Foundation
We begin by assuming the central postulates of
the Atomic-Molecular Theory. These are:
the elements are
comprised of identical atoms; all atoms of a single element
have the same characteristic mass; the number and masses of
these atoms do not change during a chemical transformation; compounds consist of identical molecules formed of atoms combined
in simple whole number ratios.
We also assume a knowledge of the
observed natural laws on which this theory is based: the
Law of Conservation of Mass, the
Law of Definite Proportions, and the
Law of Multiple Proportions.
Goals
We have concluded that atoms combine in simple
ratios to form molecules. However, we don't know what those
ratios are. In other words, we have not yet determined any
molecular formulae. In
the second table of Concept Development Study #1,
we
found that the mass ratios for nitrogen oxide compounds were
consistent with many different molecular formulae. A glance back at
the nitrogen oxide data shows that the oxide B could be
N
O
N
O,
N
O
2
N
O
2
,
N
2
O
N
2
O
, or any other simple ratio.
Each of these formulae correspond to different
possible relative atomic weights for nitrogen and oxygen. Since
oxide B has oxygen to nitrogen ratio 1.14 : 1, then the relative
masses of oxygen to nitrogen could be 1.14:1 or 2.28:1 or 0.57:1 or
many other simple possibilities. If we knew the relative masses of
oxygen and nitrogen atoms, we could determine the molecular formula
of oxide B. On the other hand, if we knew the molecular formula of
oxide B, we could determine the relative masses of oxygen and
nitrogen atoms. If we solve one problem, we solve both. Our problem
then is that we need a simple way to "count" atoms, at
least in relative numbers.
Observation 1: Volume Relationships in Chemical
Reactions
Although mass is conserved, most chemical and
physical properties are not conserved during a reaction. Volume is
one of those properties which is not conserved, particularly when
the reaction involves gases as reactants or products. For example,
hydrogen and oxygen react explosively to form water vapor. If we
take 1 liter of oxygen gas and 2 liters of hydrogen gas, by careful
analysis we could find that the reaction of these two volumes is
complete, with no left over hydrogen and oxygen, and that 2 liters
of water vapor are formed. Note that the total volume is not
conserved: 3 liters of oxygen and hydrogen become 2 liters of water
vapor. (All of the volumes are measured at the same temperature and
pressure.)
More notable is the fact that the ratios of
the volumes involved are simple whole number ratios: 1 liter of
oxygen : 2 liters of hydrogen : 2 liters of water. This result
proves to be general for reactions involving gases. For example, 1
liter of nitrogen gas reacts with 3 liters of hydrogen gas to form
2 liters of ammonia gas. 1 liter of hydrogen gas combines with 1
liter of chlorine gas to form 2 liters of hydrogen chloride gas.
These observations can be generalized into the
Law of Combining Volumes.
law 1: Law of Combining Volumes When gases combine during a
chemical reaction at a fixed pressure and temperature, the ratios
of their volumes are simple whole number
ratios.
These simple integer ratios are striking,
particularly when viewed in the light of our conclusions from the
Law of Multiple Proportions. Atoms combine in simple
whole number ratios, and evidently, volumes of gases also combine
in simple whole number ratios. Why would this be? One simple
explanation of this similarity would be that the volume ratio and
the ratio of atoms and molecules in the reaction are the same. In
the case of the hydrogen and oxygen, this would say that the ratio
of volumes (1 liter of oxygen : 2 liters of hydrogen : 2 liters of
water) is the same as the ratio of atoms and molecules (1 atom of
oxygen: 2 atoms of hydrogen: 2 molecules of water). For this to be
true, equal volumes of gas would have to contain equal numbers of
gas particles (atoms or molecules), independent of the type of gas.
If true, this means that the volume of a gas must be a direct
measure of the number of particles (atoms or molecules) in the gas.
This would allow us to "count" the number of gas
particles and determine molecular formulae.
There seem to be big problems with this
conclusion, however. Look back at the data for forming hydrogen
chloride: 1 liter of hydrogen plus 1 liter of chlorine yields 2
liters of hydrogen chloride. If our thinking is true, then this is
equivalent to saying that 1 hydrogen atom plus 1 chlorine atom
makes 2 hydrogen chloride molecules. But how could that be
possible? How could we make 2 identical molecules from a single
chlorine atom and a single hydrogen atom? This would require us to
divide each hydrogen and chlorine atom, violating the postulates of
the atomic-molecular theory.
Another problem appears when we weigh the
gases: 1 liter of oxygen gas weighs more than 1 liter of water
vapor. If we assume that these volumes contain equal numbers of
particles, then we must conclude that 1 oxygen particle weighs more
than 1 water particle. But how could that be possible? It would
seem that a water molecule, which contains at least one oxygen
atom, should weigh more than a single oxygen particle.
These are serious objections to the idea that
equal volumes of gas contain equal numbers of particles. Our
postulate appears to have contradicted common sense and
experimental observation. However, the simple ratios of the
Law of Combining Volumes are also equally compelling.
Why should volumes react in simple whole number ratios if they do
not represent equal numbers of particles? Consider the opposite
viewpoint: if equal volumes of gas do not contain equal numbers of
particles, then equal numbers of particles must be contained in
unequal volumes not related by integers. Now when we combine
particles in simple whole number ratios to form molecules, the
volumes of gases required would produce decidedly non-whole number
ratios. The
Law of Combining Volumes should not be contradicted
lightly.
There is only one logical way out. We will
accept our deduction from the
Law of Combining Volumes that equal
volumes
of gas
contain equal numbers of particles, a conclusion known as
Avogadro's Hypothesis. How do we account for the
fact that 1 liter of hydrogen plus 1 liter of chlorine yields 2
liters of hydrogen chloride? There is only one way for a single
hydrogen particle to produce 2 identical hydrogen chloride
molecules: each hydrogen particle must contain more than one atom.
In fact, each hydrogen particle (or molecule) must contain an even
number of hydrogen atoms. Similarly, a chlorine molecule must
contain an even number of chlorine atoms.
More explicitly, we observe that
1 liter of hydrogen
+
1 liter of chlorine
→
2 liters of hydrogen chloride
1 liter of hydrogen
+
1 liter of chlorine
→
2 liters of hydrogen chloride
(1)
Assuming that each liter volume contains an
equal number of particles, then we can interpret this observation
as
1
H
2
molecule
+
1
Cl
2
molecule
→
2
H
Cl
molecules
1
H
2
molecule
+
1
Cl
2
molecule
→
2
H
Cl
molecules
(2)
(Alternatively, there could be any fixed even
number of atoms in each hydrogen molecule and in each chlorine
molecule. We will assume the simplest possibility and see if that
produces any contradictions.)
This is a wonderful result, for it correctly
accounts for the
Law of Combining Volumes and eliminates our concerns
about creating new atoms. Most importantly, we now know the
molecular formula of hydrogen chloride. We have, in effect, found a
way of "counting" the atoms in the reaction by
measuring the volume of gases which react.
This method works to tell us the molecular
formula of many compounds. For example,
2 liters of hydrogen
+
1 liter of oxygen
→
2 liters of water
2 liters of hydrogen
+
1 liter of oxygen
→
2 liters of water
(3)
This requires that oxygen particles contain an
even number of oxygen atoms. Now we can interpret this equation as
saying that
2
H
2
molecules
+
1
O
2
molecule
→
2
H
2
O
molecules
2
H
2
molecules
+
1
O
2
molecule
→
2
H
2
O
molecules
(4)
Now that we know the molecular formula of
water, we can draw a definite conclusion about the relative masses
of the hydrogen and oxygen atoms. Recall from the
Table
that the mass ratio in
water is 8:1 oxygen to hydrogen. Since there are two
hydrogen atoms for every oxygen atom in water, then the mass ratio
requires that a single oxygen atom weigh 16 times the mass of a
hydrogen atom.
To determine a mass scale for atoms, we simply
need to choose a standard. For example, for our purposes here, we
will say that a hydrogen atom has a mass of 1 on the atomic mass
scale. Then an oxygen atom has a mass of 16 on this scale.
Our conclusions account for the apparent
problems with the masses of reacting gases, specifically, that
oxygen gas weighs more than water vapor. This seemed to be
nonsensical: given that water contains oxygen, it would seem that
water should weigh more than oxygen. However, this is now simply
understood: a water molecule, containing only a single oxygen atom,
has a mass of 18, whereas an oxygen molecule, containing two oxygen
atoms, has a mass of 32.
Determination of Atomic Weights for Gaseous Elements
Now that we can count atoms and molecules to
determine molecular formulae, we need to determine relative atomic
weights for all atoms. We can then use these to determine molecular
formulae for any compound from the mass ratios of the elements in
the compound.
We begin by examining data on reactions
involving the
Law of Combining Volumes. Going back to the nitrogen
oxide data given
here, we recall that
there are three compounds formed from nitrogen and oxygen. Now we
measure the volumes which combine in forming each. We find that 2
liters of oxide B can be decomposed into 1 liter of nitrogen and 1
liter of oxygen. From the reasoning above, then a nitrogen particle
must contain an even number of nitrogen atoms. We assume for now
that nitrogen is
N
2
N
2
. We have already concluded that oxygen is
O
2
O
2
.
Therefore, the molecular formula for oxide B is
N
O
N
O
, and we call it
nitric oxide. Since we have already determined that the oxygen to
nitrogen mass ratio is 1.14 : 1, then, if we assign oxygen a mass
of 16, as above, nitrogen has a mass of 14. (That is
161.14=14
16
1.14
14
.)
2 liters of oxide A is formed from 2 liters of oxygen and 1 liter
of nitrogen. Therefore, oxide A is
N
O
2
N
O
2
, which we call nitrogen
dioxide. Note that we predict an oxygen to nitrogen mass ratio
of
32
14
=
2.28
:
1
32
14
=
2.28
:
1
, in agreement with the data. Oxide C is
N
2
O
N
2
O
, called
nitrous oxide, and predicted to have a mass ratio of
16
28
=
0.57
:
1
16
28
=
0.57
:
1
, again in agreement with the data. We have now resolved the
ambiguity in the molecular formulae.
What if nitrogen were actually
N
4
N
4
? Then the
first oxide would be
N
2
O
N
2
O
, the second would be
N
2
O
2
N
2
O
2
, and the third
would be
N
4
O
N
4
O
. Furthermore, the mass of a nitrogen atom would be 7.
Why don't we assume this? Simply because in doing so, we will
always find that the minimum relative mass of nitrogen in any
molecule is 14. Although this might be two nitrogen atoms, there is
no reason to believe that it is. Therefore, a single nitrogen atom
weighs 14, and nitrogen gas particles are
N
2
N
2
.
Determination of Atomic Weights for Non-Gaseous
Elements
We can proceed with this type of measurement,
deduction, and prediction for any compound which is a gas and which
is made up of elements which are gases. But this will not help us
with the atomic masses of non-gaseous elements, nor will it permit
us to determine the molecular formulae for compounds which contain
these elements.
Consider carbon, an important example. There
are two oxides of carbon. Oxide A has oxygen to carbon mass ratio
1.33 : 1 and oxide B has mass ratio 2.66 : 1. Measurement
of reacting volumes shows that we find that 1 liter of oxide A is
produced from 0.5 liters of oxygen. Hence, each molecule of oxide A
contains only half as many oxygen atoms as does an oxygen molecule.
Oxide A thus contains one oxygen atom. But how many carbon atoms
does it contain? We can't determine this yet because the
elemental carbon is solid, not gas. This means that we also cannot
determine what the mass of a carbon atom is.
But we can try a different approach: we weigh
1 liter of oxide A and 1 liter of oxygen gas. The result we find is
that oxide A weighs 0.875 times per liter as much as oxygen gas.
Since we have assumed that a fixed volume of gas contains a fixed
number of particles, then 1 liter of oxide A contains just as many
particles as 1 liter of oxygen gas. Therefore, each
particle
of
oxide A weighs 0.875 times as much as a particle of oxygen gas
(that is, an
O
2
O
2
molecule). Since an
O
2
O
2
molecule weighs 32 on our
atomic mass scale, then a particle of oxide A weighs
0.875
×
32
=
28
0.875
×
32
=
28
. Now we know the molecular weight of oxide A.
Furthermore, we have already determined from
the combining volumes that oxide A contains a single oxygen atom,
of mass 16. Therefore, the mass of carbon in oxide A is 12.
However, at this point, we do not know whether this is one carbon
atom of mass 12, two atoms of mass 6, eight atoms of mass 1.5, or
one of many other possibilities.
To make further progress, we make additional
measurements on other carbon containing gas compounds. 1 liter of
oxide B of carbon is formed from 1 liter of oxygen. Therefore, each
oxide B molecule contains two oxygen atoms. 1 liter of oxide B
weighs 1.375 times as much as 1 liter of oxygen. Therefore, one
oxide B molecule has mass
1.375
×
32
=
44
1.375
×
32
=
44
. Since there are
two oxygen atoms in a molecule of oxide B, the mass of oxygen in
oxide B is 32. Therefore, the mass of carbon in oxide B is 12, the
same as in oxide A.
We can repeat this process for many such
gaseous compounds containing carbon atoms. In each case, we find
that the mass of carbon in each molecule is either 12 or a multiple
of 12. We never find, for examples, 6 or 18, which would be
possible if each carbon atom had mass 6. The simplest conclusion is
that a carbon atom has mass 12. Once we know the atomic mass of
carbon, we can conclude that the molecular formula of oxide A is
C
O
C
O
, and that of oxide B is
C
O
2
C
O
2
.
Therefore, the atomic masses of non-gaseous
elements can be determined by mass and volume measurements on
gaseous compounds containing these elements. This procedure is
fairly general, and most atomic masses can be determined in this
way.
Moles, Molecular Formulae and Stoichiometric
Calculations
We began with a circular dilemma: we could
determine molecular formulae provided that we knew atomic masses,
but that we could only determine atomic masses from a knowledge of
molecular formulae. Since we now have a method for determining all
atomic masses, we have resolved this dilemma and we can determine
the molecular formula for any compound for which we have percent
composition by mass.
As a simple example, we consider a compound
which is found to be 40.0% carbon, 53.3% oxygen, and 6.7% hydrogen
by mass. Recall from the
Law of Definite Proportions that these mass ratios are
independent of the sample, so we can take any convenient sample to
do our analysis. Assuming that we have 100.0g of the compound, we
must have 40.0g of carbon, 53.3g of oxygen, and 6.7g of hydrogen.
If we could count or otherwise determine the number of atoms of
each element represented by these masses, we would have the
molecular formula. However, this would not only be extremely
difficult to do but also unnecessary.
From our determination of atomic masses, we
can note that 1 atom of carbon has a mass which is 12.0 times the
mass of a hydrogen atom. Therefore, the mass of
NN
atoms of carbon
is also 12.0 times the mass of NN
atoms of hydrogen atoms, no matter
what NN
is. If we consider this carefully, we discover that 12.0g of
carbon contains exactly the same number of atoms as does 1.0g of
hydrogen. Similarly, we note that 1 atom of oxygen has a mass which
is
16.012.0
16.0
12.0
times the mass of a carbon atom. Therefore, the mass
of NN
atoms of oxygen is
16.012.0
16.0
12.0
times the mass of
NN atoms of
carbon. Again, we can conclude that 16.0g of oxygen contains
exactly the same number of atoms as 12.0g of carbon, which in turn
is the same number of atoms as 1.0g of hydrogen. Without knowing
(or necessarily even caring) what the number is, we can say that it
is the same number for all three elements.
For convenience, then, we
define
the number of
atoms in 12.0g of carbon to be 1
mole of atoms. Note that 1 mole
is a specific number of
particles, just like 1 dozen is a specific number, independent of
what objects we are counting. The advantage to defining the
mole in this way is that it is easy to determine the
number of moles of a substance we have, and knowing the number of
moles is equivalent to counting the number of atoms (or molecules)
in a sample. For example, 24.0g of carbon contains 2.0 moles of
atoms, 30.0g of carbon contains 2.5 moles of atoms, and in general,
xx
grams of carbon contains
x12.0
x
12.0
moles of atoms. Also, we recall
that 16.0g of oxygen contains exactly as many atoms as does 12.0g
of carbon, and therefore 16.0g of oxygen contains exactly 1.0 mole
of oxygen atoms. Thus, 32.0g of oxygen contains 2.0 moles of oxygen
atoms, 40.0g of oxygen contains 2.5 moles, and
xx grams of oxygen
contains
x16.0
x
16.0
moles of oxygen atoms. Even more generally, then,
if we have mm
grams of an element whose atomic mass is
MM, the number
of moles of atoms, nn, is
n=mM
n
m
M
(5)
Now we can determine the relative numbers of
atoms of carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen in our unknown compound
above. In a 100.0g sample, we have 40.0g of carbon, 53.3g of
oxygen, and 6.7g of hydrogen. The number of moles of atoms in each
element is thus
n
C
=40.0g12.0gmol=3.33moles
n
C
40.0
g
12.0
g
mol
3.33
moles
(6)
n
O
=53.3g16.0gmol=3.33moles
n
O
53.3
g
16.0
g
mol
3.33
moles
(7)
n
H
=6.7g1.0gmol=6.67moles
n
H
6.7
g
1.0
g
mol
6.67
moles
(8)
We note that the numbers of moles of atoms of
the elements are in the simple ratio
n
C
:
n
O
:
n
H
=
1
:
1
:
2
n
C
:
n
O
:
n
H
=
1
:
1
:
2
. Since the
number of particles in 1 mole is the same for all elements, then it
must also be true that the number of atoms of the elements are in
the simple ratio 1 : 1 : 2. Therefore, the molecular formula of the
compound must be
C
O
H
2
C
O
H
2
.
Or is it? On further reflection, we must
realize that the simple ratio 1 : 1 : 2 need not represent the exact
numbers of atoms of each type in a molecule of the compound, since
it is indeed only a ratio. Thus the molecular formula could just as
easily be
C
2
O
2
H
4
C
2
O
2
H
4
or
C
3
O
3
H
6
C
3
O
3
H
6
. Since the formula
C
O
H
2
C
O
H
2
is based on
empirical mass ratio data, we refer to this as the empirical
formula of the compound. To determine the
molecular formula, we
need to determine the relative mass of a molecule of the compound,
i.e. the molecular mass. One way to do so is based on the
Law of Combining Volumes,
Avogadro's Hypothesis, and the
Ideal Gas Law. To illustrate, however, if we were to
find that the relative mass of one molecule of the compound is
60.0, we could conclude that the molecular formula is
C
2
O
2
H
4
C
2
O
2
H
4
.
Review and Discussion Questions
Problem 1State the
Law of Combining Volumes and provide an example of your
own construction which demonstrates this law.
Problem 2Explain how the
Law of Combining Volumes, combined with the
Atomic-Molecular Theory, leads directly to
Avogadro's Hypothesis that equal volumes of gas at
equal temperatures and pressure contain equal numbers of
particles.
Problem 3Use
Avogadro's Hypothesis to demonstrate that oxygen gas
molecules cannot be monatomic.
Problem 4
The density of water vapor at room
temperature and atmospheric pressure is
0.737gL
0.737
g
L
. Compound A
is 80.0% carbon by mass, and 20.0% hydrogen. Compound B is 83.3%
carbon by mass and 16.7% hydrogen. The density of gaseous Compound
A is
1.227gL
1.227
g
L
, and the density of Compound B is
2.948gL
2.948
g
L
. Show how these data can be used to determine the
molar masses of Compounds A and B, assuming that water has
molecular mass 18.
Problem 5
From the results
above, determine
the mass of carbon in a molecule of Compound A and in a molecule of
Compound B. Explain how these results indicate that a carbon atom
has atomic mass 12.
Problem 6
Explain the utility of calculating the
number of moles in a sample of a
substance.
Problem 7
Explain how we can conclude that 28g of
nitrogen gas (
N
2
N
2
) contains exactly as many molecules as 32g of
oxygen gas (
O
2
O
2
), even though we cannot possibly count this
number.
"General Chemistry course in Braille."