Some Basic Concepts of Chemistry
Jharkhand Board · Class 11 · Chemistry
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Worked Examples (In-text Problems)
1.7Calculate the molarity of NaOH in the solution prepared by dissolving its 4 g in enough water to form 250 mL of the solution.Show solution
- Mass of NaOH = 4 g
- Volume of solution = 250 mL = 0.250 L
- Molar mass of NaOH = 23 + 16 + 1 = 40 g mol⁻¹
Formula:
Step 1: Calculate moles of NaOH.
Step 2: Calculate molarity.
Note: Molarity depends on temperature because volume changes with temperature.
1.8The density of 3 M solution of NaCl is 1.25 g mL⁻¹. Calculate the molality of the solution.Show solution
- Molarity (M) = 3 mol L⁻¹
- Density of solution = 1.25 g mL⁻¹
- Molar mass of NaCl = 23 + 35.5 = 58.5 g mol⁻¹
Step 1: Find mass of NaCl in 1 L of solution.
Step 2: Find mass of 1 L solution.
Step 3: Find mass of water (solvent).
Step 4: Calculate molality.
Note: Molality does not change with temperature since mass is unaffected by temperature.
EXERCISES
1.1Calculate the molar mass of the following: (i) H₂O (ii) CO₂ (iii) CH₄Show solution
Atomic masses used: H = 1, O = 16, C = 12
(i) H₂O:
(ii) CO₂:
(iii) CH₄:
1.2Calculate the mass per cent of different elements present in sodium sulphate (Na₂SO₄).Show solution
Molar mass of Na₂SO₄:
Formula:
Mass % of Na:
Mass % of S:
Mass % of O:
Verification: ✓
1.3Determine the empirical formula of an oxide of iron, which has 69.9% iron and 30.1% dioxygen by mass.Show solution
Step 1: Convert mass % to moles (assume 100 g sample).
Step 2: Divide by the smallest number of moles.
Step 3: Multiply by 2 to get whole numbers.
Empirical formula:
1.4Calculate the amount of carbon dioxide that could be produced when (i) 1 mole of carbon is burnt in air. (ii) 1 mole of carbon is burnt in 16 g of dioxygen. (iii) 2 moles of carbon are burnt in 16 g of dioxygen.Show solution
1 mol C reacts with 1 mol O₂ (32 g) to give 1 mol CO₂ (44 g).
(i) 1 mole of carbon burnt in air (excess O₂):
O₂ is in excess in air, so 1 mol C reacts completely.
(ii) 1 mole of carbon burnt in 16 g of O₂:
O₂ is the limiting reagent (only 0.5 mol available, but 1 mol needed).
(iii) 2 moles of carbon burnt in 16 g of O₂:
2 mol C requires 2 mol O₂, but only 0.5 mol O₂ is available. O₂ is the limiting reagent.
1.5Calculate the mass of sodium acetate (CH₃COONa) required to make 500 mL of 0.375 molar aqueous solution. Molar mass of sodium acetate is 82.0245 g mol⁻¹.Show solution
- Volume = 500 mL = 0.500 L
- Molarity = 0.375 M
- Molar mass of CH₃COONa = 82.0245 g mol⁻¹
Step 1: Find moles of sodium acetate required.
Step 2: Find mass.
1.6Calculate the concentration of nitric acid in moles per litre in a sample which has a density, 1.41 g mL⁻¹ and the mass per cent of nitric acid in it being 69%.Show solution
- Density = 1.41 g mL⁻¹
- Mass per cent of HNO₃ = 69%
- Molar mass of HNO₃ = 1 + 14 + 48 = 63 g mol⁻¹
Step 1: Consider 1 L (1000 mL) of solution.
Step 2: Mass of HNO₃ in 1 L.
Step 3: Moles of HNO₃.
Step 4: Molarity.
1.7How much copper can be obtained from 100 g of copper sulphate (CuSO₄)?Show solution
Molar mass of CuSO₄:
Step 1: Moles of CuSO₄.
Step 2: Each mole of CuSO₄ contains 1 mole of Cu.
Step 3: Mass of Cu.
1.8Determine the molecular formula of an oxide of iron, in which the mass per cent of iron and oxygen are 69.9 and 30.1, respectively.Show solution
Ratio Fe : O =
Empirical formula: Fe₂O₃
Step 2: Calculate empirical formula mass.
Step 3: Determine n.
For iron oxides, the molar mass of Fe₂O₃ ≈ 159.7 g mol⁻¹.
Molecular formula:
1.9Calculate the atomic mass (average) of chlorine using the following data: ³⁵Cl: % Natural Abundance = 75.77, Molar Mass = 34.9689; ³⁷Cl: % Natural Abundance = 24.23, Molar Mass = 36.9659.Show solution
1.10In three moles of ethane (C₂H₆), calculate the following: (i) Number of moles of carbon atoms. (ii) Number of moles of hydrogen atoms. (iii) Number of molecules of ethane.Show solution
Each molecule of C₂H₆ contains 2 C atoms and 6 H atoms.
(i) Moles of carbon atoms:
(ii) Moles of hydrogen atoms:
(iii) Number of molecules of ethane:
1.11What is the concentration of sugar (C₁₂H₂₂O₁₁) in mol L⁻¹ if its 20 g are dissolved in enough water to make a final volume up to 2L?Show solution
- Mass of sugar = 20 g
- Volume = 2 L
- Molar mass of C₁₂H₂₂O₁₁ = 12(12) + 22(1) + 11(16) = 144 + 22 + 176 = 342 g mol⁻¹
Step 1: Moles of sugar.
Step 2: Molarity.
1.12If the density of methanol is 0.793 kg L⁻¹, what is its volume needed for making 2.5 L of its 0.25 M solution?Show solution
- Density of methanol = 0.793 kg L⁻¹ = 793 g L⁻¹
- Volume of solution to be prepared = 2.5 L
- Molarity = 0.25 M
- Molar mass of methanol (CH₃OH) = 12 + 4 + 16 = 32 g mol⁻¹
Step 1: Find moles of methanol needed.
Step 2: Find mass of methanol needed.
Step 3: Find volume of methanol.
1.13Pressure is determined as force per unit area of the surface. The SI unit of pressure, pascal is as shown below: 1 Pa = 1 N m⁻². If mass of air at sea level is 1034 g cm⁻², calculate the pressure in pascal.Show solution
Concept: Pressure = Force/Area = (mass × g)/Area
Step 1: Convert mass per unit area to SI units.
Step 2: Calculate pressure (using g = 9.8 m s⁻²).
1.14What is the SI unit of mass? How is it defined?Show solution
Definition: The kilogram is the SI unit of mass. It is defined as the mass equal to the international prototype of the kilogram (a platinum-iridium alloy cylinder kept at the International Bureau of Weights and Measures, Sèvres, France).
In the revised SI (2019), the kilogram is defined by fixing the numerical value of the Planck constant J s (i.e., kg m² s⁻¹), thereby defining the kilogram in terms of fundamental constants.
1.15Match the following prefixes with their multiples: (i) micro (ii) deca (iii) mega (iv) giga (v) femto — Multiples: 10⁶, 10⁹, 10⁻⁶, 10⁻¹⁵, 10Show solution
| Prefix | Multiple |
|--------|----------|
| (i) micro | |
| (ii) deca | |
| (iii) mega | |
| (iv) giga | |
| (v) femto | |
1.16What do you mean by significant figures?Show solution
Rules for counting significant figures:
1. All non-zero digits are significant. (e.g., 285 has 3 significant figures)
2. Zeros between non-zero digits are significant. (e.g., 2005 has 4 significant figures)
3. Leading zeros (zeros to the left of the first non-zero digit) are NOT significant. (e.g., 0.0025 has 2 significant figures)
4. Trailing zeros in a number with a decimal point ARE significant. (e.g., 4.500 has 4 significant figures)
5. Trailing zeros in a whole number without a decimal point may or may not be significant (ambiguous).
Significance: Significant figures indicate the precision of a measurement.
1.17A sample of drinking water was found to be severely contaminated with chloroform, CHCl₃, supposed to be carcinogenic in nature. The level of contamination was 15 ppm (by mass). (i) Express this in per cent by mass. (ii) Determine the molality of chloroform in the water sample.Show solution
Concept: 1 ppm = 1 part per million by mass = of solution
(i) Per cent by mass:
(ii) Molality:
Molar mass of CHCl₃ = 12 + 1 + 3(35.5) = 12 + 1 + 106.5 = 119.5 g mol⁻¹
In 10⁶ g of water sample:
- Mass of CHCl₃ = 15 g
- Mass of water (solvent) ≈ (10⁶ − 15) g ≈ 10⁶ g (since contamination is very small)
1.18Express the following in the scientific notation: (i) 0.0048 (ii) 234,000 (iii) 8008 (iv) 500.0 (v) 6.0012Show solution
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv)
(v) (already in scientific notation)
1.19How many significant figures are present in the following? (i) 0.0025 (ii) 208 (iii) 5005 (iv) 126,000 (v) 500.0 (vi) 2.0034Show solution
Leading zeros are not significant. Only 2 and 5 are significant.
(ii) 208:
All digits including the zero between 2 and 8 are significant.
(iii) 5005:
Zeros between non-zero digits are significant.
(iv) 126,000:
Trailing zeros in a whole number without decimal point are ambiguous; conventionally taken as not significant.
(v) 500.0:
The decimal point makes all trailing zeros significant.
(vi) 2.0034:
All digits are significant (zeros between non-zero digits count).
1.20Round up the following upto three significant figures: (i) 34.216 (ii) 10.4107 (iii) 0.04597 (iv) 2808Show solution
The 4th digit is 1 (< 5), so drop it.
(ii) 10.4107 → 3 significant figures:
The 4th digit is 1 (< 5), so drop.
(iii) 0.04597 → 3 significant figures:
Leading zeros are not significant. The significant digits are 4, 5, 9, 7.
Rounding to 3 sig figs: 4th significant digit is 7 (≥ 5), so round up 9 → 10, carry over.
(iv) 2808 → 3 significant figures:
The 4th digit is 8 (≥ 5), so round up.
1.21The following data are obtained when dinitrogen and dioxygen react together to form different compounds: (i) 14g N₂, 16g O₂ (ii) 14g N₂, 32g O₂ (iii) 28g N₂, 32g O₂ (iv) 28g N₂, 80g O₂. (a) Which law of chemical combination is obeyed by the above experimental data? Give its statement. (b) Fill in the blanks: (i) 1 km = __ mm = __ pm (ii) 1 mg = __ kg = __ ng (iii) 1 mL = __ L = __ dm³Show solution
For a fixed mass of dinitrogen (14 g), the masses of dioxygen that combine are 16 g, 32 g (cases i and ii).
Ratio of O₂ = 16 : 32 = 1 : 2 (simple whole number ratio)
For 28 g of dinitrogen, masses of O₂ are 32 g and 80 g (cases iii and iv).
Ratio of O₂ = 32 : 80 = 2 : 5 (simple whole number ratio)
This obeys the Law of Multiple Proportions.
Statement: When two elements combine to form two or more different compounds, the masses of one element that combine with a fixed mass of the other element bear a simple whole number ratio to one another.
---
(b) Unit conversions:
(i) 1 km = ? mm = ? pm
(ii) 1 mg = ? kg = ? ng
(iii) 1 mL = ? L = ? dm³
1.22If the speed of light is 3.0 × 10⁸ m s⁻¹, calculate the distance covered by light in 2.00 ns.Show solution
- Speed of light,
- Time,
Formula: Distance = Speed × Time
1.23In a reaction A + B₂ → AB₂, identify the limiting reagent, if any, in the following reaction mixtures. (i) 300 atoms of A + 200 molecules of B₂ (ii) 2 mol A + 3 mol B₂ (iii) 100 atoms of A + 100 molecules of B₂ (iv) 5 mol A + 2.5 mol B₂ (v) 2.5 mol A + 5 mol B₂Show solution
1 atom/mol of A reacts with 1 molecule/mol of B₂ in a 1:1 ratio.
(i) 300 atoms of A + 200 molecules of B₂:
A needed for 200 B₂ = 200 atoms. A available = 300 (excess).
Limiting reagent: B₂
(ii) 2 mol A + 3 mol B₂:
B₂ needed for 2 mol A = 2 mol. B₂ available = 3 mol (excess).
Limiting reagent: A
(iii) 100 atoms of A + 100 molecules of B₂:
Ratio is exactly 1:1. Both are consumed completely.
No limiting reagent (both are in stoichiometric amounts)
(iv) 5 mol A + 2.5 mol B₂:
A needed for 2.5 mol B₂ = 2.5 mol. A available = 5 mol (excess).
Limiting reagent: B₂
(v) 2.5 mol A + 5 mol B₂:
B₂ needed for 2.5 mol A = 2.5 mol. B₂ available = 5 mol (excess).
Limiting reagent: A
1.24Dinitrogen and dihydrogen react with each other to produce ammonia according to the following chemical equation: N₂(g) + 3H₂(g) → 2NH₃(g). (i) Calculate the mass of ammonia produced if 2.00 × 10³ g dinitrogen reacts with 1.00 × 10³ g of dihydrogen. (ii) Will any of the two reactants remain unreacted? (iii) If yes, which one and what would be its mass?Show solution
Given:
- Mass of N₂ = g
- Mass of H₂ = g
Step 1: Calculate moles of reactants.
Step 2: Identify limiting reagent.
From stoichiometry, 1 mol N₂ requires 3 mol H₂.
71.43 mol N₂ requires mol H₂.
Available H₂ = 500 mol > 214.3 mol.
∴ N₂ is the limiting reagent.
(i) Mass of NH₃ produced:
1 mol N₂ gives 2 mol NH₃.
(ii) Yes, H₂ will remain unreacted.
(iii) Mass of unreacted H₂:
1.25How are 0.50 mol Na₂CO₃ and 0.50 M Na₂CO₃ different?Show solution
This refers to a definite amount (number of moles) of Na₂CO₃.
No mention of volume or solvent — it is simply a quantity of substance.
0.50 M Na₂CO₃:
This refers to a concentration — a solution containing 0.50 moles of Na₂CO₃ dissolved in enough water to make 1 litre of solution.
Key difference: 0.50 mol is an amount of substance, while 0.50 M is a concentration (moles per litre of solution).
1.26If 10 volumes of dihydrogen gas reacts with five volumes of dioxygen gas, how many volumes of water vapour would be produced?Show solution
By Gay-Lussac's Law of Gaseous Volumes, volumes react in the same ratio as molar coefficients.
From the equation: 2 volumes H₂ + 1 volume O₂ → 2 volumes H₂O
Given: 10 volumes H₂ and 5 volumes O₂.
Check stoichiometry: 10 volumes H₂ requires volumes O₂. Exactly 5 volumes O₂ are available — both are completely consumed.
1.27Convert the following into basic units: (i) 28.7 pm (ii) 15.15 pm (iii) 25365 mgShow solution
(i) 28.7 pm:
(ii) 15.15 pm:
(iii) 25365 mg:
1.28Which one of the following will have the largest number of atoms? (i) 1 g Au (s) (ii) 1 g Na (s) (iii) 1 g Li (s) (iv) 1 g of Cl₂(g)Show solution
For 1 g of each substance:
(i) Au: Molar mass = 197 g mol⁻¹
(ii) Na: Molar mass = 23 g mol⁻¹
(iii) Li: Molar mass = 6.941 g mol⁻¹
(iv) Cl₂: Molar mass = 71 g mol⁻¹; each molecule has 2 atoms
Comparison: Li (0.144) > Na (0.0435) > Cl₂ (0.0282) > Au (0.00508)
1.29Calculate the molarity of a solution of ethanol in water, in which the mole fraction of ethanol is 0.040 (assume the density of water to be one).Show solution
- Mole fraction of ethanol,
- Density of water = 1 g mL⁻¹ = 1 kg L⁻¹
- Molar mass of ethanol (C₂H₅OH) = 46 g mol⁻¹
- Molar mass of water = 18 g mol⁻¹
Step 1: Find mole fraction of water.
Step 2: Assume 1 mol total. Then moles of ethanol = 0.040 mol, moles of water = 0.960 mol.
Step 3: Find mass of water (solvent).
(using density = 1 g mL⁻¹)
Step 4: Calculate molarity.
Volume of solution ≈ volume of water (dilute solution) =
1.30What will be the mass of one ¹²C atom in g?Show solution
1.31How many significant figures should be present in the answer of the following calculations? (i) (0.02856 × 298.15 × 0.112) / 0.5785 (ii) 5 × 5.364 (iii) 0.0125 + 0.7864 + 0.0215Show solution
For multiplication/division, the answer should have the same number of significant figures as the number with the least significant figures.
- 0.02856 → 4 sig figs
- 298.15 → 5 sig figs
- 0.112 → 3 sig figs
- 0.5785 → 4 sig figs
Least = 3 significant figures.
(ii) :
- 5 is an exact number (or 1 sig fig)
- 5.364 → 4 sig figs
If 5 is exact (counting number), the answer has 4 significant figures.
(iii) :
For addition/subtraction, the answer should have the same number of decimal places as the number with the fewest decimal places.
- 0.0125 → 4 decimal places
- 0.7864 → 4 decimal places
- 0.0215 → 4 decimal places
All have 4 decimal places, so the answer has 4 decimal places.
1.32Use the data given in the following table to calculate the molar mass of naturally occurring argon isotopes: ³⁶Ar: 35.96755 g mol⁻¹, 0.337%; ³⁸Ar: 37.96272 g mol⁻¹, 0.063%; ⁴⁰Ar: 39.9624 g mol⁻¹, 99.600%.Show solution
1.33Calculate the number of atoms in each of the following (i) 52 moles of Ar (ii) 52 u of He (iii) 52 g of He.Show solution
(i) 52 moles of Ar:
(ii) 52 u of He:
Molar mass of He = 4 u = 4 g mol⁻¹
(iii) 52 g of He:
1.34A welding fuel gas contains carbon and hydrogen only. Burning a small sample of it in oxygen gives 3.38 g carbon dioxide, 0.690 g of water and no other products. A volume of 10.0 L (measured at STP) of this welding gas is found to weigh 11.6 g. Calculate (i) empirical formula, (ii) molar mass of the gas, and (iii) molecular formula.Show solution
Moles of CO₂ = mol → Moles of C = 0.0768 mol
Mass of C = g
Moles of H₂O = mol → Moles of H = mol
Mass of H = g
Step 2: Find mole ratio C : H.
(i) Empirical formula:
Step 3: Find molar mass.
At STP, 1 mole of gas occupies 22.4 L.
Step 4: Find molecular formula.
Empirical formula mass of CH = 12 + 1 = 13 g mol⁻¹
(iii) Molecular formula: (ethyne/acetylene)
1.35Calcium carbonate reacts with aqueous HCl to give CaCl₂ and CO₂ according to the reaction, CaCO₃(s) + 2HCl(aq) → CaCl₂(aq) + CO₂(g) + H₂O(l). What mass of CaCO₃ is required to react completely with 25 mL of 0.75 M HCl?Show solution
- Volume of HCl = 25 mL = 0.025 L
- Molarity of HCl = 0.75 M
- Molar mass of CaCO₃ = 100 g mol⁻¹
Step 1: Find moles of HCl.
Step 2: From stoichiometry, 2 mol HCl reacts with 1 mol CaCO₃.
Step 3: Find mass of CaCO₃.
1.36Chlorine is prepared in the laboratory by treating manganese dioxide (MnO₂) with aqueous hydrochloric acid according to the reaction: 4HCl(aq) + MnO₂(s) → 2H₂O(l) + MnCl₂(aq) + Cl₂(g). How many grams of HCl react with 5.0 g of manganese dioxide?Show solution
- Mass of MnO₂ = 5.0 g
- Molar mass of MnO₂ = 55 + 32 = 87 g mol⁻¹
- Molar mass of HCl = 1 + 35.5 = 36.5 g mol⁻¹
Step 1: Find moles of MnO₂.
Step 2: From stoichiometry, 4 mol HCl reacts with 1 mol MnO₂.
Step 3: Find mass of HCl.
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