GradeGrove
Grades 10–11
Final Exam
Official

Chemistry: Stoichiometry: Final Exam Review

Free high school chemistry practice on stoichiometry. Convert between moles and mass, use mole ratios from balanced equations, and solve limiting reactant problems. Comprehensive review mixing skills from the whole unit. Use this set the week before a major test.

For teachers

Use after students can balance equations, then assign before a stoichiometry problem set or lab report.

Learning support

Sign in to track sections, star this pack, or pin it for review.

Study guide

# Final Exam Review Guide Comprehensive review mixing skills from the whole unit. Use this set the week before a major test. ## Unit checklist Work through every section below, then take the final exam quiz. # The Mole Concept One mole equals 6.02 × 10²³ particles (Avogadro's number). Molar mass in g/mol converts between grams and moles. For water, 18 g is one mole of H₂O molecules. # Balanced Chemical Equations Coefficients show mole ratios in a reaction. Balance by adjusting coefficients, never subscripts. A balanced equation obeys the law of conservation of mass: atoms are neither created nor destroyed. # Mole-to-Mole Calculations Use coefficients as conversion factors. If 2H₂ + O₂ → 2H₂O, then 2 mol H₂ produces 2 mol H₂O. Set up dimensional analysis: given → moles → moles product → grams if needed. # Limiting Reactant and Percent Yield The limiting reactant runs out first and caps product amount. Excess reactant remains. Percent yield = (actual yield / theoretical yield) × 100%. Real reactions rarely reach 100% due to side reactions and loss.

FAQ

Do I need a calculator?
Yes. Stoichiometry problems involve multiplication and division with molar masses.
Is balancing equations covered?
The pack assumes you can balance equations. Focus is on mole ratio calculations.