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A Mole of Two Cities: Advanced 12th Grade Reaction Stoichiometry (Advanced) Worksheet • Free PDF Download with Answer Key

Students synthesize complex limiting reactant data and gas laws to predict yields in multicomponent industrial and environmental chemical systems.

Pedagogical Overview

This worksheet assesses advanced chemistry students on their ability to integrate stoichiometry with complex concepts such as percent yield, gas laws, and redox titrations. The instructional approach employs multi-step problem solving that requires synthesis of diverse chemical principles rather than isolate formula application. It is designed for high-achieving 12th-grade learners or as a comprehensive review for AP and IB chemistry exam preparation.

A Mole of Two Cities: Advanced 12th Grade Reaction Stoichiometry - science 12 Quiz Worksheet - Page 1
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A Mole of Two Cities: Advanced 12th Grade Reaction Stoichiometry - science 12 Quiz Worksheet - Page 2
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Tool: Multiple Choice Quiz
Subject: Science
Category: Chemistry
Grade: 12th Grade
Difficulty: Advanced
Topic: Stoichiometry & Mole Concept
Language: 🇬🇧 English
Items: 10
Answer Key: Yes
Hints: No
Created: Feb 14, 2026

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What Students Will Learn

  • Calculate theoretical yield and mass percent within industrial chemical decomposition scenarios.
  • Apply the Ideal Gas Law and Avogadro's Law of Combining Volumes to solve for unknown gas identities and stoichiometric ratios.
  • Determine the limiting reactant and molarity of unknown solutions through redox and acid-base titration analysis.

All 10 Questions

  1. A 10.0 g sample of impure magnesium carbonate (MgCO3) is decomposed to form MgO and CO2. If 3.82 g of MgO is actually recovered, and the reaction has a 92% yield, what was the approximate mass percent of MgCO3 in the original sample? (Molar masses: MgCO3 = 84.3 g/mol, MgO = 40.3 g/mol)
    A) 79.8%
    B) 87.1%
    C) 91.3%
    D) 95.2%
  2. In the combustion of a complex hydrocarbon, if the calculated mass of water produced exceeds the initial mass of the fuel, the Law of Conservation of Mass has been violated.
    A) True
    B) False
  3. An unknown gas with a mass of 1.43 g occupies 0.500 L at 298 K and 1.00 atm. Using the ideal gas law (R=0.0821) and the mole concept, identify the likely identity of this diatomic gas: ________.
    A) Oxygen (O2)
    B) Nitrogen (N2)
    C) Chlorine (Cl2)
    D) Fluorine (F2)
Show all 10 questions
  1. Consider the titration of 25.0 mL of 0.150 M H2SO4 with 0.200 M KOH. What volume of KOH is required to reach the second equivalence point?
    A) 18.75 mL
    B) 37.50 mL
    C) 50.00 mL
    D) 75.00 mL
  2. In the synthesis of adipic acid for nylon production, a chemist uses 120 g of cyclohexane (C6H12) as the starting material. If the theoretical mole ratio of cyclohexane to adipic acid (C6H10O4) is 1:1, the theoretical yield of adipic acid is ________ grams.
    A) 146.1 g
    B) 165.2 g
    C) 208.4 g
    D) 240.2 g
  3. At constant temperature and pressure, the volume ratios of gaseous reactants and products are equivalent to their stoichiometric mole ratios.
    A) True
    B) False
  4. Determine the limiting reactant when 5.0 moles of Silver Nitrate (AgNO3) reacts with 2.0 moles of Aluminum Chloride (AlCl3) to form Silver Chloride and Aluminum Nitrate.
    A) Silver Nitrate
    B) Aluminum Chloride
    C) Silver Chloride
    D) Neither; they are in stoichiometric proportion
  5. A hydrate of Cobalt(II) chloride, CoCl2·xH2O, is heated. The mass of the sample drops from 2.38 g to 1.30 g. The integer value of 'x' in the formula is ________.
    A) 2
    B) 4
    C) 6
    D) 10
  6. The empirical formula of a compound can be determined using only the percent composition by mass, without knowing the total molar mass of the compound.
    A) True
    B) False
  7. In a redox titration, 32.0 mL of 0.100 M KMnO4 is needed to oxidize 25.0 mL of an acidic Fe2+ solution to Fe3+. What is the molarity of the Fe2+ solution? (Mn is reduced from +7 to +2)
    A) 0.128 M
    B) 0.400 M
    C) 0.640 M
    D) 0.320 M

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Grade 12 ScienceAdvanced ChemistryReaction StoichiometryLimiting ReactantsSummative AssessmentAp Chemistry PrepGas Laws
This advanced 12th-grade chemistry quiz focuses on complex stoichiometry, integrating stoichiometric calculations with gas laws, percent yield, and titration data. The assessment contains ten items across multiple-choice, true-false, and fill-in-the-blank formats, requiring students to demonstrate mastery in identifying limiting reactants, calculating mass percentages, and determining molarities in redox and diprotic acid-base systems. It emphasizes the quantitative application of Avogadro's Law, the Law of Conservation of Mass, and the mole concept in practical industrial and environmental contexts.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, this science quiz is an effective resource for sub-plans in advanced chemistry because it provides detailed explanations and a clear answer key for every complex problem.

Most advanced 12th grade students will complete this science quiz in approximately 45 to 60 minutes due to the multi-step nature of the stoichiometric calculations.

This science quiz can be used for differentiation by assigning the true-false conceptual items to all students while providing the multi-step titration and yield calculations to learners who have mastered basic stoichiometry.

This science quiz is specifically designed for 12th grade students or those enrolled in university-level introductory chemistry courses who have a firm grasp of the mole concept.

You can use individual problems from this science quiz as high-level warm-ups or exit tickets to check for student understanding of gas stoichiometry and concentration analysis.

A Mole of Two Cities: Advanced 12th Grade Reaction Stoichiometry - Free Advanced Quiz Worksheet | Sheetworks