Percentage Yield Calculator
The Percentage Yield Calculator tells you how efficient a chemical reaction was in practice. You can use it in two ways: enter an actual yield and a theoretical yield directly (Mode A — Direct), or provide a balanced equation with reactant amounts and let the calculator derive the theoretical yield for you (Mode B — From Reaction). In both cases the result is the same key metric every chemist needs after an experiment: the percent yield.
Mode B goes further, identifying the limiting reagent, showing excess reagents that remain after the reaction, displaying a complete stoichiometric table, and presenting a step-by-step calculation breakdown. Reactant purity fields let you correct for impure reagents without any manual pre-calculation.
What Is Percentage Yield?
Percentage yield (also written percent yield or % yield) compares the amount of product actually collected from a reaction to the maximum amount that stoichiometry predicts is possible:
% Yield = (Actual Yield / Theoretical Yield) × 100%A yield of 100% would mean every atom of limiting reagent was converted into pure, isolated product with zero loss. In practice, values of 70–95% are considered good for single-step laboratory reactions; complex multi-step syntheses can have overall yields below 10% when individual step yields are multiplied together.
Percent yield is a dimensionless ratio, so it works regardless of whether you measure in grams or moles — as long as actual and theoretical are on the same basis. If one value is in grams and the other in moles, you need the molar mass of the product to convert; Mode A handles this automatically when the units differ.
Why Percentage Yield Matters
Yield is the primary efficiency metric in synthetic chemistry. Consider a pharmaceutical company synthesising an active ingredient through five steps, each with 90% yield. The overall yield is 0.9⁵ ≈ 59%, meaning more than 40% of the starting material is wasted. Improving each step by just a few percent compresses dramatically into significant cost and waste savings at industrial scale.
In academic laboratories, percent yield is also a diagnostic tool. Consistently low yields on a known reaction prompt a review of technique — reaction time, temperature, solvent quality, or workup procedure. Understanding where yield is lost is the first step to improving it.
How the Calculator Works
Mode A — Direct Calculation
This is the fastest path when you already know the theoretical yield from a textbook, datasheet, or prior calculation. Enter the mass (g) or moles you collected as the actual yield, enter the predicted theoretical value, and the calculator returns the percent yield instantly. If you mix mass and mole inputs, the tool asks for the molar mass of the product and converts both values to moles before dividing.
Mode B — From Reaction
This mode computes everything from first principles in five steps:
1. Parse the balanced equation → extract stoichiometric coefficients ν
2. Convert each reactant amount to moles (apply purity %)
3. Compute reaction extent: ξ_r = n_r / ν_r for each reactant
4. Limiting reagent → reactant with the smallest ξ_r
5. Theoretical yield: n_product = ν_product × ξ
m_product = n_product × M_product
6. % Yield = (actual yield / m_product) × 100%The calculator supports four input formats for each reactant: solid or liquid mass (mg, g, kg); direct moles; solution molarity with volume (n = M × V); and gas quantities via the Ideal Gas Law (n = PV / RT, with full unit conversion for pressure, volume, and temperature).
Common Causes of Low Yield
Understanding why yield falls short of 100% is as important as calculating the number itself. The main causes fall into three categories:
Chemical Factors
Reactions rarely go to completion. Many reactions reach an equilibrium where both forward and reverse reactions occur simultaneously. Side reactions consume starting material to make unwanted by-products. Some reactions require a catalyst that becomes deactivated, slowing conversion before it is complete.
Physical Losses
Every transfer step costs material. Filtering, washing, transferring solutions, evaporating solvents, and recrystallising all leave some product behind. Volatile products evaporate during workup. Soluble products are lost in wash solvents. Solid products that are not fully dried add phantom mass — artificially inflating the apparent yield above 100%.
Measurement and Purity Issues
Impure starting materials deliver fewer moles of reactive species than their nominal mass suggests — this is what the purity field in Mode B corrects for. Weighing errors, graduated cylinder misreadings, and imprecise volume measurements all propagate into the final yield figure. A result significantly above 100% almost always means the product is wet or contaminated, not that the stoichiometry was broken.
Tips for Improving Yield in the Lab
Several practical strategies reliably increase percentage yield across different reaction types:
Optimise reaction conditions. Temperature, solvent, concentration, and reaction time all affect conversion. Running reactions under inert atmosphere prevents oxidative side products for air-sensitive compounds. Adding reagents slowly controls exotherms and reduces by-product formation.
Use excess of cheap reagents. If one reactant is significantly cheaper than the other, you can run the reaction with an excess of the cheap reagent to drive the equilibrium toward the product. Le Chatelier's principle guarantees that increasing reactant concentration pushes the equilibrium to the product side.
Minimise workup losses. Every extra purification step costs yield. Use the simplest workup that achieves the required purity. Avoid excessive washing and choose wash solvents in which your product is insoluble.
Dry thoroughly before weighing. Residual solvent is one of the most common sources of yield values above 100% and of irreproducible results. Dry products to constant weight in an oven or desiccator before recording the final mass.
Worked Example
Consider the reduction of iron(III) oxide with carbon monoxide:
Fe2O3 + 3CO → 2Fe + 3CO2
Given: 100.0 g Fe2O3 (MM = 159.69 g/mol), 50.0 g CO (MM = 28.01 g/mol)
Target product: Fe
Step 1 — moles of each reactant:
n(Fe2O3) = 100.0 / 159.69 = 0.6262 mol
n(CO) = 50.0 / 28.01 = 1.7851 mol
Step 2 — reaction extents:
ξ(Fe2O3) = 0.6262 / 1 = 0.6262 mol
ξ(CO) = 1.7851 / 3 = 0.5950 mol ← limiting reagent
Step 3 — theoretical yield of Fe:
n(Fe) = 2 × 0.5950 = 1.1901 mol
m(Fe) = 1.1901 × 55.845 = 66.47 g
Step 4 — if actual yield = 55.0 g:
% Yield = (55.0 / 66.47) × 100 = 82.7%Mode B of the calculator performs all these steps automatically and displays them in the Step-by-Step tab so you can verify each conversion.
Percentage Yield vs Atom Economy
Percent yield and atom economy are complementary but different measures of reaction efficiency. Percent yield measures how much of the possible product was actually collected. Atom economy (introduced by Barry Trost in 1991) measures what fraction of the atoms in the reactants end up in the desired product, regardless of how much you collected:
Atom economy = (MW of desired product / sum of MW of all reactants) × 100%A reaction with 95% yield but 30% atom economy still wastes 70% of its input atoms as by-products. Green chemistry aims to maximise both metrics simultaneously. For student purposes, percent yield is the standard metric reported in lab reports and practical assessments.
Interpreting the Result
As a rough guide: a yield above 90% is excellent for a simple reaction; 70–90% is typical for well-optimised lab-scale chemistry; 50–70% is acceptable in a first attempt; below 50% suggests a significant problem with technique, conditions, or stoichiometry. A yield above 100% is physically impossible for a pure dry product — it signals wet product, a co-precipitated impurity, or a weighing or calculation error, and should be investigated before reporting.
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