Unit 2 Section C Conserving Matter. C.1 Keeping Track of Atoms Law of conservation of matter: In a...

13
Unit 2 Section C Conserving Matter

description

Anatomy of a chemical equation CH 4 + 2O 2 --> CO 2 + 2H 2 O Left side of the arrow = reactants Right Side of the arrow = products Subscripts = number of atoms in a given molecule Coefficients = number of the molecules present Formula unit = molecule for ionic compounds

Transcript of Unit 2 Section C Conserving Matter. C.1 Keeping Track of Atoms Law of conservation of matter: In a...

Page 1: Unit 2 Section C Conserving Matter. C.1 Keeping Track of Atoms Law of conservation of matter: In a chemical reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed.

Unit 2 Section C

Conserving Matter

Page 2: Unit 2 Section C Conserving Matter. C.1 Keeping Track of Atoms Law of conservation of matter: In a chemical reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed.

C.1 Keeping Track of Atoms Law of conservation of matter: In a

chemical reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed.

Atoms are forever! Balanced chemical equation: the

number of atoms of each element is the same on the reactant and product sides.

Page 3: Unit 2 Section C Conserving Matter. C.1 Keeping Track of Atoms Law of conservation of matter: In a chemical reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed.

Anatomy of a chemical equation CH4 + 2O2 --> CO2 + 2H2O Left side of the arrow = reactants Right Side of the arrow = products Subscripts = number of atoms in a given

molecule Coefficients = number of the molecules

present Formula unit = molecule for ionic compounds

Page 4: Unit 2 Section C Conserving Matter. C.1 Keeping Track of Atoms Law of conservation of matter: In a chemical reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed.

2Cu + O2 --> 2CuO

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 5: Unit 2 Section C Conserving Matter. C.1 Keeping Track of Atoms Law of conservation of matter: In a chemical reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed.

Count the atoms…balanced?

2 K + 2 H2O → 2 KOH + H2

3 CaBr2 + 2H3PO4 → 6 HBr + Ca3(PO4)2

Page 6: Unit 2 Section C Conserving Matter. C.1 Keeping Track of Atoms Law of conservation of matter: In a chemical reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed.

A Dozen What is a dozen? How many atoms are there in a dozen

atoms? How many bottles are there in a dozen pop

bottles? How many cars are there in a dozen cars? What is similar about all these examples? What’s different?

Page 7: Unit 2 Section C Conserving Matter. C.1 Keeping Track of Atoms Law of conservation of matter: In a chemical reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed.

A New Unit: THE MOLE

?Photo from www.palaeos.com

Page 8: Unit 2 Section C Conserving Matter. C.1 Keeping Track of Atoms Law of conservation of matter: In a chemical reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed.

The Chemist’s Mole A mole (abbreviated mol) is a counting

unit to make calculations easier.

1 mol = 6.02 x 1023 “things”

How many cars are there in 1 mole of cars?

Page 9: Unit 2 Section C Conserving Matter. C.1 Keeping Track of Atoms Law of conservation of matter: In a chemical reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed.

6.02 x 1023 THIS NUMBER IS HUGE!!!

Called Avogadro’s number

Equal to the number of grains of sand on all the beaches in all the world!

Equal to the number of glasses of water in the entire ocean!

If one mole of marbles were spread over the surface of the Earth, our planet would be covered by a 50-mile-thick layer of marbles.

Page 10: Unit 2 Section C Conserving Matter. C.1 Keeping Track of Atoms Law of conservation of matter: In a chemical reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed.

Which would you rather do? Count out 1 mole of carbon atoms? Mass (weigh) 1 mole of carbon atoms?

Much easier to weigh something than to count something, however, it’s the atoms, not their mass, that do the reactions.

The mole concept allows us to know the number of atoms in a given sample by only knowing the mass of the sample.

Page 11: Unit 2 Section C Conserving Matter. C.1 Keeping Track of Atoms Law of conservation of matter: In a chemical reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed.

Molar Mass Molar Mass = mass of 1 mole of a

substance.

Add up the masses of all the atoms of a compound from the periodic table and you have the molar mass!

Page 12: Unit 2 Section C Conserving Matter. C.1 Keeping Track of Atoms Law of conservation of matter: In a chemical reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed.

What is the molar mass of CO2? Add up the masses from the periodic

table.

Mass of 1 C = 12.011 Mass of 1 O = 15.9994

Mass of CO2 = 12.011 + 2(15.9994) = 44.1 g/mol CO2

Page 13: Unit 2 Section C Conserving Matter. C.1 Keeping Track of Atoms Law of conservation of matter: In a chemical reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed.

Calculate the molar mass of the following compounds Ga Po CaCO3

H2SO4

(NH4)3PO4