Theoretical Yield
Theoretical yield is the maximum amount of product obtainable from a reaction based on stoichiometry and the limiting reagent. It assumes complete conversion with no side reactions or losses.
Why This Chemistry Calculation Matters
Why: Theoretical yield guides reaction planning, identifies limiting reagents, and sets the benchmark for actual yield. It is essential for optimizing synthesis and understanding reaction efficiency.
How: Convert reactant amounts to moles, apply stoichiometric ratios from the balanced equation, and use the limiting reagent to determine maximum product. Mole ratios come from reaction coefficients.
- ●The limiting reagent determines theoretical yield—the reactant consumed first.
- ●Mole ratios from balanced equations connect reactant and product quantities.
- ●Theoretical yield is always the maximum possible; actual yield is typically lower.
- ●Gas reactants use PV=nRT for mole conversion.
Reaction Examples
🧪 Aspirin Synthesis
Acetylsalicylic acid from salicylic acid
C₇H₆O₃ + C₄H₆O₃ → C₉H₈O₄ + CH₃COOH
🔥 Methane Combustion
Complete combustion of methane
CH₄ + 2O₂ → CO₂ + 2H₂O
⚗️ Silver Chloride Precipitation
Formation of AgCl precipitate
AgNO₃ + NaCl → AgCl + NaNO₃
🧬 Acid-Base Neutralization
HCl + NaOH → NaCl + H₂O
HCl + NaOH → NaCl + H₂O
⚡ Zinc-Copper Displacement
Redox reaction: Zn + CuSO₄ → ZnSO₄ + Cu
Zn + CuSO₄ → ZnSO₄ + Cu
💨 CO₂ from CaCO₃
CaCO₃ + 2HCl → CaCl₂ + CO₂ + H₂O
CaCO₃ + 2HCl → CaCl₂ + CO₂ + H₂O
🧪 Esterification Reaction
Ethanol + Acetic acid → Ethyl acetate
CH₃COOH + C₂H₅OH → CH₃COOC₂H₅ + H₂O
Calculate Theoretical Yield
Reactant 1
Product
For educational and informational purposes only. Verify with a qualified professional.
🔬 Chemistry Facts
Theoretical yield assumes 100% conversion and no side products.
— IUPAC
Limiting reagent is the reactant with the smallest mole-to-coefficient ratio.
— Stoichiometry
Yield = (mass reactant / MW reactant) × (coeff product / coeff reactant) × MW product.
— IUPAC
Combustion reactions often approach theoretical yield when oxygen is in excess.
— NIST
What is Theoretical Yield?
Theoretical yield is the maximum amount of product that can be obtained from a chemical reaction based on stoichiometry, assuming complete conversion and no side reactions. It represents the ideal outcome when all reactants are consumed according to the balanced chemical equation.
Where Ratio = (Product Coefficient) / (Reactant Coefficient)
Limiting Reagent Concept
In reactions with multiple reactants, the limiting reagent is the reactant that is completely consumed first, determining the maximum amount of product that can be formed. The other reactants are in excess.
Limiting Reagent
The reactant that runs out first, limiting the amount of product formed.
Excess Reagent
Reactants present in amounts greater than needed, remaining after reaction.
Stoichiometric Ratio
The exact ratio of reactants needed for complete reaction with no excess.
How to Calculate Theoretical Yield
The calculation involves converting reactant amounts to moles, applying stoichiometric ratios, and converting back to desired units.
🔬 Step-by-Step Process
Single Reactant
1. Convert mass to moles:
n = mass / MW
2. Apply stoichiometric ratio:
n_product = n_reactant × (coeff_product / coeff_reactant)
3. Convert to mass:
mass_product = n_product × MW_product
Multiple Reactants
1. Calculate moles of each reactant
2. Determine limiting reagent:
Compare available vs. needed
3. Use limiting reagent moles
4. Calculate theoretical yield
5. Calculate excess amounts
When to Use This Calculator
Theoretical yield calculations are essential for planning reactions, optimizing conditions, and understanding reaction efficiency.
Organic Synthesis
Multi-step organic reactions
Typical Yield: 60-90%
- Aspirin synthesis
- Grignard reactions
Combustion
Burning reactions with oxygen
Typical Yield: 85-100%
- Methane combustion
- Propane combustion
Precipitation
Formation of insoluble products
Typical Yield: 90-99%
- Silver chloride
- Barium sulfate
Acid-Base
Neutralization reactions
Typical Yield: 95-100%
- HCl + NaOH
- H2SO4 + Ca(OH)2
Redox
Oxidation-reduction reactions
Typical Yield: 70-95%
- Metal displacement
- Corrosion
Key Formulas
Mass-Based Calculation
mass_product = (mass_reactant / MW_reactant) × (coeff_product / coeff_reactant) × MW_product
Mole-Based Calculation
n_product = n_reactant × (coeff_product / coeff_reactant)
mass_product = n_product × MW_product
Gas Reactions (Ideal Gas Law)
PV = nRT
n = PV / (RT)
Where R = 0.0821 L·atm/(mol·K)
Limiting Reagent Determination
For each reactant: n_needed = (n_other_reactant / coeff_other) × coeff_this
Limiting reagent: reactant with n_available < n_needed
Excess = n_available - n_needed
Practical Examples
Example: Aspirin Synthesis
Reaction:
C₇H₆O₃ + C₄H₆O₃ → C₉H₈O₄ + CH₃COOH
Given:
- Salicylic acid: 10.0 g (MW = 138.12)
- Acetic anhydride: 8.0 g (MW = 102.09)
Solution:
n_salicylic = 10.0 / 138.12 = 0.0724 mol
n_anhydride = 8.0 / 102.09 = 0.0784 mol
Limiting: Salicylic acid
Theoretical yield = 13.0 g aspirin
Example: Methane Combustion
Reaction:
CH₄ + 2O₂ → CO₂ + 2H₂O
Given:
- CH₄: 16.0 g
- O₂: 64.0 g
Solution:
n_CH4 = 16.0 / 16.04 = 0.997 mol
n_O2 = 64.0 / 32.00 = 2.00 mol
O₂ needed = 0.997 × 2 = 1.99 mol
Stoichiometric ratio - both limiting
Factors Affecting Actual Yield
⚠️ Why Actual Yield < Theoretical Yield
- • Incomplete reactions (equilibrium limitations)
- • Side reactions producing unwanted products
- • Losses during purification (filtration, distillation)
- • Incomplete mixing or poor reaction conditions
- • Impurities in starting materials
- • Reversible reactions not reaching completion
✓ Optimizing Yield
- • Use excess of less expensive reactant
- • Optimize temperature and pressure
- • Use catalysts to improve kinetics
- • Remove products to shift equilibrium
- • Purify starting materials
- • Control reaction time and conditions
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