Stoichiometry (/ˌstɔɪkiˈɒmɪtri/ ) is the relationships between the masses of reactants and products before, during, and following chemical reactions.
Stoichiometry is founded on the law of conservation of mass where the total mass of the reactants equals the total mass of the products, leading to the insight that the relations between quantities of reactants and products typically form a ratio of positive integers. This means that if the amounts of the separate reactants are known, then the amount of the product can be calculated. Conversely, if one reactant has a known quantity and the quantity of the products can be empirically determined, then the amount of the other reactants can also be calculated.
This is illustrated in the image here, where the balanced equation is:
- CH4 + 2 O2 → CO2 + 2 H2O
Here, one molecule of methane reacts with two molecules of oxygen gas to yield one molecule of carbon dioxide and two molecules of water. This particular chemical equation is an example of complete combustion. Stoichiometry measures these quantitative relationships, and is used to determine the amount of products and reactants that are produced or needed in a given reaction. Describing the quantitative relationships among substances as they participate in chemical reactions is known as reaction stoichiometry. In the example above, reaction stoichiometry measures the relationship between the quantities of methane and oxygen that react to form carbon dioxide and water.
Because of the well known relationship of moles to atomic weights, the ratios that are arrived at by stoichiometry can be used to determine quantities by weight in a reaction described by a balanced equation. This is called composition stoichiometry.
Gas stoichiometry deals with reactions involving gases, where the gases are at a known temperature, pressure, and volume and can be assumed to be ideal gases. For gases, the volume ratio is ideally the same by the ideal gas law, but the mass ratio of a single reaction has to be calculated from the molecular masses of the reactants and products. In practice, because of the existence of isotopes, molar masses are used instead in calculating the mass ratio.
Etymology
The term stoichiometry was first used by Jeremias Benjamin Richter in 1792 when the first volume of Richter's Anfangsgründe der Stöchyometrie oder Meßkunst chymischer Elemente (Fundamentals of Stoichiometry, or the Art of Measuring the Chemical Elements) was published. The term is derived from the Ancient Greek words στοιχεῖον stoikheîon "element" and μέτρον métron "measure". L. Darmstaedter and Ralph E. Oesper has written a useful account on this.
Definition
A stoichiometric amount or stoichiometric ratio of a reagent is the optimum amount or ratio where, assuming that the reaction proceeds to completion:
- All of the reagent is consumed
- There is no deficiency of the reagent
- There is no excess of the reagent.
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. In general, chemical reactions combine in definite ratios of chemicals. Since chemical reactions can neither create nor destroy matter, nor transmute one element into another, the amount of each element must be the same throughout the overall reaction. For example, the number of atoms of a given element X on the reactant side must equal the number of atoms of that element on the product side, whether or not all of those atoms are actually involved in a reaction.
Chemical reactions, as macroscopic unit operations, consist of simply a very large number of elementary reactions, where a single molecule reacts with another molecule. As the reacting molecules (or moieties) consist of a definite set of atoms in an integer ratio, the ratio between reactants in a complete reaction is also in integer ratio. A reaction may consume more than one molecule, and the stoichiometric number counts this number, defined as positive for products (added) and negative for reactants (removed). The unsigned coefficients are generally referred to as the stoichiometric coefficients.
Each element has an atomic mass, and considering molecules as collections of atoms, compounds have a definite molecular mass, which when expressed in daltons is numerically equal to the molar mass in g/mol. By definition, the atomic mass of carbon-12 is 12 Da, giving a molar mass of 12 g/mol. The number of molecules per mole in a substance is given by the Avogadro constant, exactly 6.02214076×1023 mol−1 since the 2019 revision of the SI. Thus, to calculate the stoichiometry by mass, the number of molecules required for each reactant is expressed in moles and multiplied by the molar mass of each to give the mass of each reactant per mole of reaction. The mass ratios can be calculated by dividing each by the total in the whole reaction.
Elements in their natural state are mixtures of isotopes of differing mass; thus, atomic masses and thus molar masses are not exactly integers. For instance, instead of an exact 14:3 proportion, 17.04 g of ammonia consists of 14.01 g of nitrogen and 3 × 1.01 g of hydrogen, because natural nitrogen includes a small amount of nitrogen-15, and natural hydrogen includes hydrogen-2 (deuterium).
A stoichiometric reactant is a reactant that is consumed in a reaction, as opposed to a catalytic reactant, which is not consumed in the overall reaction because it reacts in one step and is regenerated in another step.
Converting grams to moles
Stoichiometry is not only used to balance chemical equations but also used in conversions, i.e., converting from grams to moles using molar mass as the conversion factor, or from grams to milliliters using density. For example, to find the amount of NaCl (sodium chloride) in 2.00 g, one would do the following:
In the above example, when written out in fraction form, the units of grams form a multiplicative identity, which is equivalent to one (g/g = 1), with the resulting amount in moles (the unit that was needed), as shown in the following equation,
Molar proportion
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 H2 + O2 → 2 H2O
Reaction stoichiometry describes the 2:1:2 ratio of hydrogen, oxygen, and water molecules in the above equation.
The molar ratio allows for conversion between moles of one substance and moles of another. For example, in the reaction
- 2 CH3OH + 3 O2 → 2 CO2 + 4 H2O
the amount of water that will be produced by the combustion of 0.27 moles of CH
3OH is obtained using the molar ratio between CH
3OH and H
2O of 2 to 4.
The term stoichiometry is also often used for the molar proportions of elements in stoichiometric compounds (composition stoichiometry). For example, the stoichiometry of hydrogen and oxygen in H
2O is 2:1. In stoichiometric compounds, the molar proportions are whole numbers.
Determining amount of product
Stoichiometry can also be used to find the quantity of a product yielded by a reaction. If a piece of solid copper (Cu) were added to an aqueous solution of silver nitrate (AgNO3), the silver (Ag) would be replaced in a single displacement reaction forming aqueous copper(II) nitrate (Cu(NO3)2) and solid silver. How much silver is produced if 16.00 grams of Cu is added to the solution of excess silver nitrate?
The following steps would be used:
- Write and balance the equation
- Mass to moles: Convert grams of Cu to moles of Cu
- Mole ratio: Convert moles of Cu to moles of Ag produced
- Mole to mass: Convert moles of Ag to grams of Ag produced
The complete balanced equation would be:
- Cu + 2 AgNO3 → Cu(NO3)2 + 2 Ag
For the mass to mole step, the mass of copper (16.00 g) would be converted to moles of copper by dividing the mass of copper by its molar mass: 63.55 g/mol.
Now that the amount of Cu in moles (0.2518) is found, we can set up the mole ratio. This is found by looking at the coefficients in the balanced equation: Cu and Ag are in a 1:2 ratio.
Now that the moles of Ag produced is known to be 0.5036 mol, we convert this amount to grams of Ag produced to come to the final answer:
This set of calculations can be further condensed into a single step:
Further examples
For propane (C3H8) reacting with oxygen gas (O2), the balanced chemical equation is:
- C3H8 + 5 O2 → 3 CO2 + 4 H2O
The mass of water formed if 120 g of propane (C3H8) is burned in excess oxygen is then
Stoichiometric ratio
Stoichiometry is also used to find the right amount of one reactant to "completely" react with the other reactant in a chemical reaction – that is, the stoichiometric amounts that would result in no leftover reactants when the reaction takes place. An example is shown below using the thermite reaction,[citation needed]
- Fe2O3 + 2 Al → Al2O3 + 2 Fe
This equation shows that 1 mole of iron(III) oxide and 2 moles of aluminum will produce 1 mole of aluminium oxide and 2 moles of iron. So, to completely react with 85.0 g of iron(III) oxide (0.532 mol), 28.7 g (1.06 mol) of aluminium are needed.
Limiting reagent and percent yield
The limiting reagent is the reagent that limits the amount of product that can be formed and is completely consumed when the reaction is complete. An excess reactant is a reactant that is left over once the reaction has stopped due to the limiting reactant being exhausted.
Consider the equation of roasting lead(II) sulfide (PbS) in oxygen (O2) to produce lead(II) oxide (PbO) and sulfur dioxide (SO2):
- 2 PbS + 3 O2 → 2 PbO + 2 SO2
To determine the theoretical yield of lead(II) oxide if 200.0 g of lead(II) sulfide and 200.0 g of oxygen are heated in an open container:
Because a lesser amount of PbO is produced for the 200.0 g of PbS, it is clear that PbS is the limiting reagent.
In reality, the actual yield is not the same as the stoichiometrically-calculated theoretical yield. Percent yield, then, is expressed in the following equation:
If 170.0 g of lead(II) oxide is obtained, then the percent yield would be calculated as follows:
Example
Consider the following reaction, in which iron(III) chloride reacts with hydrogen sulfide to produce iron(III) sulfide and hydrogen chloride:
- 2 FeCl3 + 3 H2S → Fe2S3 + 6 HCl
The stoichiometric masses for this reaction are:
- 324.41 g FeCl3, 102.25 g H2S, 207.89 g Fe2S3, 218.77 g HCl
Suppose 90.0 g of FeCl3 reacts with 52.0 g of H2S. To find the limiting reagent and the mass of HCl produced by the reaction, we change the above amounts by a factor of 90/324.41 and obtain the following amounts:
- 90.00 g FeCl3, 28.37 g H2S, 57.67 g Fe2S3, 60.69 g HCl
The limiting reactant (or reagent) is FeCl3, since all 90.00 g of it is used up while only 28.37 g H2S are consumed. Thus, 52.0 − 28.4 = 23.6 g H2S left in excess. The mass of HCl produced is 60.7 g.
By looking at the stoichiometry of the reaction, one might have guessed FeCl3 being the limiting reactant; three times more FeCl3 is used compared to H2S (324 g vs 102 g).
Different stoichiometries in competing reactions
Often, more than one reaction is possible given the same starting materials. The reactions may differ in their stoichiometry. For example, the methylation of benzene (C6H6), through a Friedel–Crafts reaction using AlCl3 as a catalyst, may produce singly methylated (C6H5CH3), doubly methylated (C6H4(CH3)2), or still more highly methylated (C6H6−n(CH3)n) products, as shown in the following example,
- C6H6 + CH3Cl → C6H5CH3 + HCl
- C6H6 + 2 CH3Cl → C6H4(CH3)2 + 2 HCl
- C6H6 + n CH3Cl → C6H6−n(CH3)n + n HCl
In this example, which reaction takes place is controlled in part by the relative concentrations of the reactants.
Stoichiometric coefficient and stoichiometric number
In lay terms, the stoichiometric coefficient of any given component is the number of molecules and/or formula units that participate in the reaction as written. A related concept is the stoichiometric number (using IUPAC nomenclature), wherein the stoichiometric coefficient is multiplied by +1 for all products and by −1 for all reactants.
For example, in the reaction CH4 + 2 O2 → CO2 + 2 H2O, the stoichiometric number of CH4 is −1, the stoichiometric number of O2 is −2, for CO2 it would be +1 and for H2O it is +2.
In more technically precise terms, the stoichiometric number in a chemical reaction system of the i-th component is defined as
or
where is the number of molecules of i, and is the progress variable or extent of reaction.
The stoichiometric number represents the degree to which a chemical species participates in a reaction. The convention is to assign negative numbers to reactants (which are consumed) and positive ones to products, consistent with the convention that increasing the extent of reaction will correspond to shifting the composition from reactants towards products. However, any reaction may be viewed as going in the reverse direction, and in that point of view, would change in the negative direction in order to lower the system's Gibbs free energy. Whether a reaction actually will go in the arbitrarily selected forward direction or not depends on the amounts of the substances present at any given time, which determines the kinetics and thermodynamics, i.e., whether equilibrium lies to the right or the left of the initial state,
In reaction mechanisms, stoichiometric coefficients for each step are always integers, since elementary reactions always involve whole molecules. If one uses a composite representation of an overall reaction, some may be rational fractions. There are often chemical species present that do not participate in a reaction; their stoichiometric coefficients are therefore zero. Any chemical species that is regenerated, such as a catalyst, also has a stoichiometric coefficient of zero.
The simplest possible case is an isomerization
- A → B
in which νB = 1 since one molecule of B is produced each time the reaction occurs, while νA = −1 since one molecule of A is necessarily consumed. In any chemical reaction, not only is the total mass conserved but also the numbers of atoms of each kind are conserved, and this imposes corresponding constraints on possible values for the stoichiometric coefficients.
There are usually multiple reactions proceeding simultaneously in any natural reaction system, including those in biology. Since any chemical component can participate in several reactions simultaneously, the stoichiometric number of the i-th component in the k-th reaction is defined as
so that the total (differential) change in the amount of the i-th component is
Extents of reaction provide the clearest and most explicit way of representing compositional change, although they are not yet widely used.
With complex reaction systems, it is often useful to consider both the representation of a reaction system in terms of the amounts of the chemicals present { Ni } (state variables), and the representation in terms of the actual compositional degrees of freedom, as expressed by the extents of reaction { ξk }. The transformation from a vector expressing the extents to a vector expressing the amounts uses a rectangular matrix whose elements are the stoichiometric numbers [ νi k ].
The maximum and minimum for any ξk occur whenever the first of the reactants is depleted for the forward reaction; or the first of the "products" is depleted if the reaction as viewed as being pushed in the reverse direction. This is a purely kinematic restriction on the reaction simplex, a hyperplane in composition space, or N‑space, whose dimensionality equals the number of linearly-independent chemical reactions. This is necessarily less than the number of chemical components, since each reaction manifests a relation between at least two chemicals. The accessible region of the hyperplane depends on the amounts of each chemical species actually present, a contingent fact. Different such amounts can even generate different hyperplanes, all sharing the same algebraic stoichiometry.
In accord with the principles of chemical kinetics and thermodynamic equilibrium, every chemical reaction is reversible, at least to some degree, so that each equilibrium point must be an interior point of the simplex. As a consequence, extrema for the ξs will not occur unless an experimental system is prepared with zero initial amounts of some products.
The number of physically-independent reactions can be even greater than the number of chemical components, and depends on the various reaction mechanisms. For example, there may be two (or more) reaction paths for the isomerism above. The reaction may occur by itself, but faster and with different intermediates, in the presence of a catalyst.
The (dimensionless) "units" may be taken to be molecules or moles. Moles are most commonly used, but it is more suggestive to picture incremental chemical reactions in terms of molecules. The Ns and ξs are reduced to molar units by dividing by the Avogadro constant. While dimensional mass units may be used, the comments about integers are then no longer applicable.
Stoichiometry matrix
In complex reactions, stoichiometries are often represented in a more compact form called the stoichiometry matrix. The stoichiometry matrix is denoted by the symbol N.
If a reaction network has n reactions and m participating molecular species, then the stoichiometry matrix will have correspondingly m rows and n columns.
For example, consider the system of reactions shown below:
- S1 → S2
- 5 S3 + S2 → 4 S3 + 2 S2
- S3 → S4
- S4 → S5
This system comprises four reactions and five different molecular species. The stoichiometry matrix for this system can be written as:
where the rows correspond to S1, S2, S3, S4 and S5, respectively. The process of converting a reaction scheme into a stoichiometry matrix can be a lossy transformation: for example, the stoichiometries in the second reaction simplify when included in the matrix. This means that it is not always possible to recover the original reaction scheme from a stoichiometry matrix.
Often the stoichiometry matrix is combined with the rate vector, v, and the species vector, x to form a compact equation, the biochemical systems equation, describing the rates of change of the molecular species:
Gas stoichiometry
Gas stoichiometry is the quantitative relationship (ratio) between reactants and products in a chemical reaction with reactions that produce gases. Gas stoichiometry applies when the gases produced are assumed to be ideal, and the temperature, pressure, and volume of the gases are all known. The ideal gas law is used for these calculations. Often, but not always, the standard temperature and pressure (STP) are taken as 0 °C and 1 bar and used as the conditions for gas stoichiometric calculations.
Gas stoichiometry calculations solve for the unknown volume or mass of a gaseous product or reactant. For example, if we wanted to calculate the volume of gaseous NO2 produced from the combustion of 100 g of NH3, by the reaction:
- 4 NH3 (g) + 7 O2 (g) → 4 NO2 (g) + 6 H2O (l)
we would carry out the following calculations:
There is a 1:1 molar ratio of NH3 to NO2 in the above balanced combustion reaction, so 5.871 mol of NO2 will be formed. We will employ the ideal gas law to solve for the volume at 0 °C (273.15 K) and 1 atmosphere using the gas law constant of R = 0.08206 L·atm·K−1·mol−1:
Gas stoichiometry often involves having to know the molar mass of a gas, given the density of that gas. The ideal gas law can be re-arranged to obtain a relation between the density and the molar mass of an ideal gas:
- and
and thus:
where:
- P = absolute gas pressure
- V = gas volume
- n = amount (measured in moles)
- R = universal ideal gas law constant
- T = absolute gas temperature
- ρ = gas density at T and P
- m = mass of gas
- M = molar mass of gas
Stoichiometric air-to-fuel ratios of common fuels
In the combustion reaction, oxygen reacts with the fuel, and the point where exactly all oxygen is consumed and all fuel burned is defined as the stoichiometric point. With more oxygen (overstoichiometric combustion), some of it stays unreacted. Likewise, if the combustion is incomplete due to lack of sufficient oxygen, fuel remains unreacted. (Unreacted fuel may also remain because of slow combustion or insufficient mixing of fuel and oxygen – this is not due to stoichiometry.) Different hydrocarbon fuels have different contents of carbon, hydrogen and other elements, thus their stoichiometry varies.
Oxygen makes up only 20.95% of the volume of air, and only 23.20% of its mass. The air-fuel ratios listed below are much higher than the equivalent oxygen-fuel ratios, due to the high proportion of inert gasses in the air.
Fuel | Ratio by mass | Ratio by volume [full citation needed] | Percent fuel by mass | Main reaction |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gasoline | 14.7 : 1 | — | 6.9% | 2 C8H18 + 25 O2 → 16 CO2 + 18 H2O |
Natural gas | 14.5 : 1 | 9.7 : 1 | 6.9% | CH4 + 2 O2 → CO2 + 2 H2O |
Propane (LP) | 15.67 : 1 | 23.9 : 1 | 6.45% | C3H8 + 5 O2 → 3 CO2 + 4 H2O |
Ethanol | 9 : 1 | — | 11.1% | C2H6O + 3 O2 → 2 CO2 + 3 H2O |
Methanol | 6.47 : 1 | — | 15.6% | 2 CH4O + 3 O2 → 2 CO2 + 4 H2O |
n-Butanol | 11.2 : 1 | — | 8.2% | C4H10O + 6 O2 → 4 CO2 + 5 H2O |
Hydrogen | 34.3 : 1 | 2.39 : 1 | 2.9% | 2 H2 + O2 → 2 H2O |
Diesel | 14.5 : 1 [citation needed] | — | 6.8% | 2 C12H26 + 37 O2 → 24 CO2 + 26 H2O |
Methane | 17.23 : 1 | 9.52 : 1 | 5.5% | CH4 + 2 O2 → CO2 + 2 H2O |
Acetylene | 13.26 : 1 [citation needed] | 11.92 : 1 | 7.0% | 2 C2H2 + 5 O2 → 4 CO2 + 2 H2O |
Ethane | 16.07 : 1 [citation needed] | 16.68 : 1 | 5.9% | 2 C2H6 + 7 O2 → 4 CO2 + 6 H2O |
Butane | 15.44 : 1 [citation needed] | 30.98 : 1 | 6.1% | 2 C4H10 + 13 O2 → 8 CO2 + 10 H2O |
Pentane | 15.31 : 1 [citation needed] | 38.13 : 1 | 6.1% | C5H12 + 8 O2 → 5 CO2 + 6 H2O |
Gasoline engines can run at stoichiometric air-to-fuel ratio, because gasoline is quite volatile and is mixed (sprayed or carburetted) with the air prior to ignition. Diesel engines, in contrast, run lean, with more air available than simple stoichiometry would require. Diesel fuel is less volatile and is effectively burned as it is injected.
See also
- Non-stoichiometric compound
- Biochemical systems equation
- Chemical reaction
- Chemical equation
- Molecule
- Molar mass
- Ideal gas law
References
- Richter, J.B. (1792). Anfangsgründe der Stöchyometrie ... (in 3 vol.s) [Rudiments of Stoichiometry ...] (in German). Vol. 1. Breslau and Hirschberg, (Germany): Johann Friedrich Korn der Aeltere. p. 121. From p. 121: "Die Stöchyometrie (Stöchyometria) ist die Wissenschaft die quantitativen oder Massenverhältnisse ... zu messen, in welchen die chemischen Elemente ... gegen einander stehen." (Stoichiometry (stoichiometria) is the science of measuring the quantitative or mass relations in which the chemical "elements" exist in relation to each other.) [On pp. 3–7, Richter explains that an "element" is a pure substance, and that a "chemical element" (chymisches Element (Elementum chymicum)) is a substance that cannot be resolved into dissimilar substances by known physical or chemical means. Thus, for example, aluminium oxide was a "chemical element" because in Richter's time, it couldn't be resolved further into its component elements.]
- Sinnott, R. K. (2005). Coulson and Richardson's Chemical Engineering (4th ed.). Amsterdam Paris: Elsevier Butterworth-Heinemann. p. 36. ISBN 978-0-7506-6538-4.
- L. Darmstaedter; R. E. Oesper (1928). "Jeremias Benjamin Richter". J. Chem. Educ. 5 (7): 785–790. Bibcode:1928JChEd...5..785D. doi:10.1021/ed005p785.
- What's in a Name? Amount of Substance, Chemical Amount, and Stoichiometric Amount Carmen J. Giunta Journal of Chemical Education 2016 93 (4), 583-586 doi:10.1021/acs.jchemed.5b00690
- "Stoichiometry of Chemical Reactions" (PDF).
- IUPAC, Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 2nd ed. (the "Gold Book") (1997). Online corrected version: (2006–) "stoichiometric number, ν". doi:10.1351/goldbook.S06025
- Nijmeh, Joseph; Tye, Mark (2 October 2013). "Stoichiometry and Balancing Reactions". LibreTexts. Retrieved 5 May 2021.
- Prigogine & Defay, p. 18; Prigogine, pp. 4–7; Guggenheim, p. 37 & 62
- IUPAC, Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 2nd ed. (the "Gold Book") (1997). Online corrected version: (2006–) "extent of reaction, ξ". doi:10.1351/goldbook.E02283
- Ghaderi, Susan; Haraldsdóttir, Hulda S.; Ahookhosh, Masoud; Arreckx, Sylvain; Fleming, Ronan M.T. (August 2020). "Structural conserved moiety splitting of a stoichiometric matrix". Journal of Theoretical Biology. 499: 110276. Bibcode:2020JThBi.49910276G. doi:10.1016/j.jtbi.2020.110276. hdl:1887/3134882. PMID 32333975.
- Hofmeyr, Jan-hendrik S. (2001). "Metabolic control analysis in a nutshell". In Proceedings of the 2 Nd International Conference on Systems Biology: 291–300. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.324.922.
- Reder, Christine (21 November 1988). "Metabolic control theory: A structural approach". Journal of Theoretical Biology. 135 (2): 175–201. Bibcode:1988JThBi.135..175R. doi:10.1016/s0022-5193(88)80073-0. PMID 3267767.
- "Universal Industrial Gases, Inc: Composition of Air - Components & Properties of Air - Answers to "What is air?" - "What is air made up of?" -" What are air products and what are they used for?"".
- John B. Heywood: "Internal Combustion Engine Fundamentals page 915", 1988
- North American Mfg. Co.: "North American Combustion Handbook", 1952
- "Air-fuel ratio, lambda and engine performance". Retrieved 2019-05-31.
- Zumdahl, Steven S. Chemical Principles. Houghton Mifflin, New York, 2005, pp 148–150.
- Internal Combustion Engine Fundamentals, John B. Heywood
External links
- Engine Combustion primer from the University of Plymouth
- Free Stoichiometry Tutorials from Carnegie Mellon's ChemCollective
- Stoichiometry Add-In for Microsoft Excel Archived 2011-05-11 at the Wayback Machine for calculation of molecular weights, reaction coëfficients and stoichiometry.
- Reaction Stoichiometry Calculator a comprehensive free online reaction stoichiometry calculator.
Stoichiometry ˌ s t ɔɪ k i ˈ ɒ m ɪ t r i is the relationships between the masses of reactants and products before during and following chemical reactions A stoichiometric diagram of the combustion reaction of methane Stoichiometry is founded on the law of conservation of mass where the total mass of the reactants equals the total mass of the products leading to the insight that the relations between quantities of reactants and products typically form a ratio of positive integers This means that if the amounts of the separate reactants are known then the amount of the product can be calculated Conversely if one reactant has a known quantity and the quantity of the products can be empirically determined then the amount of the other reactants can also be calculated This is illustrated in the image here where the balanced equation is CH4 2 O2 CO2 2 H2O Here one molecule of methane reacts with two molecules of oxygen gas to yield one molecule of carbon dioxide and two molecules of water This particular chemical equation is an example of complete combustion Stoichiometry measures these quantitative relationships and is used to determine the amount of products and reactants that are produced or needed in a given reaction Describing the quantitative relationships among substances as they participate in chemical reactions is known as reaction stoichiometry In the example above reaction stoichiometry measures the relationship between the quantities of methane and oxygen that react to form carbon dioxide and water Because of the well known relationship of moles to atomic weights the ratios that are arrived at by stoichiometry can be used to determine quantities by weight in a reaction described by a balanced equation This is called composition stoichiometry Gas stoichiometry deals with reactions involving gases where the gases are at a known temperature pressure and volume and can be assumed to be ideal gases For gases the volume ratio is ideally the same by the ideal gas law but the mass ratio of a single reaction has to be calculated from the molecular masses of the reactants and products In practice because of the existence of isotopes molar masses are used instead in calculating the mass ratio EtymologyThe term stoichiometry was first used by Jeremias Benjamin Richter in 1792 when the first volume of Richter s Anfangsgrunde der Stochyometrie oder Messkunst chymischer Elemente Fundamentals of Stoichiometry or the Art of Measuring the Chemical Elements was published The term is derived from the Ancient Greek words stoixeῖon stoikheion element and metron metron measure L Darmstaedter and Ralph E Oesper has written a useful account on this DefinitionA stoichiometric amount or stoichiometric ratio of a reagent is the optimum amount or ratio where assuming that the reaction proceeds to completion All of the reagent is consumed There is no deficiency of the reagent There is no excess of the reagent 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 In general chemical reactions combine in definite ratios of chemicals Since chemical reactions can neither create nor destroy matter nor transmute one element into another the amount of each element must be the same throughout the overall reaction For example the number of atoms of a given element X on the reactant side must equal the number of atoms of that element on the product side whether or not all of those atoms are actually involved in a reaction Chemical reactions as macroscopic unit operations consist of simply a very large number of elementary reactions where a single molecule reacts with another molecule As the reacting molecules or moieties consist of a definite set of atoms in an integer ratio the ratio between reactants in a complete reaction is also in integer ratio A reaction may consume more than one molecule and the stoichiometric number counts this number defined as positive for products added and negative for reactants removed The unsigned coefficients are generally referred to as the stoichiometric coefficients Each element has an atomic mass and considering molecules as collections of atoms compounds have a definite molecular mass which when expressed in daltons is numerically equal to the molar mass in g mol By definition the atomic mass of carbon 12 is 12 Da giving a molar mass of 12 g mol The number of molecules per mole in a substance is given by the Avogadro constant exactly 6 022140 76 1023 mol 1 since the 2019 revision of the SI Thus to calculate the stoichiometry by mass the number of molecules required for each reactant is expressed in moles and multiplied by the molar mass of each to give the mass of each reactant per mole of reaction The mass ratios can be calculated by dividing each by the total in the whole reaction Elements in their natural state are mixtures of isotopes of differing mass thus atomic masses and thus molar masses are not exactly integers For instance instead of an exact 14 3 proportion 17 04 g of ammonia consists of 14 01 g of nitrogen and 3 1 01 g of hydrogen because natural nitrogen includes a small amount of nitrogen 15 and natural hydrogen includes hydrogen 2 deuterium A stoichiometric reactant is a reactant that is consumed in a reaction as opposed to a catalytic reactant which is not consumed in the overall reaction because it reacts in one step and is regenerated in another step Converting grams to molesStoichiometry is not only used to balance chemical equations but also used in conversions i e converting from grams to moles using molar mass as the conversion factor or from grams to milliliters using density For example to find the amount of NaCl sodium chloride in 2 00 g one would do the following 2 00 g NaCl58 44 g NaCl mol 1 0 0342 mol displaystyle frac 2 00 mbox g NaCl 58 44 mbox g NaCl mol 1 0 0342 text mol In the above example when written out in fraction form the units of grams form a multiplicative identity which is equivalent to one g g 1 with the resulting amount in moles the unit that was needed as shown in the following equation 2 00 g NaCl1 1 mol NaCl58 44 g NaCl 0 0342 mol displaystyle left frac 2 00 mbox g NaCl 1 right left frac 1 mbox mol NaCl 58 44 mbox g NaCl right 0 0342 text mol Molar proportionStoichiometry 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 H2 O2 2 H2O Reaction stoichiometry describes the 2 1 2 ratio of hydrogen oxygen and water molecules in the above equation The molar ratio allows for conversion between moles of one substance and moles of another For example in the reaction 2 CH3OH 3 O2 2 CO2 4 H2O the amount of water that will be produced by the combustion of 0 27 moles of CH3 OH is obtained using the molar ratio between CH3 OH and H2 O of 2 to 4 0 27 mol CH3OH1 4 mol H2O2 mol CH3OH 0 54 mol H2O displaystyle left frac 0 27 mbox mol mathrm CH 3 OH 1 right left frac 4 mbox mol mathrm H 2 O 2 mbox mol mathrm CH 3 OH right 0 54 text mol mathrm H 2 O The term stoichiometry is also often used for the molar proportions of elements in stoichiometric compounds composition stoichiometry For example the stoichiometry of hydrogen and oxygen in H2 O is 2 1 In stoichiometric compounds the molar proportions are whole numbers Determining amount of productStoichiometry can also be used to find the quantity of a product yielded by a reaction If a piece of solid copper Cu were added to an aqueous solution of silver nitrate AgNO3 the silver Ag would be replaced in a single displacement reaction forming aqueous copper II nitrate Cu NO3 2 and solid silver How much silver is produced if 16 00 grams of Cu is added to the solution of excess silver nitrate The following steps would be used Write and balance the equation Mass to moles Convert grams of Cu to moles of Cu Mole ratio Convert moles of Cu to moles of Ag produced Mole to mass Convert moles of Ag to grams of Ag produced The complete balanced equation would be Cu 2 AgNO3 Cu NO3 2 2 Ag For the mass to mole step the mass of copper 16 00 g would be converted to moles of copper by dividing the mass of copper by its molar mass 63 55 g mol 16 00 g Cu1 1 mol Cu63 55 g Cu 0 2518 mol Cu displaystyle left frac 16 00 mbox g Cu 1 right left frac 1 mbox mol Cu 63 55 mbox g Cu right 0 2518 text mol Cu Now that the amount of Cu in moles 0 2518 is found we can set up the mole ratio This is found by looking at the coefficients in the balanced equation Cu and Ag are in a 1 2 ratio 0 2518 mol Cu1 2 mol Ag1 mol Cu 0 5036 mol Ag displaystyle left frac 0 2518 mbox mol Cu 1 right left frac 2 mbox mol Ag 1 mbox mol Cu right 0 5036 text mol Ag Now that the moles of Ag produced is known to be 0 5036 mol we convert this amount to grams of Ag produced to come to the final answer 0 5036 mol Ag1 107 87 g Ag1 mol Ag 54 32 g Ag displaystyle left frac 0 5036 mbox mol Ag 1 right left frac 107 87 mbox g Ag 1 mbox mol Ag right 54 32 text g Ag This set of calculations can be further condensed into a single step mAg 16 00 g Cu1 1 mol Cu63 55 g Cu 2 mol Ag1 mol Cu 107 87 g Ag1 mol Ag 54 32 g displaystyle m mathrm Ag left frac 16 00 mbox g mathrm Cu 1 right left frac 1 mbox mol mathrm Cu 63 55 mbox g mathrm Cu right left frac 2 mbox mol mathrm Ag 1 mbox mol mathrm Cu right left frac 107 87 mbox g mathrm Ag 1 mbox mol Ag right 54 32 mbox g Further examples For propane C3H8 reacting with oxygen gas O2 the balanced chemical equation is C3H8 5 O2 3 CO2 4 H2O The mass of water formed if 120 g of propane C3H8 is burned in excess oxygen is then mH2O 120 g C3H81 1 mol C3H844 09 g C3H8 4 mol H2O1 mol C3H8 18 02 g H2O1 mol H2O 196 g displaystyle m mathrm H 2 O left frac 120 mbox g mathrm C 3 H 8 1 right left frac 1 mbox mol mathrm C 3 H 8 44 09 mbox g mathrm C 3 H 8 right left frac 4 mbox mol mathrm H 2 O 1 mbox mol mathrm C 3 H 8 right left frac 18 02 mbox g mathrm H 2 O 1 mbox mol mathrm H 2 O right 196 mbox g Stoichiometric ratioStoichiometry is also used to find the right amount of one reactant to completely react with the other reactant in a chemical reaction that is the stoichiometric amounts that would result in no leftover reactants when the reaction takes place An example is shown below using the thermite reaction citation needed Fe2O3 2 Al Al2O3 2 Fe This equation shows that 1 mole of iron III oxide and 2 moles of aluminum will produce 1 mole of aluminium oxide and 2 moles of iron So to completely react with 85 0 g of iron III oxide 0 532 mol 28 7 g 1 06 mol of aluminium are needed mAl 85 0 g Fe2O31 1 mol Fe2O3159 7 g Fe2O3 2 mol Al1 mol Fe2O3 26 98 g Al1 mol Al 28 7 g displaystyle m mathrm Al left frac 85 0 mbox g mathrm Fe 2 O 3 1 right left frac 1 mbox mol mathrm Fe 2 O 3 159 7 mbox g mathrm Fe 2 O 3 right left frac 2 mbox mol Al 1 mbox mol mathrm Fe 2 O 3 right left frac 26 98 mbox g Al 1 mbox mol Al right 28 7 mbox g Limiting reagent and percent yieldThe limiting reagent is the reagent that limits the amount of product that can be formed and is completely consumed when the reaction is complete An excess reactant is a reactant that is left over once the reaction has stopped due to the limiting reactant being exhausted Consider the equation of roasting lead II sulfide PbS in oxygen O2 to produce lead II oxide PbO and sulfur dioxide SO2 2 PbS 3 O2 2 PbO 2 SO2 To determine the theoretical yield of lead II oxide if 200 0 g of lead II sulfide and 200 0 g of oxygen are heated in an open container mPbO 200 0 g PbS1 1 mol PbS239 27 g PbS 2 mol PbO2 mol PbS 223 2 g PbO1 mol PbO 186 6 g displaystyle m mathrm PbO left frac 200 0 mbox g mathrm PbS 1 right left frac 1 mbox mol mathrm PbS 239 27 mbox g mathrm PbS right left frac 2 mbox mol mathrm PbO 2 mbox mol mathrm PbS right left frac 223 2 mbox g mathrm PbO 1 mbox mol mathrm PbO right 186 6 mbox g mPbO 200 0 g O21 1 mol O232 00 g O2 2 mol PbO3 mol O2 223 2 g PbO1 mol PbO 930 0 g displaystyle m mathrm PbO left frac 200 0 mbox g mathrm O 2 1 right left frac 1 mbox mol mathrm O 2 32 00 mbox g mathrm O 2 right left frac 2 mbox mol mathrm PbO 3 mbox mol mathrm O 2 right left frac 223 2 mbox g mathrm PbO 1 mbox mol mathrm PbO right 930 0 mbox g Because a lesser amount of PbO is produced for the 200 0 g of PbS it is clear that PbS is the limiting reagent In reality the actual yield is not the same as the stoichiometrically calculated theoretical yield Percent yield then is expressed in the following equation percent yield actual yieldtheoretical yield displaystyle mbox percent yield frac mbox actual yield mbox theoretical yield If 170 0 g of lead II oxide is obtained then the percent yield would be calculated as follows percent yield 170 0 g PbO186 6 g PbO 91 12 displaystyle mbox percent yield frac mbox 170 0 g PbO mbox 186 6 g PbO 91 12 Example Consider the following reaction in which iron III chloride reacts with hydrogen sulfide to produce iron III sulfide and hydrogen chloride 2 FeCl3 3 H2S Fe2S3 6 HCl The stoichiometric masses for this reaction are 324 41 g FeCl3 102 25 g H2S 207 89 g Fe2S3 218 77 g HCl Suppose 90 0 g of FeCl3 reacts with 52 0 g of H2S To find the limiting reagent and the mass of HCl produced by the reaction we change the above amounts by a factor of 90 324 41 and obtain the following amounts 90 00 g FeCl3 28 37 g H2S 57 67 g Fe2S3 60 69 g HCl The limiting reactant or reagent is FeCl3 since all 90 00 g of it is used up while only 28 37 g H2S are consumed Thus 52 0 28 4 23 6 g H2S left in excess The mass of HCl produced is 60 7 g By looking at the stoichiometry of the reaction one might have guessed FeCl3 being the limiting reactant three times more FeCl3 is used compared to H2S 324 g vs 102 g Different stoichiometries in competing reactionsOften more than one reaction is possible given the same starting materials The reactions may differ in their stoichiometry For example the methylation of benzene C6H6 through a Friedel Crafts reaction using AlCl3 as a catalyst may produce singly methylated C6H5CH3 doubly methylated C6H4 CH3 2 or still more highly methylated C6H6 n CH3 n products as shown in the following example C6H6 CH3Cl C6H5CH3 HCl C6H6 2 CH3Cl C6H4 CH3 2 2 HCl C6H6 n CH3Cl C6H6 n CH3 n n HCl In this example which reaction takes place is controlled in part by the relative concentrations of the reactants Stoichiometric coefficient and stoichiometric numberIn lay terms the stoichiometric coefficient of any given component is the number of molecules and or formula units that participate in the reaction as written A related concept is the stoichiometric number using IUPAC nomenclature wherein the stoichiometric coefficient is multiplied by 1 for all products and by 1 for all reactants For example in the reaction CH4 2 O2 CO2 2 H2O the stoichiometric number of CH4 is 1 the stoichiometric number of O2 is 2 for CO2 it would be 1 and for H2O it is 2 In more technically precise terms the stoichiometric number in a chemical reaction system of the i th component is defined as ni DNiD3 displaystyle nu i frac Delta N i Delta xi or DNi niD3 displaystyle Delta N i nu i Delta xi where Ni displaystyle N i is the number of molecules of i and 3 displaystyle xi is the progress variable or extent of reaction The stoichiometric number ni displaystyle nu i represents the degree to which a chemical species participates in a reaction The convention is to assign negative numbers to reactants which are consumed and positive ones to products consistent with the convention that increasing the extent of reaction will correspond to shifting the composition from reactants towards products However any reaction may be viewed as going in the reverse direction and in that point of view would change in the negative direction in order to lower the system s Gibbs free energy Whether a reaction actually will go in the arbitrarily selected forward direction or not depends on the amounts of the substances present at any given time which determines the kinetics and thermodynamics i e whether equilibrium lies to the right or the left of the initial state In reaction mechanisms stoichiometric coefficients for each step are always integers since elementary reactions always involve whole molecules If one uses a composite representation of an overall reaction some may be rational fractions There are often chemical species present that do not participate in a reaction their stoichiometric coefficients are therefore zero Any chemical species that is regenerated such as a catalyst also has a stoichiometric coefficient of zero The simplest possible case is an isomerization A B in which nB 1 since one molecule of B is produced each time the reaction occurs while nA 1 since one molecule of A is necessarily consumed In any chemical reaction not only is the total mass conserved but also the numbers of atoms of each kind are conserved and this imposes corresponding constraints on possible values for the stoichiometric coefficients There are usually multiple reactions proceeding simultaneously in any natural reaction system including those in biology Since any chemical component can participate in several reactions simultaneously the stoichiometric number of the i th component in the k th reaction is defined as nik Ni 3k displaystyle nu ik frac partial N i partial xi k so that the total differential change in the amount of the i th component is dNi knikd3k displaystyle dN i sum k nu ik d xi k Extents of reaction provide the clearest and most explicit way of representing compositional change although they are not yet widely used With complex reaction systems it is often useful to consider both the representation of a reaction system in terms of the amounts of the chemicals present Ni state variables and the representation in terms of the actual compositional degrees of freedom as expressed by the extents of reaction 3k The transformation from a vector expressing the extents to a vector expressing the amounts uses a rectangular matrix whose elements are the stoichiometric numbers ni k The maximum and minimum for any 3k occur whenever the first of the reactants is depleted for the forward reaction or the first of the products is depleted if the reaction as viewed as being pushed in the reverse direction This is a purely kinematic restriction on the reaction simplex a hyperplane in composition space or N space whose dimensionality equals the number of linearly independent chemical reactions This is necessarily less than the number of chemical components since each reaction manifests a relation between at least two chemicals The accessible region of the hyperplane depends on the amounts of each chemical species actually present a contingent fact Different such amounts can even generate different hyperplanes all sharing the same algebraic stoichiometry In accord with the principles of chemical kinetics and thermodynamic equilibrium every chemical reaction is reversible at least to some degree so that each equilibrium point must be an interior point of the simplex As a consequence extrema for the 3s will not occur unless an experimental system is prepared with zero initial amounts of some products The number of physically independent reactions can be even greater than the number of chemical components and depends on the various reaction mechanisms For example there may be two or more reaction paths for the isomerism above The reaction may occur by itself but faster and with different intermediates in the presence of a catalyst The dimensionless units may be taken to be molecules or moles Moles are most commonly used but it is more suggestive to picture incremental chemical reactions in terms of molecules The Ns and 3s are reduced to molar units by dividing by the Avogadro constant While dimensional mass units may be used the comments about integers are then no longer applicable Stoichiometry matrixIn complex reactions stoichiometries are often represented in a more compact form called the stoichiometry matrix The stoichiometry matrix is denoted by the symbol N If a reaction network has n reactions and m participating molecular species then the stoichiometry matrix will have correspondingly m rows and n columns For example consider the system of reactions shown below S1 S2 5 S3 S2 4 S3 2 S2 S3 S4 S4 S5 This system comprises four reactions and five different molecular species The stoichiometry matrix for this system can be written as N 100011000 1 10001 10001 displaystyle mathbf N begin bmatrix 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 0 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 1 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 end bmatrix where the rows correspond to S1 S2 S3 S4 and S5 respectively The process of converting a reaction scheme into a stoichiometry matrix can be a lossy transformation for example the stoichiometries in the second reaction simplify when included in the matrix This means that it is not always possible to recover the original reaction scheme from a stoichiometry matrix Often the stoichiometry matrix is combined with the rate vector v and the species vector x to form a compact equation the biochemical systems equation describing the rates of change of the molecular species dxdt N v displaystyle frac d mathbf x dt mathbf N cdot mathbf v Gas stoichiometryGas stoichiometry is the quantitative relationship ratio between reactants and products in a chemical reaction with reactions that produce gases Gas stoichiometry applies when the gases produced are assumed to be ideal and the temperature pressure and volume of the gases are all known The ideal gas law is used for these calculations Often but not always the standard temperature and pressure STP are taken as 0 C and 1 bar and used as the conditions for gas stoichiometric calculations Gas stoichiometry calculations solve for the unknown volume or mass of a gaseous product or reactant For example if we wanted to calculate the volume of gaseous NO2 produced from the combustion of 100 g of NH3 by the reaction 4 NH3 g 7 O2 g 4 NO2 g 6 H2O l we would carry out the following calculations 100gNH3 1molNH317 034gNH3 5 871molNH3 displaystyle 100 mathrm g NH 3 cdot frac 1 mathrm mol NH 3 17 034 mathrm g NH 3 5 871 mathrm mol NH 3 There is a 1 1 molar ratio of NH3 to NO2 in the above balanced combustion reaction so 5 871 mol of NO2 will be formed We will employ the ideal gas law to solve for the volume at 0 C 273 15 K and 1 atmosphere using the gas law constant of R 0 08206 L atm K 1 mol 1 PV nRTV nRTP 5 871 mol 0 08206L atmmol K 273 15 K1 atm 131 597LNO2 displaystyle begin aligned PV amp nRT V amp frac nRT P amp frac 5 871 text mol cdot 0 08206 frac mathrm L cdot atm mathrm mol cdot K cdot 273 15 text K 1 text atm amp 131 597 mathrm L NO 2 end aligned Gas stoichiometry often involves having to know the molar mass of a gas given the density of that gas The ideal gas law can be re arranged to obtain a relation between the density and the molar mass of an ideal gas r mV displaystyle rho frac m V and n mM displaystyle n frac m M and thus r MPRT displaystyle rho frac MP R T where P absolute gas pressure V gas volume n amount measured in moles R universal ideal gas law constant T absolute gas temperature r gas density at T and P m mass of gas M molar mass of gasStoichiometric air to fuel ratios of common fuelsIn the combustion reaction oxygen reacts with the fuel and the point where exactly all oxygen is consumed and all fuel burned is defined as the stoichiometric point With more oxygen overstoichiometric combustion some of it stays unreacted Likewise if the combustion is incomplete due to lack of sufficient oxygen fuel remains unreacted Unreacted fuel may also remain because of slow combustion or insufficient mixing of fuel and oxygen this is not due to stoichiometry Different hydrocarbon fuels have different contents of carbon hydrogen and other elements thus their stoichiometry varies Oxygen makes up only 20 95 of the volume of air and only 23 20 of its mass The air fuel ratios listed below are much higher than the equivalent oxygen fuel ratios due to the high proportion of inert gasses in the air Fuel Ratio by mass Ratio by volume full citation needed Percent fuel by mass Main reactionGasoline 14 7 1 6 9 2 C8H18 25 O2 16 CO2 18 H2ONatural gas 14 5 1 9 7 1 6 9 CH4 2 O2 CO2 2 H2OPropane LP 15 67 1 23 9 1 6 45 C3H8 5 O2 3 CO2 4 H2OEthanol 9 1 11 1 C2H6O 3 O2 2 CO2 3 H2OMethanol 6 47 1 15 6 2 CH4O 3 O2 2 CO2 4 H2On Butanol 11 2 1 8 2 C4H10O 6 O2 4 CO2 5 H2OHydrogen 34 3 1 2 39 1 2 9 2 H2 O2 2 H2ODiesel 14 5 1 citation needed 6 8 2 C12H26 37 O2 24 CO2 26 H2OMethane 17 23 1 9 52 1 5 5 CH4 2 O2 CO2 2 H2OAcetylene 13 26 1 citation needed 11 92 1 7 0 2 C2H2 5 O2 4 CO2 2 H2OEthane 16 07 1 citation needed 16 68 1 5 9 2 C2H6 7 O2 4 CO2 6 H2OButane 15 44 1 citation needed 30 98 1 6 1 2 C4H10 13 O2 8 CO2 10 H2OPentane 15 31 1 citation needed 38 13 1 6 1 C5H12 8 O2 5 CO2 6 H2O Gasoline engines can run at stoichiometric air to fuel ratio because gasoline is quite volatile and is mixed sprayed or carburetted with the air prior to ignition Diesel engines in contrast run lean with more air available than simple stoichiometry would require Diesel fuel is less volatile and is effectively burned as it is injected See alsoNon stoichiometric compound Biochemical systems equation Chemical reaction Chemical equation Molecule Molar mass Ideal gas lawReferencesRichter J B 1792 Anfangsgrunde der Stochyometrie in 3 vol s Rudiments of Stoichiometry in German Vol 1 Breslau and Hirschberg Germany Johann Friedrich Korn der Aeltere p 121 From p 121 Die Stochyometrie Stochyometria ist die Wissenschaft die quantitativen oder Massenverhaltnisse zu messen in welchen die chemischen Elemente gegen einander stehen Stoichiometry stoichiometria is the science of measuring the quantitative or mass relations in which the chemical elements exist in relation to each other On pp 3 7 Richter explains that an element is a pure substance and that a chemical element chymisches Element Elementum chymicum is a substance that cannot be resolved into dissimilar substances by known physical or chemical means Thus for example aluminium oxide was a chemical element because in Richter s time it couldn t be resolved further into its component elements Sinnott R K 2005 Coulson and Richardson s Chemical Engineering 4th ed Amsterdam Paris Elsevier Butterworth Heinemann p 36 ISBN 978 0 7506 6538 4 L Darmstaedter R E Oesper 1928 Jeremias Benjamin Richter J Chem Educ 5 7 785 790 Bibcode 1928JChEd 5 785D doi 10 1021 ed005p785 What s in a Name Amount of Substance Chemical Amount and Stoichiometric Amount Carmen J Giunta Journal of Chemical Education 2016 93 4 583 586 doi 10 1021 acs jchemed 5b00690 Stoichiometry of Chemical Reactions PDF IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology 2nd ed the Gold Book 1997 Online corrected version 2006 stoichiometric number n doi 10 1351 goldbook S06025 Nijmeh Joseph Tye Mark 2 October 2013 Stoichiometry and Balancing Reactions LibreTexts Retrieved 5 May 2021 Prigogine amp Defay p 18 Prigogine pp 4 7 Guggenheim p 37 amp 62 IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology 2nd ed the Gold Book 1997 Online corrected version 2006 extent of reaction 3 doi 10 1351 goldbook E02283 Ghaderi Susan Haraldsdottir Hulda S Ahookhosh Masoud Arreckx Sylvain Fleming Ronan M T August 2020 Structural conserved moiety splitting of a stoichiometric matrix Journal of Theoretical Biology 499 110276 Bibcode 2020JThBi 49910276G doi 10 1016 j jtbi 2020 110276 hdl 1887 3134882 PMID 32333975 Hofmeyr Jan hendrik S 2001 Metabolic control analysis in a nutshell In Proceedings of the 2 Nd International Conference on Systems Biology 291 300 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 324 922 Reder Christine 21 November 1988 Metabolic control theory A structural approach Journal of Theoretical Biology 135 2 175 201 Bibcode 1988JThBi 135 175R doi 10 1016 s0022 5193 88 80073 0 PMID 3267767 Universal Industrial Gases Inc Composition of Air Components amp Properties of Air Answers to What is air What is air made up of What are air products and what are they used for John B Heywood Internal Combustion Engine Fundamentals page 915 1988 North American Mfg Co North American Combustion Handbook 1952 Air fuel ratio lambda and engine performance Retrieved 2019 05 31 Zumdahl Steven S Chemical Principles Houghton Mifflin New York 2005 pp 148 150 Internal Combustion Engine Fundamentals John B HeywoodExternal linksLook up stoichiometry in Wiktionary the free dictionary Library resources about Stoichiometry Resources in your library Engine Combustion primer from the University of Plymouth Free Stoichiometry Tutorials from Carnegie Mellon s ChemCollective Stoichiometry Add In for Microsoft Excel Archived 2011 05 11 at the Wayback Machine for calculation of molecular weights reaction coefficients and stoichiometry Reaction Stoichiometry Calculator a comprehensive free online reaction stoichiometry calculator