Egg Samples of Concrete Stoichiometry

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    Eggsamples of Concrete StoichiometryTom Stretton, Head of Science, North Grenville District High School,

    P.O. Box 2001, Kemptville, Ont; KOG 1JO

    * This article was orginally written for CHEM13 News

    The first few days of stoichiometry are often frustrating for both the students and teacher

    because quite often the students do not known how to think about or go about solving a

    simple problem. Though they have the required mathematical skills, the concepts elude

    them, at least temporarily. Here are some example problems that I have either gone over

    step by step on the board, or overhead, or I have given them out in the form of worksheets.

    Both questions have been used successfully to overcome the anxiety of the first day of

    stoichiometry.

    Problem #1 Get Cracking!!

    You are the cook at a northern mining town. It is your job to keep the miners fed, which

    usually means the food had better be good and there had better be lots of it. Remember,

    mine shafts are deep and tempers can be short!!

    Your basic breakfast menu consists of 2 eggs, 4 strips of bacon, a glass of orange juice and

    2 pieces of toast. We won't include the coffee because it works as a catalyst!

    The equation you work with everyday for breakfast is:

    2 eggs + 4 strips + 1 juice + 2 toast -----> 1 complete of bacon breakfast

    Here are the supplies in your kitchen larder:

    200 dozen eggs

    70 sides of bacon (averaging 60 strips of bacon per side)

    300 L of orange juice (your juice glasses hold 300 mL each)

    150 loaves of bread (20 slices per loaf, including the ends)

    You also have 600 miners to feed. Get cooking.

    If you feed all 600 miners the first day what supplies from your stock do you use up?

    From the equation below, which just happens to be balanced:

    2 eggs + 4 strips + 1 juice + 2 toast --------> 1 complete

    of bacon breakfast

    we can get the amount of each food from the equation as follows:

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    Eggs 1 complete breakfast = 2 eggs

    600 miners x

    x = 1200 eggs

    Bacon 1 complete breakfast = 4 strips of bacon600 miners x

    x = 2400 strips of bacon

    Juice 1 complete breakfast = 1 juice

    600 miners x

    x = 600 glasses of juice

    If each juice glass holds 300 mL of juice then we need

    300 mL = x

    1 glass 600 glasses

    x = 180 000 mL of juice = 180 L of juice.

    Toast 1 complete breakfast = 2 pieces of toast

    600 miners x

    x = 1200 pieces of toast.

    From the above information you can see that in order to feed these ravenous miner typepersons you must cook

    1200 eggs + 2400 strips + 180 L + 1200 pieces --------> 600

    of bacon of juice of toast complete

    breakfasts

    Question #2: How much of each food type do you have left in your larder? The results can

    be found by using the following calculations.

    Eggs 200 dozen eggs = 200 dozen x 12 eggs = 2400 eggs

    dozen

    You originally had 2400 eggs. After breakfast you have:

    2400 eggs - 1200 eggs used up = 1200 eggs still in stock.

    Bacon 70 sides of bacon x 60 strips = 4200 strips of bacon

    side

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    You originally had 4200 strips of bacon. After breakfast you have:

    4200 strips - 2400 strips = 1800 strips of bacon left.

    Juice 300 L of juice - 180 L of juice used = 120 L of juice.

    Toast 150 loaves x 20 slices = 3000 slices of bread.

    loaf

    You start out with 3000 slices of bread.

    After breakfast you have:

    3000 slices - 1200 slices toasted = 1800 slices of bread.

    Question #3 On the second day you again need to make breakfast. Because your first day

    was so successful you party all night long. So you didn't go shopping. Bad move. You will

    have to make breakfast using the existing stock in your larder.

    Your stock on hand from the question above is: 1200 eggs, 1800 strips of bacon, 120 L of

    juice, 1800 slices of bread

    You will continue to make full breakfasts. It's really the only thing you know how to do.

    Nobody said you were a Cordon Bleu chef, did they! You'll keep this up until you run out

    of one of the ingredients. Which one of the ingredients do you run out of first?

    Let's answer this by seeing how much of each ingredient will go around.

    Eggs 1200 eggs = 600 miners can have eggs!2 eggs/miner

    You have enough eggs on hand to feed the 600 miners. Boy are you lucky.

    Bacon 1800 strips = 450 miners get 4 strips of bacon!

    4 strips/miner

    You can only give 450 out of the 600 miners bacon!

    That mineshaft looks pretty dark doesn't it?

    Juice 120 L of juice = 120 000 mL of juice = 400 miners get

    300 mL of juice/miner juice!

    Only 400 of the 600 miners get their morning's dose of vitamin C. How fast can you run?

    Bread 1800 slices = 900 miners get bread!

    2 slices/miner

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    You can give all 600 miners their bread. You suddenly realize that each miner can have 3

    pieces of bread. You blurt out that instead of bacon and juice you'll gladly give each miner

    an extra piece of toast. They just as gladly pick you up, carry you to the shaft and throw

    you in as a sacrifice to incompetence.

    From the information above you can see that you run out of juice first. You are only goingto feed 400 miners their full breakfasts. The other 250 are going to give you the shaft.

    The thing we have the least of is the orange juice so it is called the limiting reagent. i.e.

    Once it runs out you are limited in your ability to make full breakfasts.

    Once you've feed the 400 miners you stop making full breakfasts.

    Question #4 How much stock is still in the larder?

    Eggs 1200 eggs - (400 miners x 2 eggs ) = 400 eggs left.

    miner

    Bacon 1800 strips - (400 miners x 4 strips) = 200 strips left.

    miner

    Juice 120 000 mL - (400 miners x 300 mL ) = 0 Juice left!!!

    miner

    Bread 1800 slices - (400 miners x 2 slices) = 100 slices

    miner

    You used 400 miners in the equation above because they are all you can feed.

    Problem #2 How to Cement a Beautiful Relationship!

    You have been assigned the task of building a concrete sidewalk by your boss. The boss has

    left you at a secluded, out of the way spot with 900 bags of cement, 160 m3

    of premixed

    gravel and sand, and 1000 L of water. You've got to mix and pour enough concrete to fill a

    sidewalk that is 1 m wide x 60 m long by 20 cm thick. (The carpenters have already been

    there and laid the forms.)

    Your boss has left you, in addition to the above materials, a concrete mixer, (55 dm3

    capacity), and a wheelbarrow that can hold 60 L and a shovel. Lucky you!

    The boss tells you to mix 1 shovelful of cement with 6 shovelfuls of the gravel/sand premix,

    then add enough water to just mix it into a smooth mass!

    The equation is: 1 cement + 6 premix + water ----> 1 load of mixed concrete

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    After a little experimenting you discover that an average shovelful of cement is 1 dm3. The

    sand/gravel premix is about the same. Okay, I know, it's a small shovel.

    An average bag of cement is 6 dm3.

    Question #1 How many shovelfuls of cement are in each bag?

    # of shovelfuls = volume of cement bag = 6 dm3

    = 6 shovelfuls

    volume of a shovelful 1 dm3

    bag

    You can now find out how many shovelfuls of cement you have on hand!

    900 bags of cement * 6 shovelfuls = 5400 shovelfuls

    bag

    Question #2 How any shovelfuls of gravel/sand premix do you have on hand?

    160 m3

    of premix = 160 000 dm3

    of premix = 160 000 shovelfuls

    1 dm3/shovelful

    Again after a little experimentation you discover that you need 5 L of water for each mix so

    that the concrete has the right consistency.

    So the equation becomes:

    1 shovelful + 6 shovelfuls + 5 L ----> 1 load of concrete

    of cement of premix of water mixture

    Question #3 You mix a few more loads and find that you are averaging about 8 dm3

    of

    concrete mixture per load, if you use the 1:6 cement:premix ratio the boss gave you. How

    many loads will you have to mix in order to fill the sidewalk?

    Volume of sidewalk = length * width * depth

    = 60 m * 1 m * 20 cm

    = 60 m * 1 m * 0.20 m

    = 12 m3

    = 12 000 dm3

    The number of loads you have to mix will be

    # of loads = volume of sidewalk = 12 000 dm3

    volume of a single load 8 dm3

    = 1500 loads.

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    Lucky for you the mixer is a super duper mixmaster which can hold up to 55 L of mix at a

    time.

    Question #4 How many loads of 8 dm3

    can you do at one time?

    # of loads at one time = 1 load = 8 dm

    3

    x 55 dm3

    x = 6.875 loads.

    Since we can't overfill the cement mixer, we will only make up 6 full loads at any one time.

    Question #5 If we use the boss's mix recipe and do 6 loads at a time, how much of each

    ingredient do we need?

    1 cement + 6 premix + 5 L water ---> 1 load of concrete

    To do six loads we need:

    Cement 1 cement = 1 load of mix

    x 6 loads of mix

    x = 6 shovelfuls of cement

    Sand/gravel premix 6 sand/gravel = 1 load of mix

    x 6 loads of mix

    x = 18 shovelfuls of sand/gravel premix

    Water 5 L of water = 1 load of mix

    x 6 loads of mix

    x = 30 L of water

    Total Volume 8 dm3

    = 1 load of mix

    x 6 loads of mix

    x = 48 dm3

    of mix

    Since the mixer holds 55 dm3

    you are okay.

    Question #6 Do you have enough ingredients to do the complete job?

    Materials ON HAND NEEDED IN EXCESS

    cement 5400 dm3

    1500 dm3

    3900 dm3

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    Water All the water gets used up therefore % usage is 100%

    Question #8 If you fill the mixer each time with 6 full loads and let it mix, how many times

    do you have to walk back and forth from the mixer to the sidewalk forms?

    # of loads that can be made = 200 loads# of loads in the mixer 6 loads at a time

    = 33.3 times.

    Question #9 What percentage of the sidewalk do you complete?

    Total volume of concrete mixed x 100

    Total volume of sidewalk

    = 200 loads x 8 dm3/load x 100

    120 000 dm

    3

    sidewalk volume

    = 1600 dm3

    x 100

    120 000 dm3

    = 1.3%

    Only 1.3% of the sidewalk gets completed. Are you in trouble? What solution can you

    come up with to resolve your dilemma?