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Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical...

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Chemical Reactions
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Page 1: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Chemical Reactions

Page 2: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Law of Conservation of Mass

Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction

The same number of atoms of reactant elements must equal the atoms of product elements

Page 3: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Balancing Chemical Equations

To write a balanced chemical equation, first write the skeleton equation. Then use coefficients to balance the equation so that it obeys the law of conservation of mass.

11.1

Page 4: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Diatomic Elements

Some elements exist naturally in pairs, as diatomic molecules. You will be expected to memorize these: Br2, I2, N2, Cl2, H2, O2, F2.

Page 5: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Subscripts

Soild: (s) Examples: S(s), Na(s), Cu(s)

Liquid: (l) Examples: H2O(l), C4H10(l)

Gas: (g) Examples: O2(g), Cl2(g), CH4(g)

Aqueous: (aq) – Dissolved in water. Examples: NaCl(aq), HF(aq), BaCl2(aq)

Page 6: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Types of Reactions

• There are five types of chemical reactions:

1. Synthesis reactions2. Decomposition reactions3. Single displacement reactions4. Double displacement reactions5. Combustion reactions

• Unit objective: identify the type of reaction and predict the product(s).

Page 7: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Steps to Writing Reactions

• Steps for doing reaction problems:1. Identify the type of reaction.2. Predict the product(s) using the type of

reaction as a model.3. Check for diatomics. (BrINClHOF)4. Balance the equation.

Page 8: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

1. Synthesis reactions

• Synthesis reactions occur when two substances (generally elements) combine to form a compound.

reactant + reactant 1 product

• Basically: A + B AB• Example: 2H2 + O2 2H2O

• Example: C + O2 CO2

Page 9: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Synthesis Reactions

• Another example of synthesis:

Page 10: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Practice

• Predict the products. Write and balance the following synthesis reaction equations.

• Sodium metal reacts with chlorine gas Na(s) + Cl2(g)

• Solid Magnesium reacts with fluorine gas Mg(s) + F2(g)

• Aluminum metal reacts with fluorine gas Al(s) + F2(g)

Page 11: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

2. Decomposition Reactions• Decomposition reactions occur

when a compound breaks up into the elements or into a few simpler compounds

• 1 Reactant Product + Product • In general: AB A + B• Example: 2 H2O 2H2 + O2

• Example: 2 HgO 2Hg + O2

Page 12: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Decomposition Reactions

• Another view of a decomposition reaction:

Page 13: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Decomposition Reaction

AB A + B

Page 14: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Practice

• Predict the products. Then, write and balance the following decomposition reaction equations:

• Solid Lead (IV) oxide decomposes PbO2(s)

• Aluminum nitride decomposes AlN(s)

Page 15: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Practice

Identify the type of reaction for each of the following synthesis or decomposition reactions, and write the balanced equation: H2(g) + O2(g) BaCO3(s) Zn(s)+ S(s) NH3(g) + H2CO3(aq) NI3(s)

Page 16: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

3. Single Replacement Reactions

• Single Replacement Reactions occur when one element replaces another in a compound.

• A metal can replace a metal (+) OR a nonmetal can replace a nonmetal (-).

• element + compound element + compound A + BC AC + B (if A is a metal) ORA + BC BA + C (if A is a nonmetal) (remember the cation always goes first!)

When H2O splits into ions, it splits intoH+ and OH- (not H+ and O-2 !!)

Page 17: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Single Replacement Reactions

• Another view:

Page 18: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Single Replacement Example

Example: Zn + CuCl2

ZnClCl

Cu+

General: AB + C AC + B

ClCl

Zn Cu+

LIKE replaces LIKE

Page 19: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Activity Series

lists metals in order of decreasing reactivity.

As a general rule, more reactive metals replace less reactive metals in a compound

Li

K

Ba

Ca

Na

Mg

Al

Zn

Fe

Cd

Ni

Sn

Pb

H

Cu

Hg

Ag

Au

Page 20: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Single Replacement Reactions

• Write and balance the following single replacement reaction equation:

• Zinc metal reacts with aqueous hydrochloric acid:

Zn(s) + HCl(aq) ZnCl2 + H2(g)

Note: Zinc replaces the hydrogen ion in the reaction

2

Page 21: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Single Replacement Reactions

• Sodium chloride solid reacts with fluorine gas

NaCl(s) + F2(g) NaF(s) + Cl2(g)

Note that fluorine replaces chlorine in the compound

• Aluminum metal reacts with aqueous copper (II) nitrate

Al(s)+ Cu(NO3)2(aq)

2 2

Page 22: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

4. Double Replacement Reactions

• Double Replacement Reactions occur when a metal replaces a metal in a compound and a nonmetal replaces a nonmetal in a compound

• Compound + compound compound+ compound

• AB + CD AD + CB

Page 23: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Decomposition reactions cont..

Solubility rules- The formation of a precipitate is a

driving force of a double replacement reaction

When you predict the products of a double replacement reaction, you must indicate which product is the precipitate using the solubility rules

If both products are soluble, the reaction will not occur- all ions will remain in solution

Page 24: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Double Replacement Reactions

• Think about it like “foil”ing in algebra, first and last ions go together + inside ions go together

• Example: AgNO3(aq) + NaCl(s) AgCl(s) + NaNO3(aq)

• Another example:K2SO4(aq) + Ba(NO3)2(aq) KNO3(aq) + BaSO4(s)

2

Page 25: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Practice

• Predict the products. Balance the equation HCl(aq) + AgNO3(aq)

CaCl2(aq) + Na3PO4(aq)

Pb(NO3)2(aq) + BaCl2(aq)

FeCl3(aq) + NaOH(aq)

H2SO4(aq) + NaOH(aq)

KOH(aq) + CuSO4(aq)

Page 26: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

5. Combustion Reactions

• Combustion reactions occur when a fuel reacts with oxygen gas, which produces heat!

Fuel + O2 (+ Heat) Product

Page 27: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Hydrocarbon Combustion Reactions• Hydrocarbon Combustion:

CxHy + O2 CO2 + H2O

• Products in combustion are ALWAYS carbon dioxide and water. (although incomplete burning does cause some by-products like carbon monoxide)

• Combustion is used to heat homes (CH4)and run automobiles (octane: C8H18)

Page 28: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Carbon Monoxide Effects

Edgar Allen Poe’s drooping eyes

and mouth are potential signs of

CO poisoning.

Page 29: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Combustion

• Example• C5H12 + O2 CO2 + H2O

• Write the products and balance the following combustion reaction:• C10H22 + O2

5 68

Page 30: Mass is never created or destroyed-ALL must be conserved and accounted for during a chemical reaction  The same number of atoms of reactant elements.

Mixed Practice

• State the type, predict the products, and balance the following reactions:

1. BaCl2 + H2SO4

2. C6H12 + O2

3. Zn + CuSO4

4. Cs + Br2

5. FeCO3


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