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Mastering Stoichiometry — Complete Notes for NEET, JEE & Competitive Exams

JK
JKEdusphere Chemistry Faculty
NEET & JEE Physical Chemistry · Verified PYQ analysis 2016–2024 · Class 11 NCERT aligned
Mastering Stoichiometry - Complete Notes for NEET JEE Class 11 with PYQs
What You Will Learn
Stoichiometry is one of the highest-yield chapters in Physical Chemistry for NEET and JEE. This guide covers every calculation type — mass-mass, mass-volume, limiting reagent, percentage yield, and empirical/molecular formula — with step-by-step worked examples, 8 NEET-pattern PYQs, a formula cheatsheet, and common exam mistakes to avoid.

1. What is Stoichiometry?

Stoichiometry (from Greek: stoicheion = element, metron = measure) is the branch of chemistry that deals with the quantitative relationships between reactants and products in a chemical reaction. In plain language, it answers: how much of substance A reacts with how much of substance B to give how much of product C?

Every stoichiometric calculation rests on two foundations: (1) a correctly balanced chemical equation, and (2) the mole concept. Without balancing the equation first, all calculations will give wrong answers — this is the single most common mistake in exams.

Why it matters for NEET/JEE: Stoichiometry appears in almost every section of Physical Chemistry — Mole Concept, Solutions, Electrochemistry, Thermodynamics, and Redox Reactions. Mastering this chapter makes all those topics significantly easier.

2. The Mole Concept — Foundation of Stoichiometry

The mole is the SI unit for amount of substance. One mole of any substance contains exactly 6.022 × 10²³ particles (atoms, molecules, ions, etc.). This number is called Avogadro's Number (Nₐ).

The molar mass of a substance (in g/mol) is numerically equal to its molecular/atomic mass in atomic mass units (u). For example, water (H₂O) has a molar mass of 18 g/mol, meaning 1 mole of water weighs exactly 18 grams and contains 6.022 × 10²³ water molecules.

Moles from mass
n = m ÷ M
n = moles, m = given mass (g), M = molar mass (g/mol)
Moles from gas volume (STP)
n = V ÷ 22.4
V = volume in litres at STP (0°C, 1 atm)
Number of particles
N = n × Nₐ
Nₐ = 6.022 × 10²³ mol⁻¹ (Avogadro's Number)
Percentage yield
% Y = (A ÷ T) × 100
A = actual yield, T = theoretical yield
Worked Example: How many moles are in 36 g of water (H₂O)?
Molar mass of H₂O = 2(1) + 16 = 18 g/mol
n = 36 ÷ 18 = 2 moles
Number of molecules = 2 × 6.022 × 10²³ = 1.204 × 10²⁴ molecules

3. Balanced Chemical Equation — Why It is the Starting Point

A balanced chemical equation satisfies the Law of Conservation of Mass — the number of atoms of each element must be equal on both sides. The coefficients in a balanced equation directly represent the mole ratio of reactants and products.

Example: Combustion of Hydrogen
2H₂  +  O₂  →  2H₂O
2 mol H₂ reacts with 1 mol O₂ to give 2 mol H₂O

The ratio 2:1:2 is the mole ratio. All stoichiometric conversions use this ratio.

4. Types of Stoichiometric Calculations

A. Mass–Mass Calculation

The most common type. Convert mass → moles → use mole ratio → convert back to mass.

Example: How much water forms when 4 g of H₂ reacts with excess O₂?
1 Write balanced equation: 2H₂ + O₂ → 2H₂O
2 Moles of H₂ = 4 ÷ 2 = 2 mol
3 Mole ratio: 2 mol H₂ → 2 mol H₂O (1:1 ratio)
4 Moles of H₂O = 2 mol → Mass = 2 × 18 = 36 g ✓

B. Mass–Volume Calculation (Gases at STP)

At STP (Standard Temperature and Pressure: 0°C, 1 atm), 1 mole of any ideal gas occupies 22.4 litres. This is called the molar volume.

Example: What volume of O₂ is needed to react with 2 mol H₂?
1 2H₂ + O₂ → 2H₂O
2 2 mol H₂ requires 1 mol O₂
3 Volume of 1 mol gas at STP = 22.4 L → Answer: 22.4 L ✓

C. Limiting Reagent

The limiting reagent (or limiting reactant) is the reactant that is completely consumed first in a reaction. It determines how much product can form. The other reactant is said to be in excess.

To find the limiting reagent: divide the moles of each reactant by its stoichiometric coefficient. The reactant with the smaller value is the limiting reagent.

Example: 2 mol H₂ + 2 mol O₂ → find limiting reagent
1 Equation: 2H₂ + O₂ → 2H₂O
2 H₂: 2 ÷ 2 = 1.0  |  O₂: 2 ÷ 1 = 2.0
3 Smaller value = 1.0 (H₂) → H₂ is the limiting reagent
4 Product formed = 2 mol H₂O (based on limiting reagent H₂)

D. Percentage Yield

In real reactions, the actual amount of product formed is often less than the theoretical (calculated) amount due to side reactions, incomplete reactions, or losses during isolation. Percentage yield measures the efficiency of the reaction.

Percentage Yield
% Yield = (Actual Yield ÷ Theoretical Yield) × 100

5. Empirical Formula and Molecular Formula

The empirical formula gives the simplest whole-number ratio of atoms in a compound. The molecular formula gives the actual number of atoms. They may be the same (like H₂O) or different (like glucose: empirical CH₂O, molecular C₆H₁₂O₆).

Finding Empirical Formula
  1. Convert % composition to grams (assume 100 g sample)
  2. Divide grams of each element by its atomic mass → get moles
  3. Divide all mole values by the smallest mole value
  4. If not whole numbers, multiply by smallest integer to make whole
Finding Molecular Formula
  1. Find empirical formula mass
  2. n = Molecular Mass ÷ Empirical Formula Mass
  3. Molecular Formula = (Empirical Formula) × n
If empirical formula is CH₂O (mass = 30) and molecular mass = 180, then n = 180÷30 = 6 → Molecular formula = C₆H₁₂O₆ (Glucose)

6. Three Fundamental Laws of Stoichiometry

LawStatementApplication in Stoichiometry
Law of Conservation of Mass
(Lavoisier, 1789)
Mass is neither created nor destroyed in a chemical reaction Basis of balancing equations; total mass of reactants = total mass of products
Law of Definite Proportions
(Proust, 1799)
A compound always contains elements in a fixed mass ratio Allows calculation of mass of one element given mass of compound
Gay-Lussac's Law of Gaseous Volumes
(Gay-Lussac, 1808)
Gases react in simple whole-number ratios by volume at same T and P Directly gives volume ratios for gas-phase reactions (same as mole ratios)

7. Complete Formula Cheatsheet

Moles from mass
n = m / M
Mass from moles
m = n × M
Gas volume at STP
V = n × 22.4 L
Moles from gas volume
n = V / 22.4
Number of particles
N = n × 6.022×10²³
% Yield
% Y = (A/T) × 100
Molecular formula
MF = EF × n
n (for mol. formula)
n = MM / EFM

8. NEET PYQ-Pattern Questions with Solutions

These 8 questions follow exact NEET question patterns from 2016–2024. Work through each solution carefully before checking the answer.

PYQ 1 NEET 2020 Pattern · Mole-Mole

How many moles of O₂ are required to completely burn 4 moles of methane?
CH₄ + 2O₂ → CO₂ + 2H₂O

From balanced equation: 1 mol CH₄ requires 2 mol O₂
∴ 4 mol CH₄ requires = 4 × 2 = 8 moles O₂
PYQ 2 NEET 2019 Pattern · Limiting Reagent

When 3 mol H₂ react with 2 mol O₂, how many moles of water are formed?
2H₂ + O₂ → 2H₂O

Check limiting reagent: H₂ → 3÷2 = 1.5 | O₂ → 2÷1 = 2.0
Smaller = 1.5 → H₂ is limiting reagent
From equation: 2 mol H₂ → 2 mol H₂O (1:1 ratio)
∴ 3 mol H₂ → 3 moles H₂O
PYQ 3 NEET 2018 Pattern · Mass-Mass

What mass of CaCO₃ is required to produce 22 g of CO₂?
CaCO₃ → CaO + CO₂

M(CaCO₃) = 100 g/mol | M(CO₂) = 44 g/mol
44 g CO₂ ← 100 g CaCO₃ (mole ratio 1:1)
22 g CO₂ ← (100 × 22) ÷ 44 = 50 g CaCO₃
PYQ 4 NEET 2021 Pattern · % Yield

Theoretical yield = 80 g, actual yield = 60 g. Calculate percentage yield.

% Yield = (60 ÷ 80) × 100 = 75%
PYQ 5 NEET 2017 Pattern · Empirical Formula

A compound contains 40% C, 6.67% H, 53.33% O. Find its empirical formula.

Assume 100 g → C = 40 g, H = 6.67 g, O = 53.33 g
Moles: C = 40÷12 = 3.33 | H = 6.67÷1 = 6.67 | O = 53.33÷16 = 3.33
Divide by smallest (3.33): C = 1, H = 2, O = 1
Empirical formula = CH₂O (same as formaldehyde/glucose unit)
PYQ 6 NEET 2022 Pattern · Gas Volume at STP

What volume of CO₂ at STP is produced when 1 mol CaCO₃ decomposes?
CaCO₃ → CaO + CO₂

1 mol CaCO₃ → 1 mol CO₂ (1:1 ratio)
Volume at STP = 1 × 22.4 = 22.4 L
PYQ 7 NEET 2016 Pattern · Avogadro Number

How many molecules are present in 0.5 mol of water?

N = n × Nₐ = 0.5 × 6.022 × 10²³ = 3.011 × 10²³ molecules
PYQ 8 NEET 2023 Pattern · Limiting Reagent + Mass

10 g H₂ reacts with 80 g O₂. Calculate mass of water formed.
2H₂ + O₂ → 2H₂O

n(H₂) = 10÷2 = 5 mol | n(O₂) = 80÷32 = 2.5 mol
LR check: H₂ → 5÷2 = 2.5 | O₂ → 2.5÷1 = 2.5 → Equal (exact stoichiometric ratio)
From equation: 2 mol H₂ → 2 mol H₂O → 5 mol H₂ → 5 mol H₂O
Mass = 5 × 18 = 90 g H₂O

9. Common Exam Mistakes — And How to Avoid Them

Mistake 1 — Not balancing the equation first: All coefficients come from the balanced equation. If your equation is unbalanced, every subsequent calculation is wrong. Always write and balance the equation before touching numbers.
Mistake 2 — Using mass directly instead of converting to moles: You cannot use the mole ratio with grams. Always convert mass → moles using n = m/M before applying the stoichiometric ratio.
Mistake 3 — Ignoring the limiting reagent: When two reactant quantities are given, always check which one is limiting. Using excess reagent as the basis for calculation gives a wrong (higher) answer.
Mistake 4 — Confusing empirical and molecular formula: Empirical = simplest ratio. Molecular = actual count. CH₂O and C₆H₁₂O₆ have the same empirical formula but completely different molecular formulas. NEET often tests this distinction.

10. Strategy for Scoring in Stoichiometry (NEET/JEE)

📐
Master the 4-Step Method
Every stoichiometry problem follows: (1) Balance equation → (2) Convert to moles → (3) Apply mole ratio → (4) Convert to required unit. Memorise this sequence and never skip a step, even under time pressure.
📝
Memorise Key Molar Masses
H₂O = 18, CO₂ = 44, NaCl = 58.5, CaCO₃ = 100, H₂SO₄ = 98, NaOH = 40, HCl = 36.5, CH₄ = 16, NH₃ = 17. These appear again and again in NEET questions — calculating them in the exam wastes precious time.
🎯
Solve PYQs by Year
NEET Stoichiometry questions from 2016–2024 follow very similar patterns. Solve at least 3 years of PYQs before the exam. You will notice that limiting reagent, % yield, and empirical formula questions repeat almost every year.
Speed Tricks for NEET
For mass-mass problems: use the direct ratio method — (given mass × molar mass of product × coefficient of product) ÷ (molar mass of given × coefficient of given). This saves 30–40 seconds per question in the exam hall.
Master Stoichiometry in 3 Days

Day 1: Understand mole concept, balanced equations, mass-mass and mass-volume calculations.
Day 2: Limiting reagent, % yield, empirical & molecular formula with 20 practice problems.
Day 3: Solve all 8 PYQs above from scratch (no peeking), then do 1 full mock test.

Questions about a specific problem type? Drop them in the comments — the JKEdusphere chemistry team will solve them for you.

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