±«Óătv

Atom economy

No are created or destroyed in a chemical reaction. However, the atoms in the may not become the desired . They instead end up forming by-products.

For example, hydrogen can be manufactured by reacting methane with steam:

Methane + steam → hydrogen + carbon monoxide

CH4(g) + H2O(g) → 3H2(g) + CO(g)

In this reaction, carbon and oxygen atoms in the reactants do not form the useful product. Carbon monoxide is a waste gas.

The of a reaction is a measure of how many reactant atoms form a desired product.

Calculating percentage atom economy

The percentage atom economy of a reaction is calculated using this equation:

The atom economy of a reaction is 100% if there are no unwanted by-products in the reaction. Usually the atom economy is less than 100%. The more atoms that end up in the by-products, the lower the atom economy.

Worked example

Hydrogen can be manufactured by reacting methane with steam:

CH4(g) + H2O(g) → 3H2(g) + CO(g)

Calculate the atom economy for the reaction. (Ar of H = 1, Ar of C = 12, Ar of O = 16)

Mr of CH4 = 12 + (4 Ă— 1) = 16

Mr of H2O = (2 Ă— 1) + 16 = 18

Total Mr of reactants = 16 + 18 = 34

Ar of H2 = (2 Ă— 1) = 2

Total Mr of desired product = 3 Ă— 2 = 6 (there are three H2 in the balanced equation)

Atom economy = \(\frac{\textup{total M}_{r} \textup{of the desired product}}{\textup{total M}_{r} \textup{of all reactants}}\) Ă— 100

Atom economy = \(\frac{6}{34} \times 100\)

Atom economy = 17.6% (to 3 significant figures)

Question

Ethanol, CH3CH2OH, can be produced by the fermentation of glucose, C6H12O6:

C6H12O6(aq) → 2CH3CH2OH(aq) + 2CO2(g)

Calculate the atom economy for the reaction. (Mr of C6H12O6 = 180, Mr of CH3CH2OH = 46)