The most important piece of information to know here is that the molecular weight (mw) of a chemical is the weight that contains a specific number of molecules of that said chemical. For basic elements, the molecular weight is found on the periodic table. Here is a periodic table with molecular weights of basic elements:
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Example: Iodine & Iodine Crystals
Take Iodine (I) for example. The molecular weight shown on the periodic table for an Iodine atom is 126.90 (it's near the bottom of the green section). That means that 1 mole of Iodine atoms weighs 126.90 grams on Earth.
What does this mean? It means there are 6.02214199 × 10^23 iodine atoms in 126.90 grams (1 mole) of iodine atoms. I would write the number out, but there would be 23 digits after the number 6. BTW that number is called Avogadro's Number.
There is a catch. Iodine doesn't come as single atoms. Iodine crystals are actually a molecule made from (2) Iodine atoms. That's why the formula for Iodine crystals is I2. So if there are (2) atoms of Iodine in (1) Iodine molecule, then the molecular weight of I2 (Iodine crystals) is:
126.90 x 2 = 253.80 g
That means 1 mole of I2 (Iodine crystals) weighs 253.80 grams. That also means that there are 6.02214199 × 10^23 molecules of I2 in 253.80 grams of Iodine crystals.
Why is this useful? You can calculate the number of moles in a given weight of a chemical. If you have 100 g of iodine, you can calculate the number of moles like this:
100g I2 / 253.80 g per mole I2 = 0.394 moles of I2
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Example: Hydriodic Acid - 57% HI
This periodic table can also be used to calculate the molecular weight (grams per mole) of any molecule. Take HI (Hydriodic Acid), for example. You can see from the formula that (1) molecule of Hydriodic Acid is made up of (1) atom of Hydrogen (H) and (1) atom of Iodine (I). You can look up the induvidual molecular weights for Hydrogen and Iodine on the periodic table. Here they are:
M.W. of Hydrogen = 1.0079 g
M.W. of Iodine = 126.90 g
To calculate the molecular weight of HI, the weights of the two atoms are simply added together like this:
126.90 + 1.0079 = 127.9079 g
So 1 mole of Hydriodic Acid (HI) weighs 127.9079 g. One can't exactly weigh out 100 g of pure HI. HI is a gas. One can learn about other topics in chemistry to figure out how many moles of a gas are in a known volume at a known temperature and pressure. See Ideal Gas Law.
Many gasses are measured as a % weight dissolved in a liquid. That's where the 57% HI comes from. 57% HI means that 57% of the weight is HI and the other 43% is water. If one has 100g of 57% HI, then one has 57 g of HI gas dissolved in 43 g of water. The moles of HI can be calculated from these numbers. Hypothetically one has 100 g of 57% aqueous HI, and we know the molecular weight of HI is 127.9079 g:
100g HI solution x .57 = 57 g HI in solution (for 57% solution)
57 g HI / 127.9079 g per mole = 0.446 moles HI (in 100 g 57% solution)
We could also say that there are 0.446 x 6.022x10^23 = 2.69x10^23 molecules of HI in 100 g of 57% HI, but this isn't realistically as useful as moles. Most chemistry folks just calculate reactions based on moles, not molecules. See the next example.
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Lye + HCl Neutralization (NaOH + HCl => NaCl + H2O)
If 6254 molecules of NaOH reacts with 6254 molecules of HCl to yeild 6254 molecules of both H2O and NaCl, who cares? We know that 1 mole of NaOH rects with 1 mole of HCl to yield 1 mole of water and 1 mole of Salt (NaCl), and that is good enough.
For the following reaction:
NaOH + HCl => NaCl + H2O
We can calculate the correct weights of each chemical to exactly react everything. This is a primary use for calculating moles. As the reaction shows, the molecules react on a 1 to 1 basis. 1 molecule of NaOH for each Molecule of HCl. From the periodic table:
Molecular Weights in grams
Sodium (Na) = 22.990
Oxygen (O) = 15.999
Hydrogen (H) = 1.0079
Chlorine (Cl) = 35.453
One thing you should know at this point is that the weights we are pulling from the periodic table are actually called atomic wieghts because they are for atoms, not molecules. Anyway, from these atomic weights, the molecular weights can be calculated.
Molecular Weight Calculations (rounded to 3 digits):
NaOH has Na x 1, O x 1, & H x1:
(22.990 x 1) + (15.999 x 1) + (1.0079 x 1) = 39.997 g per mole
HCl has H x 1, & Cl x 1:
(1.0079 x 1) + (35.453 x 1) = 36.461 g per mole
So for a 1 mole reaction we need 1 mole of NaOH and 1 mole of HCl. The NaOH is easy; one would just measure out 33.997 g of NaOH (Sodium Hydroxide). The HCl (Hydrochloric Acid) isn't as simple because it is a gas. HCl can be found at most hardware stores as a 32% aqueous solution. Since we need 36.461 g (1 mole) of HCl we must calculate the weight of 32% HCl that contains 36.461 g (1 mole) of HCl. Here is how it's done:
36.461 / .32 = 113.941 g
So 113.941 g of 32% HCl.aq containes exactly 1 mole or 36.461 g of HCl. The rest of the solution is water. This means that there will be an extra 77.48 g (113.941 - 36.461) of water added to the reaction, as well.
The product of this reaction, as shown at the start of the example, is 1 mole of NaCl (Sodium Cloride, Salt) and 1 mole of water + the additional 77.48 g of water added.
H2O Molecular weight: (1.0079 x 2) + (15.999 x 1) = 18.015 g
The additional moles of water added at the beginning (with the aqueous HCl) is calculated like this:
77.48 g H2O / 18.015 g per mole H2O = 4.30 moles H2O
So the product of this reaction is really 1 mole of NaCl and 5.30 moles of H2O. Most of the NaCl would be dissolved in the water. This could be written as:
NaOH + HCl + 4.30*H2O => NaCl + 5.30*H2O
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Example: NaH2PO2 + HCl => H3PO2 + NaCl
Atomic WeightsSodium (Na) = 22.990
Hydrogen (H) = 1.0079
Phosphorus (P) = 30.974
Oxygen (O) = 15.999
Chlorine (Cl) = 35.453
Molecular Weights
NaH2PO2: 22.990 + (1.0079 x 2) + 30.974 + (15.999 x 2) = 87.978
HCl: 1.0079 + 35.453 = 36.461
H3PO2: (1.0079 x 3) + 30.974 + (15.999 x 2) = 65.996
NaCl: 22.990 + 35.453 = 58.443
For 1 mole, each
87.978 g Sodium Hypophosphite in 50% solution
87.978 x 2 = 175.956 g of 50% NaH2PO2 solution
36.461 g HCl in 32% solution
36.461 / .32 = 113.941 g of 32% HCl solution (muriatic acid)
Yields
65.996 g of H3PO2 in water.
For 50% H3PO2 in water:
Reduce weight of water to 65.996 grams (about 66 mL)
In reality, reduce it to 50 mL or less, filter salt, and add back water to 66 mL to avoild a salt saturated solution