Percentage Yield (WJEC GCSE Chemistry)

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How to Calculate Percentage Yield

Percentage Yield

  • Yield is the term used to describe the amount of product you get from a reaction
  • In practice, you never get 100% yield in a chemical process for several reasons
  • These include:
    • Some reactants may be left behind in the equipment
    • The reaction may be reversible and in these reactions a high yield is never possible as the products are continually turning back into the reactants
    • Some products may also be lost during separation and purification stages such as filtration or distillation
    • There may be side reactions occurring where a substance reacts with a gas in the air or an impurity in one of the reactants
    • Products can also be lost during transfer from one container to another

Actual & Theoretical Yield

  • The actual yield is the recorded amount of product obtained
  • The theoretical yield is the amount of product that would be obtained under perfect practical and chemical conditions
  • It is calculated from the balanced equation and the reacting masses
  • The percentage yield compares the actual yield to the theoretical yield
  • For economic reasons, the objective of every chemical producing company is to have as high a percentage yield as possible to increase profits and reduce costs and waste
  • To calculate percentage yield the following equation is used:

percentage space yield space equals space fraction numerator actual space yield over denominator theoretical space yield end fraction space cross times space 100

Worked example

Copper(II) sulfate may be prepared by the reaction of dilute sulfuric acid with copper(II) oxide. A student prepared 1.6 g of dry copper(II) sulfate crystals.

Calculate the percentage yield if the theoretical yield is 2.0 g.

Answer

  • Actual yield of copper(II) sulfate = 1.6 g
  • Percentage yield of copper(II) sulfate = (1.6 / 2.0) x 100
  • Percentage yield = 80%

Examiner Tip

  • You are expected to remember the equation for percentage yield
  • If you remember it incorrectly and get a percentage yield greater than 100%, then you have made an error!
  • The most common error is to divide the theoretical yield by the actual yield
    • In this case, you just need to swap the numbers around in your calculation

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Richard

Author: Richard

Expertise: Chemistry

Richard has taught Chemistry for over 15 years as well as working as a science tutor, examiner, content creator and author. He wasn’t the greatest at exams and only discovered how to revise in his final year at university. That knowledge made him want to help students learn how to revise, challenge them to think about what they actually know and hopefully succeed; so here he is, happily, at SME.