Chemical Calculations Workbook Igcse
Chemical Calculations Workbook Igcse
Percentage Yield 18
1
Relative Atomic Mass
2
Relative Atomic Mass Questions
Question 1:
Osmium Lithium
Sodium Nitrogen
Platinum Helium
Titanium Carbon
Chlorine Hydrogen
Argon Sulphur
Question 2:
a) Carbon / Oxygen
b) Sodium / Lithium
c) Gold / Copper
d) Hydrogen / Helium
e) Lead / Tin
Question 3:
Ar Element
12
16
23
222
3
Relative Molecular Mass
Ar for C = 12
Ar for H = 1
So Mr = (1 x 12) + (4 x1)
= 16
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Example 2: Calculating the relative molecular mass of Al(OH) 3
Ar for Al = 27
Ar for O = 16
Ar for H = 1
So Mr = (1 x 27) + (3 x 16) + (3 x 1)
= 78
.
Now try these examples the first one has been done for you.
(a)Ca(OH)2 = 40 + (16 + 1)2 = 74 (b) (NH4)2SO4 =
5
Fill in this worksheet
6
Calculating the Formula of Simple Compounds
You can use relative atomic masses (Ar) to calculate the
formula of compounds when you know the mass of reactants
you used.
Example:
3.2g of sulphur reacts with oxygen to produce 6.4g of sulphur
oxide. What is the formula of the oxide?
0.1 = 1 0.2 = 2
0.1 0.1
Ratio S : O = 1:2
Use this table as a
Step 4 - Write out the formula prompt until you are
confident with the
method.
SO2
Step Process
1 Write down masses of reactants* * If you are
2 Divide by Ar given % just
3 Divide by smallest number to get ratio use the % as
4 Write down formula the mass in
grams.
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Answer these questions to calculate the formula of simple
compounds:
8
4. A compound contains 40.21% of potassium, 26.80%
chromium and 32.99% oxygen by mass. Calculate its
empirical formula
9
Calculating the Mass of Products from a
Reaction Equation
Example
N2 + 3H2 2NH3
If we have 7g of N2, how much NH3 can we make?
Step 1
Write down the Mr or Ar underneath each chemical and multiply
by any balancing number
N2 + 3H2 2NH3
28 3x2 = 6 2x17 = 34
Step 2
Decide what fraction or multiple of the Mr the reacting amount
is:
By examination 7 is 28/4
Step 3
Work out how much product you would get
34 / 4 = 8.5g
10
Calculating the Mass of Reactants from a
Reaction Equation
The previous method can also be used to work out the mass of
reactants used in a chemical reaction.
Example
The reaction between iron (Fe) and sulphur (S) to make iron
(II) sulphide (FeS).
Fe + S FeS
Step 1
Write down the Mr or Ar underneath each chemical and multiply
by any balancing number
Fe + S FeS
56 32 88
This means that for every 88g of FeS made, we need 56g of Fe
and 32g of S
Step 2
Decide what fraction or multiple of the Mr the reacting amount
is:
By examination: 176 is 2 x 88
Step 3
Work out how much reactant you would need
56 x 2 = 112g
11
Now try these questions yourself. Remember to start by writing the M r
or Ar under each formula in the equation, and multiplying by the
balancing number.
5.6g of iron react with excess sulphur to make WHAT MASS of
iron(II) sulphide?
Fe + S FeS
3.65g of HCl react with excess sodium hydroxide. What mass of water
is formed?
HCl + NaOH NaCl + H2O
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What mass of hydrogen and oxygen are needed to make exactly 3.6g of
water (2 answers needed)
2H2 + O2 2H2O
When sulphur (found in coal) burns it forms acid rain. What mass of
sulphur dioxide is formed from 32 tonnes of sulphur and excess
oxygen?
S + O2 SO2
13
Extension Questions
Try these questions
29 tonnes of iron (III) oxide are reacted in the blast furnace with
excess carbon monoxide. What mass of iron is produced?
Fe2O3 + 3CO 2Fe + 3CO 2
14
2.567g of pure sodium hydroxide are reacted with excess dilute
sulphuric acid. What mass of water is formed?
2NaOH + H2SO4 Na2SO4 + 2H2O
15
What mass of water is formed when 1kg (1000g) of octane (equivalent
to just over a litre of petrol) is burned in excess oxygen?
2 C8H18 + 25 O2 16 CO2 + 18 H2O
16
Percentage Yield
Example
Fe + S FeS
Step 1:
Calculate the theoretical yield (the maximum amount of
product we could expect) in the same way you did before.
Fe + S FeS
56 32 88
Step 2:
Calculate the percentage yield:
= 80 x 100 = 90%
88
17
Look at your answers to the theoretical yield questions a few pages
back and answer these related questions
3.65g of HCl react with excess sodium hydroxide. What is the % yield
if 1.5g of water is formed?
HCl + NaOH NaCl + H2O
3.65 1.5
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If 3.2 g of oxygen is reacted with excess hydrogen to give 3.2g of
water. What is the theoretical yield?
2H2 + O2 2H2O
When sulphur (found in coal) burns it forms acid rain. What is the
theoretical yield when 32 tonnes of sulphur are burned to give 63
tonnes of sulphur dioxide?
S + O2 SO2
19
When a hydrocarbon burns in excess oxygen, 2 products are formed
(water and carbon dioxide). What is the percentage yield when 10g of
heptane, found in petrol, is burned in excess O2 to give 25g of the
greenhouse gas (CO2)?
C7H16 + 11O2 7CO2 + 8H2O
20
Try this typical GCSE question
21
Atom Economy
22
Calculating Atom Economy
Example 1:
What is the atom economy for making hydrogen by reacting
coal with steam?
Step 1: Work out the Mr and Ar values for the reactants and
the useful products.
= 4 x 100 = 8.3%
36 + 12
23
Example 2:
Lithium hydroxide will react with nitric acid to produce lithium nitrate
plus water. Suppose that we are trying to make lithium nitrate, and that
the water we also make is the waste material. Firstly we write an
equation
LiOH + HNO3 LiNO3 + H 2O
24
Calculate the atom economy percentage for the Haber Process. The
desired product is ammonia (NH3).
N2 + 3H2 2NH3
Calculate the atom economy percentage for the Oswald Process (the
desired product is nitric acid).
25
Try this typical GCSE question
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Comparing the Atom Economy for 2
methods of Titanium (Ti) extraction
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Do you agree that this is rather wasteful?
Your answer should have been 14.7%.
This means that 100 14.7 = 85.3% is potentially waste
material (or, at least, not very useful).
TiO2 Ti + O2
TiO2 Ti + O2
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Relevant Internet and School Network Links
In school, try these web links and click on the white arrow in the green
square to view:
http://www.yenka.com/freecontent/item.action?quick=13i#
http://www.yenka.com/freecontent/item.action?quick=13j#
http://www.yenka.com/freecontent/item.action?quick=u0
http://web.visionlearning.com/MW_calculator.shtml
http://www.tufts.edu/as/wright_center/fellows/george/georgepage3.ht
m
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