128 8 · THE MOLE
Example 8.7
What mass of iodine will react completely with 10 g of
aluminium to form aluminium iodide (Al 2 I 6 )?
Answer
Write the balanced equation:
2Al(s)3I 2 (s)Al 2 I 6 (s)
Work out the relationship between the molecules involved:
2 atoms Al 3 molecules I 2 1 molecule Al 2 I 6
You could also write:
4 atoms Al 6 molecules I 2 2 molecules Al 2 I 6
or
200 atoms Al 300 molecules I 2 100 molecules Al 2 I 6
or even
2 6.022 1023 atoms Al 3 6.022 1023 molecules I 2
1 6.022 1023 molecules Al 2 I 6
The last line can also be written as
2 mol Al 3 mol I 2 1 mol Al 2 I 6
Convert the numbers of moles to grams using molar masses, M(Al)27 g mol^1
andM(I)127 g mol^1 :
2 27 g Al 3 254 g I 2 1 816 g Al 2 I 6
or
54 g Al 762 g I 2 816 g Al 2 I 6
We now have the ratio between the quantities of reactants and products in grams.
In the question, you start with 10 g of aluminium, so what masses of iodine and
aluminium iodide are involved if the above ratio is to apply?
For 1 g of aluminium:
1 g Al
762
g I 2
816
g Al 2 I 6
54 54
Therefore, for 10 g aluminium:
10 g Al
762 10
g I 2
816 10
g Al 2 I 6
54 54
or
10 g Al 141 g I 2 151 g Al 2 I 6
So, 10 g of aluminium reacts with 141 g I 2.
Comment
The calculation is written in simple steps to help you understand. In practice, you
can leave out some of the more obvious steps and ignore the calculations
involving Al 2 I 6 , since they are not asked for in the question – the question only
asks for the relationship between aluminium and iodine.