Stoichiometry MEGA UNIT BUNDLE (2024)

Everything you need for a successful Stoichiometry Unit! Three complete lessons: each lesson includes student notes, detailed teacher notes, check for understanding exit tickets, and homework. Also, included in this Mega Unit Bundle are two quizzes, one set of task cards, color-by-number, three doodle notes, 2 graphic organizers, a board game, scavenger hunt, a stoichiometry lab, and a teacher demonstration with inquiry activity. And finally, an editable unit study guide and editable unit test are included both with honors & standard versions!

The Stoichiometry Mega Unit Bundle includes these concepts:

  • Define stoichiometry.
  • Describe the function of the mole to mole conversion factor.
  • Write mole to mole conversion factors for chemical reactions.
  • Calculate the amount of product or reactant in moles, mass, or liters from an amount of a different product or reactant in moles, mass, or liters
  • Define limiting and excess reactants.
  • Use stoichiometric calculations to determine the limiting and excess reactant.
  • Determine the amount of excess reactant remaining after reaction has run.
  • Using the limiting reactant, use stoichiometric calculations to determine the amount of product formed.
  • Show a qualitative understanding of the phenomenon of limiting and excess reagents in a chemical reaction through pictorial and conceptual examples.
  • Distinguish between theoretical yield, actual yield, and percentage yield.
  • Calculate the percentage yield for a chemical reaction given the actual yield and amount of reactant(s).

Products Included in This Mega Bundle:

Note: each lesson consists of a editable PowerPoint, Student Notes (Cornell Style), Teacher Notes, Exit Ticket, and a Homework /Practice Assignment

  • Lesson: Stoichiometry: A Complete Lesson
  • with teacher demonstration & student inquiry activity
  • Lesson: Percentage Yield
  • Conversion: The Chemistry Board Game- Stoichiometry Edition
  • Stoichiometry Scavenger Hunt w/ QR Codes
  • Stoichiometry Doodle Notes
  • Percent Yield Doodle Notes
  • Stoichiometry Task Cards
  • Stoichiometry Color-by-Number
  • Stoichiometry Lab: Making Salt
  • Stoichiometry Group Unit Study Guide

Free Bonuses:

  • Stoichiometry Quiz
  • Limiting/Excess Reactants Quiz
  • Stoichiometry Unit Study Guide- editable & pdf (Honors & Standard)
  • Stoichiometry Unit Test- editable & pdf (Honors & Standard)

Note: The PowerPoints included in this bundle are editable, animated PowerPoints. This means that slides will appear to be busy and even overlapping in the “slide” mode, but will be awesome in the “slide show” mode. Please don’t edit the PowerPoint until you have watched it in slide show mode.

Included in This Product:

  • (3) Animated PowerPoints- Editable- 52 Total Slides
  • (1) An Inquiry based Quick Activity that starts with a Teacher Demonstration (phenomenon)
  • (1) Student Activity Directions- 3 pages plus KEY
  • (1) Student Answer Sheet for Activity- 2 Pages w/ KEY
  • (3) Student Notes- Cornell Style Cloze Notes w/Example KEYs
  • (5) Homework Assignments w/KEYS (Standard & Honors for Percent Yield Lesson)
  • (3) Check for Understanding (Exit Tickets) w/KEYS
  • (2) Quizzes
  • (2) Graphic Organizers
  • (3) Teacher Notes slide by slide, tips, and strategies.
  • (26 pages- includes complete instructions for teacher demo and student activity)
  • (1) Board Game: Conversion-The Stoichiometry Edition
  • (1) Task Card Set
  • (1) Stoichiometry Scavenger Hunt w/ QR Codes
  • (1) Color-by-Number
  • (3) Doodle Notes: Stoichiometry, Limiting & Excess Reactants, and Percent Yield
  • (1) Stoichiometry Lab: Making Salt
  • Unit Study Guide—Editable w/ KEY (Standard & Honors)
  • Unit TestEditable w/ KEY (Standard & Honors)

This BUNDLE will be a something you will want to use year after year and SAVE you money, too!

This unit is appropriate for grades 9-12 chemistry.

Chemistry Corner

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LICENSING TERMS: By downloading this product, you own a license for one teacher only for personal use in your classroom. Licenses are non-transferable, meaning they cannot be passed from one teacher to another. No part of this resource is to be shared with colleagues or used by an entire grade level, school, or district without purchasing the proper number of licenses. I you are a coach, principal or district interested in transferable licenses to accommodate yearly staff changes, please contact TpT for Schools at Schools@TeachersPayTeachers.com or find more information under “Schools” on the Teachers Pay Teachers site.

COPYRIGHT TERMS: ©Chemistry Corner. Please note – all material included in this resource belongs to Chemistry Corner. By downloading, you have a license to use the material, but you do not own the material. This resource, or any portion of this resource, may not be uploaded to the internet in any form, including classroom/personal websites or network drives, unless the site is password protected and can only be accessed by —no other teachers or anyone else on the internet.

Stoichiometry MEGA UNIT BUNDLE (2024)

FAQs

How do you pass stoichiometry? ›

Almost all stoichiometric problems can be solved in just four simple steps:
  1. Balance the equation.
  2. Convert units of a given substance to moles.
  3. Using the mole ratio, calculate the moles of substance yielded by the reaction.
  4. Convert moles of wanted substance to desired units.

Why is stoichiometry important? ›

To manipulate chemical reactions on a large scale, scientists use stoichiometry to quantify those reactions and make sure that there are just the right amount of reactants and products. Without it, reactions can be incomplete, with expensive materials wasted and harmful byproducts created.

How to find mole stoichiometry? ›

Flowchart of steps in stoichiometric calculations. Step 1: grams of A is converted to moles by multiplying by the inverse of the molar mass. Step 2: moles of A is converted to moles of B by multiplying by the molar ratio. Step 3: moles of B is converted to grams of B by the molar mass.

Why is stoichiometry so hard for me? ›

Stoichiometry might be difficult for students because they often don't see the big picture. That is because they don't understand how all the concepts fit together and why they are being in the real world.

How can I make stoichiometry easier? ›

The key to making stoichiometry problems easy is to adopt and practice a methodical approach to the problems. Balance the chemical reaction equation. A balanced reaction equation contains the same number of each type of atom on both sides of the reaction arrow.

What is the first step in solving stoichiometry? ›

Answer and Explanation:

The first and critical step in any stoichiometric calculation is to have a balanced chemical equation.

What is the stoichiometry formula? ›

Stoichiometry is often used to balance chemical equations (reaction stoichiometry). For example, the two diatomic gases, hydrogen and oxygen, can combine to form a liquid, water, in an exothermic reaction, as described by the following equation: 2 H 2 + O 2 → 2 H 2O.

What are the four types of stoichiometry? ›

The four types of stoichiometry in reactions problems are mass to mass calculations, volume to volume calculations, mole to mole calculations, and identifying the limiting reagent.

What law is stoichiometry based on? ›

Stoichiometry is based on the law of conservation of mass.

Who invented stoichiometry? ›

Stoichiometry was first discovered by Jeremias Richter, a German chemist. It was Richter who coined the term stoichiometry, a tongue-twisting word that baffles students to this day. Stoichiometry was derived from stoikheion, Greek for "element", and "metron", meaning measure.

What are some examples of stoichiometry in real life? ›

Stoichiometry is at the heart of the production of many things you use in your daily life. Soap, tires, fertilizer, gasoline, deodorant, and chocolate bars are just a few commodities you use that are chemically engineered, or produced through chemical reactions.

What is stoichiometry for dummies? ›

Stoichiometry is a section of chemistry that involves using relationships between reactants and/or products in a chemical reaction to determine desired quantitative data. In Greek, stoikhein means element and metron means measure, so stoichiometry literally translated means the measure of elements.

Do you use Avogadro's number in stoichiometry? ›

If you are given grams in the problem, the Avogadro's Number will be used at the end. If you are given a number of molecules, then Avogadro's Number will be used at the start.

What are the rules of stoichiometry? ›

Stoichiometry rests upon the very basic laws that help to understand it better, i.e., law of conservation of mass, the law of definite proportions (i.e., the law of constant composition), the law of multiple proportions and the law of reciprocal proportions.

What are the 5 steps of stoichiometry? ›

  • Balance equation.
  • Convert masses of reactants to moles.
  • Using the moles of reactants determine which reactant is limiting.
  • Using the amount of limiting reactant and the appropriate mole ratios, calculate the number of moles of the desired product.
  • Convert from moles of product to grams using molar mass (if required)

How to do grade 11 stoichiometry? ›

We can tackle this stoichiometry problem using the following steps:
  1. Step 1: Convert known reactant mass to moles. ...
  2. Step 2: Use the mole ratio to find moles of other reactant. ...
  3. Step 3: Convert moles of other reactant to mass.

What is the first step for all stoichiometry problems? ›

Answer and Explanation:

The first and critical step in any stoichiometric calculation is to have a balanced chemical equation.

References

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