratio is equivalent to the number of molecules in a balanced equation
- Concentration (mol/dm^-3) × volume (dm^3)
3
Q
Ideal gas equation
A
- PV=nRT
- P= pressure (Pa)
- V=Volume (m^3)
- n= No. Moles
- R=Gas constant (8.3JK^-1mol^-1)
- T= Temperature (K)
4
Q
How to write ionic equations
A
- Write balanced equation
- split dissolved ionic species into their ions
- Remove ions appearing on both sides of the equation
5
Q
How to calculate and use empirical formulae
A
- calculate Mr of all atoms in a molecule and find the ratio by dividing all of them by the smallest Mr
- Write the ratio as a formula
- use this to find the real formula by dividing the molecules Ar by the empirical Ar and multiply all the values of the ratio by that constant
6
Q
Making a standard solution for titration
A
- Dissolve a known amount of solid in a known amount of water to create a known concentration
- calculate mass of solid necessary by calculating moles necessary and then the mass you need to weigh out
- After weighing, tip the solid into a beaker, then re-weigh the weighing bottle to see if there is any residue to subtract from the mass added
- add distilled water to the beaker to dissolve the solid, and pour that solution into another beaker of the required volume
- rinse the original beaker with distilled water to remove residue and add that to the second beaker too
- top up the second beaker with distilled water to the exact volume required (make sure botton of meniscus is exactly on the line)
- mix well and calculate the exact concentration
7
Q
Titrations
A
- fill a burette with a standard solution you know the concentration of
- fill a beaker below it with a fixed volume of a substance you don’t know the concentration of, and a suitable indicator
- take a rough initial reading to get an idea of the end point
- take at least three serious readings of the exact amount needed to change the indicator to find an average titre
- the average titre gives you the volume of the standard solution used in a balanced equation, allowing you to calculate the unknown concentration from the moles of the standard solution
8
Q
Chemical yield
A
- theoretical yield is the moles of product calculated to be made, using a balanced equation and molar ratio
- percentage yield is the actual yield over the theoretical yield
- this shows how much product is lost through incomplete reactions or transfer between containers
9
Q
Atom economy
A
- How much of the product is what you want over the total mass of all products
- (molecular mass of desired product/sum of molecular masses of all reactants) *100
- economically advantageous to have high atom economy as less money is wasted on reactants, less waste products are made that need disposing
- advantageous for society as drugs are cheaper when produced with high efficiency
- high atom economy is better for the environment as less harmful waste, more sustainable processes