D ESCRIBING C HEMICAL R EACTIONS Chapter 6 Section 2

Preview:

Citation preview

DESCRIBING CHEMICAL REACTIONS 

Chapter 6 Section 2

WHAT ARE CHEMICAL EQUATIONS?

Is a short, easy way to show a chemical reaction, using symbols instead of words.

Uses chemical formulas with subscripts and coefficients to summarize a reaction

A formula is a combination of symbols that represents elements in the compound

The substances at the left of the equation are called reactants, when the reaction is complete, on the right you have products.

If you have two or more reactants or products they are separated by a + sign

Reactant 1 + reactant 2 ----> Product 1 + product 2

CONVERSION OF MASS

During a chemical reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed, it just changes form.

All the atoms present at the start of the reaction are present at the end

The principle of conservation of mass states that in a chemical reaction, the total mass of the reactants must equal the total mass of the products

OPEN AND CLOSED SYSTEMS

Open: matter can enter from or escape to the surroundings.

Burning match

Closed: matter is not allowed to enter or leave the system

Eg: reaction is sealed in a plastic bag

BALANCING CHEMICAL EQUATIONS

To describe a reaction accurately, a chemical equation must show the same number of each type of atom on both sides of the equation

4 Step process

Step 1: Write the equation: Reactants on the Left, products on the right

___H₂ + ___O₂ ----> ____H₂0

                                                            

Step 2: Count the number of atoms of each element on each side of the equation

2 hydrogen, 2 oxygen on the react side, 1 oxygen and 2 hydrogen on the product side. IF THE ATOMS DO NOT EQUAL GO TO STEP 3

Step 3: Use coefficients to balance atoms

A coefficient is a number placed in front of a chemical formula. It is multiplied by the subscript to get the new number of atoms

Always check both sides when using a coefficient

Step 4: Check your work

CLASSIFYING CHEMICAL REACTIONS

Synthesis: when 2 or more elements or compounds combine to make a more complex substance

2H₂ + O₂ ---> 2 H₂O

Decomposition: Breaks down compounds into simpler products

2H₂O₂ ----> 2H₂O + O₂

Replacement: When one element replaces another element in a compound or when 2 elements in different compounds trade places

2CuO + C ----> 4 Cu + CO₂FeS + 2 HCl ----> FeCl₂ + H₂S

Recommended