What Is Stoichiometry in Chemistry?

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Stoichiometry is defined as a branch of chemistry that focuses on the quantitative relationships between reactants and products in chemical reactions, adhering to the laws of definite proportions and conservation of mass and energy. It involves determining the amounts of substances involved in a reaction, as illustrated by the example of a reaction involving copper and nitric acid, which shows how to balance equations and calculate the number of molecules produced. Synthesis, in a chemical context, refers to a reaction where reactants combine to form a product, typically represented by the equation A + B → AB, where A and B can be either elements or compounds.
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I have to define stoichiometry. Any one know a good definition for it? I'm reading a sentence it was used in "Many combinations of mono and trivalent cations yield crystals of the same stoichiometry and structure"

As well does anyone know a good definition of synthesis. Is it simply the combination of reactants to form a product?

thanks for your help.
 
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Stoichiometry in the Merriam-Webster dictionary is definied as:

1 : a branch of chemistry that deals with the application of the laws of definite proportions and of the conservation of mass and energy to chemical activity
2 a : the quantitative relationship between constituents in a chemical substance b : the quantitative relationship between two or more substances especially in processes involving physical or chemical change​

By synthesis I assume you mean a synthesis reaction. Correct me if I'm wrong on what you mean. But in chemistry, a general synthesis reaction is a reaction that follows the format of:

A +B \longrightarrow AB,

where A and B are reactants and AB is the product. A and B can be compounds or elements and AB is a compound.

Let me know if you need anything else.

z-component
 
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Z-component has explained the issue pretty well, but I'll give some more details.

Let me give a real example to see what stoichiometry really is.

3Cu+8HNO_3 \longrightarrow 3Cu(NO_3)_2 + 2NO + 4H_2O

Stoichiometry is the method to find how many molecules will be in a reaction to give a full-balanced equation. This is my definition, and it fits here, I think.
 
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I was introduced to the Octet Rule recently and make me wonder, why does 8 valence electrons or a full p orbital always make an element inert? What is so special with a full p orbital? Like take Calcium for an example, its outer orbital is filled but its only the s orbital thats filled so its still reactive not so much as the Alkaline metals but still pretty reactive. Can someone explain it to me? Thanks!!
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