Stoichiometric Values in a Chemical Reaction
A chemical equation is a visual representation of a chemical reaction. In a typical chemical equation, an arrow separates the reactants on the left and the products on the right. The coefficients next to the reactants and products are the stoichiometric values. They represent the number of moles of each compound that needs to react so that the reaction can go to completion.
On some occasions, it may be necessary to calculate the number of moles of a reagent or product under certain reaction conditions. To do this correctly, the reaction needs to be balanced. The law of conservation of matter states that the quantity of each element does not change in a chemical reaction. Therefore, a chemical equation is balanced when the number of each element in the equation is the same on both the left and right sides of the equation.
Using Stoichiometry to Calculate Moles
The next step is to inspect the coefficients of each element of the equation. The coefficients can be thought of as the amount of moles used in the reaction. The key is reaction stoichoimetry, which describes the quantitative relationship among the substances as they participate in the chemical reaction. The relationship between two of the reaction's participants (reactant or product) can be viewed as conversion factors and can be used to facilitate mole-to-mole conversions within the reaction.
Example 1
For example, to determine the number of moles of water produced from 2 mol O2, the balanced chemical reaction should be written out:
There is a clear relationship between O2 and H2O: for every one mole of O2, two moles of H2O are produced. Therefore, the ratio is one mole of O2 to two moles of H2O, or
Therefore, 4 moles of H2O were produced by reacting 2 moles of O2 in excess hydrogen.
Each stoichiometric conversion factor is reaction-specific and requires that the reaction be balanced. Therefore, each reaction must be balanced before starting calculations.
Example 2
If 4.44 mol of O2 react with excess hydrogen, how many moles of water are produced?
The chemical equation is