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APS106 – Lab #7

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APS106 – Lab #7
Preamble
This week you will practice using dictionaries, tuples, sets, and strings to build a program that
checks whether a chemical equation is balanced.
Deliverables
For this lab, you must submit the five functions listed below within a single file named ‘lab7.py’
to MarkUS by the posted deadline.
Functions to implement for this lab:
• mol_form
• expr_form
• find_unbalanced_atoms
• check_eqn_balance
Use appropriate variable names and place comments throughout your program.
The name of the source file must be “lab7.py”.
Five test cases are provided on MarkUs to help you prepare your solution. Passing all these test
cases does not guarantee your code is correct. You will need to develop your own test cases to
verify your solution works correctly. Your programs will be graded using ten secret test cases.
These test cases will be released after the assignment deadline.
IMPORTANT:
• Do not change the file name or function names
• Do not use input() inside your program
Problem
Your task for this lab is to build a program that will check if a chemical equation, stored as a
Python dictionary, is properly balanced. To do this, you will write the following three functions:
1. mol_form
2. expr_form
3. find_unbalanced_atoms
4. check_eqn_balance
These functions will be discussed in greater detail below.
Understanding the Problem
This section is a brief review of chemical equations and how to determine if they are balanced. If
you are familiar with how to balance chemical equations, please feel free to skip directly to the
next section.
What is a Chemical Equation?
A chemical equation is a representation of a chemical reaction within a closed system. The
equation represents the chemical reactants and products using their symbols and compound
formulas. Typically, the reactants are shown on the left-hand side and the products are shown on
the right-hand side. Consider the following example:
𝐶3𝐻8 + 5𝑂2 ⇆ 4𝐻2𝑂 + 3𝐶𝑂2
In this example, the reactants are 𝐶3𝐻8 𝑎𝑛𝑑 𝑂2 (propane and oxygen, respectively) and the
products are 𝐻2𝑂 𝑎𝑛𝑑 𝐶𝑂2 (water and carbon dioxide).
Balanced Chemical Equation
Due to the law of conservation of mass, the number of atoms for each element on both sides of a
chemical equation must be equal. The number of each type of atom can be extracted from the
subscripts in the chemical equation and the numeric coefficients in front of each molecular
formula. Let’s analyze the example above to extract the number of atoms for each element on
both sides of the equation. Let’s begin with carbon (C), on the left-hand side, carbon appears
once in the molecule 𝐶3𝐻8 and has a subscript of 3. The coefficient for 𝐶3𝐻8 is one, the total
number of carbon atoms on the left-hand side is the product of the subscript and the coefficient,
or, in this example, 1 ∙ 3 = 3. On the right-hand side, carbon appears once in 𝐶𝑂2 and has a
coefficient of 3, so the number of carbon atoms on the right-hand side is also 3. You can perform
the same analysis for the other elements to find the following:
C H O
Reactants (LHS) 3 8 10
Products (RHS) 3 8 10
If all the elements have the same number of atoms on both sides of the equation, we say that the
equation is balanced. If there are any elements that have different numbers of atoms on the rightor left-hand side, we would say that the equation is not balanced.
For more help with balancing chemical equations, see here and here.
Motivating the Problem
Imagine you are a chemical process engineer working on a new chemical process to generate a
valuable new compound. After extensive research, you think you’ve found an efficient process to
produce the compound and make a fortune! However, your process includes dozens of steps
involving chemical equations like:
4 NH4OH + KAl(SO4)2·12H2O → Al(OH)3 + 2 (NH4)2SO4 + KOH + 12 H2O
With this level of complexity and the number of atoms to account for, you think its likely you’ve
made at least one error when checking that the equations were balanced. Worse, if you did make
a mistake and you try to execute the process, the yield of the compound would be much lower
than you think and cost your company millions of dollars. Luckily, you took APS106 and decide
to write a program to check all your equations are balanced and identify any errors…
Part 1 – Extract Elements and Number of Atoms from a Molecular
Formula
For the first part of this lab, you will complete the mol_form function. This function converts
a string representation of a molecule or compound into a Python dictionary the molecule’s
chemical element symbols as keys and the number of atoms within the molecule as values.
You may assume the input string representing the compound structure will specify the number of
atoms for each element, even if the IUPAC formula would omit the subscript 1. For instance,
ethanol, 𝐶2𝐻6𝑂, would be passed to the function as the string “C2H6O1”. Each element will be
representing using either one or two letters according to its atomic symbol. The first letter will
always be capitalized and the second letter, should it exist, will be lowercase. A list of all the
symbols for chemical elements can be found here.
The keys in the returned dictionary are strings corresponding to the chemical’s symbol. The
values in the returned dictionary should be integers matching the number of atoms of a particular
element within the input molecule.
Example Test Cases
Input Argument Return Value
“C2H6O1” {‘C’: 2, ‘H’: 6, ‘O’: 1}
“H2O1” {‘H’: 2, ‘O’: 1}
“K1Fe4” {‘K’: 1, ‘Fe’: 4}
Part 2 – Summing Atoms in a Chemical Expression
In this part of the lab you will complete the expr_form function. This function counts the
number of atoms for each element in a chemical expression (i.e. one side of a chemical
equation). There are two inputs to this function. The first input, expr_coeffs, is a tuple of
integers. These integers represent the coefficients for molecules within a chemical expression.
The second input, expr_molecs, is a tuple of dictionaries representing the molecules within
the expression. These dictionaries have the form {‘atomic symbol’ : number of
atoms} (similar to the dictionary returned by the mol_form function). The order of the
coefficients corresponds to the order of molecule dictionaries. For example, if we were interested
in counting the atoms belonging to each element in the following expression,
2𝑁𝑎𝐶𝑙 + 𝐻2 + 5𝑁𝑎𝐹
The inputs to the function would be:
(2,1,5)
and
({“Na”:1, “Cl”:1}, {“H”:2}, {“Na”:1, “F”:1})
for expr_coeffs and expr_molecs respectively.
Note that each tuple contains 3 elements because the chemical expression contains 3 molecules
(𝑁𝑎𝐶𝑙, 𝐻2, 𝑎𝑛𝑑 𝑁𝑎𝐹). The first tuple contains the integers (2, 1, 5) corresponding to the
numerical coefficient for each molecule in the expression. The second tuple contains dictionaries
representing each molecule by storing the elements that make up the molecule as keys and the
subscript for each element in the molecular formula as values.
This function creates and returns a new dictionary that contains all the elements within the
expression as keys and the total number of atoms for each element as values. For the input tuple
above, the function would return:
{“Na” : 7, “Cl” : 2, “H” : 2, “F” : 5}
Example Test Cases
Chemical
Expression
expr_coeffs input expr_molecs input Return Value
2𝐶𝑂2 + 4𝐻2𝑂 (2,4) ({“C”:1,”O”:2},
{“H”:2,”O”:1})
{“C”:2, “H”:8,”O”:8}
𝐴𝑙 + 𝑂2
(1,1) ({“Al”:1},{“O”:2}) {“A1” : 1, “O” : 2}
Part 3 – Comparing Expressions to Find Unbalanced Elements
In this part of the lab you will complete the find_unbalanced_atoms function. This
function accepts two dictionaries as input parameters representing two sides of a chemical
equation and returns a set containing any elements that are not balanced in the equation.
The dictionaries input to the function are similar to the dictionaries returned by the expr_form
function. That is, the atomic symbols for the elements of an expression are the keys and the
corresponding number of atoms for each element in the expression are the values.
For example, the equation
𝐶3𝐻8 + 5𝑂2 ⇆ 4𝐻2𝑂 + 3𝐶𝑂2
would be input as the following two dictionaries:
{“C”:3, “H”:8, “O”:10}
and
{“H”:8, “O”:10, “C”:3}
In this example, because the dictionaries have the same key-value pairs, the function would
return an empty set.
If the function were passed an unbalanced equation, such as
𝐶3𝐻8 + 5𝑂2 ⇆ 4𝐻2𝑂 + 2𝐶𝑂2
as
{“C”:3, “H”:8, “O”:10}
and
{“H”:8, “O”:8, “C”:2}
the function would return the following set to indicate the carbon (C) and oxygen (O) atoms are
not balanced:
{“C”, “O”}
Developing test cases for this function, in addition to those presented above is left as an exercise.
You should not assume that the set of keys in both dictionaries will be the same,
Part 4 – Putting Everything Together
In this final part of the lab, you will complete the check_eqn_balance function to check
whether a chemical equation is balanced. The function should call the three functions you wrote
in parts 1-3.This function accepts two nested tuples representing a chemical equation as input
parameters and returns a set containing any unbalanced elements in the equation.
Each one of the input tuples represents one side of a chemical equation. Each of these tuples
contains two elements. The first element is a tuple of molecule coefficients. The second element
is a tuple of strings containing molecule compound formulas. For example, the equation
𝐶3𝐻8 + 5𝑂2 ⇆ 4𝐻2𝑂 + 3𝐶𝑂2
would be passed into this function as two tuples. First the reactant (left-hand side) tuple would
be:
((1,5),(“C3H8″,”O2”)).
The product (right-hand side) tuple would be:
((4,3),(“H2O1″,”C1O2”)).
In this example, the equation is balanced, so the function would return an empty set.
The following snippets illustrate how the function can be used. You are encouraged to read
through this function and understand how it works as an additional exercise.
Example Test Cases
Chemical Eqaution Reactants input Products input Function
Output
𝐶3𝐻8 + 5𝑂2
⇆ 4𝐻2𝑂 + 3𝐶𝑂2
((1,5),(“C3H8″,”O2”)) ((4,3),(“H2O1″,”C1O2”)) set()
𝐶3𝐻8 + 5𝑂2
⇆ 4𝐻2𝑂 + 2𝐶𝑂2
((1,5),(“C3H8″,”O2”)) ((4,2),(“H2O1″,”C1O2”)) {“C”, “O”}

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