There are several good reasons for not using the stoichiometric mixture (given by the math) for this reaction.
First of all this mixture is considered an explosive!
Second; the main areas of (peaceful) use are:
Smoke screens:
Incomplete combustion will give more smoke.
Solid state rocket fuel:
The fuel should be easy to cast and you do not want the fuel to damage the rocket by exploding or burning with too high a temperature.
From Richard Nakka's Experimental Rocketry Web Site:
http://members.aol.c...on/sucrose.html"The 65/35 (sucrose/nitrate) ratio has proven to give the best overall performance combined with acceptable casting qualities. Theoretically, the highest specific impulse is delivered at a 66/34 ratio, although the standard 65/35 ratio tends to be used by most experimentalists. There are three reasons for this:
The propellant characterization data has been obtained mainly for the 65/35 ratio
The performance difference is slight (about 1%).
The combustion temperature rises sharply with increased O/F ratio. At the 65/35 ratio, steel nozzles suffer no erosion, as there is an adequate margin between the theoretical flame temperature (1450C) and the melting point of steel (approx. 1500C). At higher O/F ratios, this margin is reduced such that a small error in weighing during preparation could result in a heat damaged nozzle."