Chemical Equations & Introduction to Stoichiometry
By Abhishek Sengar | CHEMCA – JEE & NEET Chemistry
Recommended Prerequisite
Before diving into Stoichiometry and equation balancing, make sure your basic Mole Concept is solid! Revise the core foundations here: Some Basic Concepts of Chemistry for Class 11 and JEE/NEET.
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Lecture 5: Some Basic Concepts of Chemistry
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Hello students! Welcome to Lecture 5 of Some Basic Concepts of Chemistry. We have mastered finding moles and molecular formulas. Today, we step into the heart of physical chemistry: Stoichiometry. We will learn how to read, interpret, and calculate the exact amounts of reactants and products involved in a Chemical Equation.
1. What is a Chemical Equation?
A chemical equation is a symbolic representation of a chemical reaction. It has two main parts separated by an arrow: Reactants → Products.
To provide full context, we also denote the physical states of these substances:
- (s) = Solid
- (l) = Liquid
- (g) = Gas
- (aq) = Aqueous (dissolved in water)
- ↑ = Gas evolved
- ↓ = Precipitate formed (Solid)
2. Skeletal vs. Balanced Equations
Unbalanced (Skeletal)
Gives an idea of reactants and products but the total mass of reactants ≠ total mass of products.
Example: H2 + O2 → H2O
(Violates conservation laws)
Balanced
The total number of atoms of all elements are identical on both sides. Total mass Reactants = Total mass Products.
Example: 2H2 + O2 → 2H2O
Golden Rule of Stoichiometry:
A balanced chemical equation strictly follows the Law of Conservation of Mass and the POAC (Principle of Atomic Conservation). NEVER solve a problem without balancing the equation first!
3. Interpreting a Balanced Equation
Let's take the combustion of methane: CH4(g) + 2O2(g) → CO2(g) + 2H2O(l)
The numbers in front of the formulas are called Stoichiometric Coefficients. They give us a wealth of information:
- In Moles: 1 mole of CH4 reacts with 2 moles of O2 to form 1 mole of CO2 and 2 moles of H2O.
- In Mass: 16g of CH4 reacts with 64g of O2 to form 44g of CO2 and 36g of H2O. (Notice 80g total on both sides).
4. Three Methods to Solve Stoichiometry Problems
Problem: What amount of O2 is required, and what amount of CO2 & H2O is formed when 48g of CH4 undergoes complete combustion?
Step 1: Find moles of given substance. 48g CH4 / 16 g/mol = 3 moles of CH4.
Method 1: Mole Balance Method
Compare standard moles to given moles.
- 1 mole CH4 needs 2 moles O2. → So, 3 moles CH4 need 6 moles O2.
- 1 mole CH4 forms 1 mole CO2. → So, 3 moles CH4 form 3 moles CO2.
- 1 mole CH4 forms 2 moles H2O. → So, 3 moles CH4 form 6 moles H2O.
Method 2: Mass Balance Method
Directly compare standard masses to given mass (Unitary Method).
- 16g of CH4 needs 64g of O2.
- Therefore, 1g of CH4 needs (64/16) = 4g of O2.
- So, 48g of CH4 needs 48 × 4 = 192g of O2.
Method 3: The Basic Ratio Method (Highly Recommended)
Create a simple table. Row 1 is the coefficients from the balanced equation. Row 2 is what you actually have.
| Compound | CH4 | O2 | CO2 | H2O |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basic Ratio (Coefficients) | 1 | 2 | 1 | 2 |
| Required (Given Moles) | 3 | ? | ? | ? |
The Trick: Look at the column where you have both numbers. How do you turn the top number (1) into the bottom number (3)? You multiply by 3! Therefore, multiply the entire top row by 3 to get all your answers instantly.
Answer: 6 moles O2, 3 moles CO2, 6 moles H2O.
Test Your Understanding! π―
Take this 10-question MCQ quiz to verify your grasp of Lecture 5. Explanations and study recommendations will be revealed upon submission.
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