CHM 151 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Ammonia, Limiting Reagent, Reagent

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30 May 2016
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Chapter 3 stoichiometry: calculations with formulas and equations: formula and formula weight. Chemical formula (word) formula weight: sum of the atomic weight of atoms. We can"t see the microscopic world where reactions occur. We can"t count the billions of billions of particles at that level. We use a counting quantity to represent these large quantities of microscopic particles: the mole. One mole: the amount of matter that contains the same number of objects as there are atoms in exactly 12 g of isotope 12c. 1 mole of any objects (atoms, molecules, or ions) = 6. 022 1023 objects (avogadro"s number, na) e. g. , 1 mole of hg contains 6. 02 10. Molar mass: the mass (usually in grams) of one mole of objects . Calculate molar mass the same way as molecular/formula mass, but with units of g/mol . Converting mass, mole of matter, number of particles. Molar mass as a conversion factor e. g. , consider 50. 0 g of glucose (c6h12o6).

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