Chapter focus: Mole concept, stoichiometry, concentration terms, laws of chemical combination (JEE Main).


1. Substance (Matter)

Anything having mass and volume is called a substance.

  • Physical classification: Solid, Liquid, Gas
  • Chemical classification:
    • Pure substances → Elements (metal, non-metal, metalloid), Compounds
    • Impure substances → Mixtures (homogeneous, heterogeneous)

2. Mole Concept

Avogadro’s Number (NA):
NA = 6.022 × 1023

Mole:
One mole is the amount of substance containing Avogadro’s number of particles.

Atomic Mass:
= (Mass of one atom) / (1/12 × mass of one C-12 atom)

Molecular Mass:
Sum of atomic masses of all atoms in a molecule

Example:
Molecular mass of H2SO4 = (2 × 1) + 32 + (4 × 16) = 98


3. Number of Moles

Moles of atoms:
Moles = Given mass / Atomic mass

Moles of molecules:
Moles = Given mass / Molecular mass

Number of particles:
Number = Moles × NA


4. Gaseous State (STP)

Molar volume at STP:
1 mole of any gas occupies 22.4 L

Moles of gas:
Moles = Volume (in L at STP) / 22.4

Loschmidt Number:
Number of molecules in 1 mL gas at STP = 2.687 × 1019


5. Equivalent Weight & n-Factor

Equivalent Weight:
= Molecular weight / n-factor

  • Acid: n-factor = number of H+ ions replaced
  • Base: n-factor = number of OH ions replaced
  • Salt: n-factor = total ionic charge
  • Oxidising agent: electrons lost
  • Reducing agent: electrons gained

Gram equivalent:
= Weight (g) / Equivalent weight


6. Concentration Terms

Molarity (M):
M = Moles of solute / Volume of solution (in L)

Normality (N):
N = Molarity × n-factor

Molality (m):
m = Moles of solute / Mass of solvent (in kg)

Strength (g/L):
= Molarity × Molar mass


7. Percentage Composition

  • w/w %: (Mass of solute / Mass of solution) × 100
  • v/v %: (Volume of solute / Volume of solution) × 100
  • w/v %: (Mass of solute / Volume of solution) × 100

Relation:
If % (w/w) = x, density = d, molar mass = M
Molarity = (10 × x × d) / M


8. Dilution Formula

M1V1 = M2V2

During dilution, moles of solute remain constant.


9. Empirical & Molecular Formula

Empirical formula: Simplest whole-number ratio of atoms

Molecular formula:
= Empirical formula × n


10. Laws of Chemical Combination

  1. Law of Conservation of Mass: Mass is neither created nor destroyed
  2. Law of Definite Proportions: Elements combine in fixed mass ratios
  3. Law of Multiple Proportions: Masses combine in simple whole-number ratios
  4. Law of Reciprocal Proportions
  5. Law of Gaseous Volumes
  6. Avogadro’s Law: Equal volumes of gases contain equal number of molecules
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