Calculator Form
Example Data Table
| Reaction | Known Reactant | Known Moles | Second Reactant | Second Moles | Target Product | Expected Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2H2 + O2 -> 2H2O | H2, coefficient 2 | 4 mol | O2, coefficient 1 | 1.5 mol | H2O, coefficient 2 | O2 limits reaction. H2O = 3 mol. |
| N2 + 3H2 -> 2NH3 | N2, coefficient 1 | 2 mol | H2, coefficient 3 | 9 mol | NH3, coefficient 2 | N2 limits reaction. NH3 = 4 mol. |
| CaCO3 -> CaO + CO2 | CaCO3, coefficient 1 | 5 mol | Not used | Not used | CO2, coefficient 1 | CO2 = 5 mol. |
Formula Used
Moles from mass: moles = mass ÷ molar mass
Simple mole ratio: target moles = known moles × target coefficient ÷ known coefficient
Reaction extent: extent = available moles ÷ reactant coefficient
Limiting reagent: the reactant with the smaller extent limits the reaction.
Theoretical mass: target grams = target moles × target molar mass
Percent yield: percent yield = actual yield ÷ theoretical yield × 100
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter a balanced chemical equation for your reference.
- Enter the known substance name and its balanced coefficient.
- Enter known moles, or enter mass and molar mass.
- Enter the target substance and its coefficient.
- Add target molar mass if you need grams.
- Add a second reactant when you need a limiting reagent check.
- Add actual yield when you want percent yield.
- Press calculate and review the result above the form.
- Use CSV or PDF download buttons to save the result.
Understanding Mole Ratios
Balanced Equations
Mole ratios connect substances in a balanced chemical equation. They show how many moles of one substance react with, or produce, another substance. The numbers come from coefficients, not subscripts. A coefficient of two means two moles are involved for every complete reaction set.
Mass and Mole Conversion
This calculator helps with common stoichiometry tasks. You can enter direct moles. You can also enter mass and molar mass. The tool then converts mass into moles before applying the balanced equation ratio. This is useful when lab data is measured on a scale instead of counted in moles.
Simple Ratio and Limiting Reagent
A simple mole ratio compares one known substance with one target substance. The target amount equals known moles multiplied by the target coefficient divided by the known coefficient. When a second reactant is added, the calculator switches to a limiting reagent check. It compares available reaction extents. The smaller extent controls the maximum product.
Theoretical Yield
The theoretical yield is the amount predicted by the balanced equation. It assumes pure substances, complete reaction, and no product loss. Real experiments often give less. That is why the calculator can compare actual yield with theoretical yield. Percent yield shows how efficient the reaction was.
Study and Lab Uses
Mole ratios are important in homework, titration planning, synthesis design, and quality checks. They prevent guessing. They also show whether one reactant is left over after the limiting reactant is consumed. This helps students see the logic behind excess reagent calculations.
Accuracy Tips
Always start with a balanced equation. Check each coefficient carefully. Use consistent units for mass and molar mass. Enter positive values only. If your answer seems too large, review the coefficient order. A reversed ratio is a common mistake. Clear inputs produce clear stoichiometry.
Equation Checking
The calculator is also helpful for checking balanced equations by pattern. If a product result does not match the expected lab scale, the equation may need review. Coefficients should be reduced to the lowest whole number set when possible. Decimal coefficients may be used for special cases, but classroom work usually prefers whole numbers.
Different Substance Types
For gases, solutions, or solids, the mole relationship still comes first. Volume, concentration, or mass can be converted into moles before the ratio is used. This makes the same method work across many chemistry problems during lab work.
FAQs
What is a mole ratio?
A mole ratio compares substances using coefficients from a balanced chemical equation. It tells how many moles of one substance match another substance in the reaction.
Why must the equation be balanced first?
The coefficients must represent equal atoms on both sides. Without a balanced equation, the mole ratio is not chemically valid and results will be incorrect.
Can I enter grams instead of moles?
Yes. Enter mass and molar mass. The calculator converts grams into moles, then applies the coefficient ratio for the target substance.
What does limiting reagent mean?
The limiting reagent runs out first. It controls the maximum product possible, even when another reactant remains in excess.
How is theoretical yield calculated?
Theoretical yield comes from the balanced equation. Target moles are calculated first. If molar mass is entered, the moles are converted into grams.
What is percent yield?
Percent yield compares actual yield with theoretical yield. It shows reaction efficiency and product recovery as a percentage.
Can decimal coefficients be used?
Yes. The calculator accepts decimal coefficients. However, most classroom balanced equations use the lowest whole number coefficients.
Why is my result different from my lab result?
Lab results can be lower because of incomplete reaction, impurities, side reactions, spills, or measurement error. The calculator gives ideal stoichiometric values.