Why percent yield sometimes less than 100% in chemistry experiments?

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Homework Statement
I'm learning about percent yield in chemistry labs and noticed that the percent yield is often less than 100%.

What are the most common reasons for this?
Relevant Equations
Percent Yield = (Actual Yield ÷ Theoretical Yield) × 100
Also, when calculating percent yield, do we always use the same formula?

I understand that percent yield compares actual and theoretical yield, but I want to make sure I'm doing the calculation correctly.
 
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Small thing. Percent yield = (actual yield / theoretical yield) * 100.

Without the 100 factor, you just get a ratio, not a % expression.
 
Sorry, I forgot to multiply 100 in the equation. It's corrected now.
 
For my case:
  • Theoretical yield = 10.3 g
  • Actual yield = 11.25 g
After calculating the percent yield = 109.223%

I also verified my calculation here: https://theonlinetools.net/percent-yield-calculator.html

My question is:
Does this mean the reaction produced more product than expected, or is it usually caused by measurement errors or impurities?

I'd appreciate an explanation of why this happens in chemistry experiments.
 
harveycannon said:
Does this mean the reaction produced more product than expected, or is it usually caused by measurement errors or impurities?

No way to produce more, mass conservation doesn't allow for that (in a way stoichiometry is an elaborate way of saying "matter is not lost nor created"). So it is always a problem with measuring or impurities (if it was a water based reaction most common problem is drying the product before weighing).
 
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I see what you are asking. Understand that the problem you stated in the thread title is opposite of what actually meant to ask.

When the measured yield is higher than the theoretical yield, it is either because the theoretical yield was incorrectly calculated, or because the isolated product contains impurities (this is most likely).
 

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