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Agenda: 3/27

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Agenda: 3/27. Objective: to predict products in a chemical reaction Warm-up: Formative Assessment Chemical Reactions. Objective: To predict what a chemical reaction will produce. What will we learn? Balancing equations Types of reactions When reactions will take place. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Agenda: 3/27 Objective: to predict products in a chemical reaction Warm-up: Formative Assessment Chemical Reactions
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Page 1: Agenda: 3/27

Agenda: 3/27• Objective: to predict products in a chemical reaction

• Warm-up: Formative Assessment

• Chemical Reactions

Page 2: Agenda: 3/27

Objective: To predict what a chemical reaction will produce

•What will we learn?

• Balancing equations • Types of reactions • When reactions will take place

Page 3: Agenda: 3/27

Objective: To predict what a chemical reaction will produce

•What do we need to know?

• Names and formulas• Indicators of chemical change • Moles

Page 4: Agenda: 3/27

CHEMICAL REACTIONS

Reactants: Zn + I2 Product: Zn I2

")!

What are the indicators that there is a chemical reaction?

Page 5: Agenda: 3/27

What is a chemical reaction?

• Atoms are combined into compounds or separated and then rearranged.

• New substances must be formed• New physical and chemical properties

• Energy is always involved

Page 6: Agenda: 3/27

Notes: 1. Chemical Reactions• Process in which substances (reactants) change into

1 or more different substances (products)

Reactants → Products

Yields

Products have different physical and chemical properties than the reactants.

Explain why in your notes:

Page 7: Agenda: 3/27

Notes: Energy is always involved:

- In exothermic reactions, energy is released.

- In endothermic reactions, energy is added (absorbed)

Energy change (∆H = change in heat) is shown 2 ways:

Exothermic: ∆H = - or shown as a product

Endothermic: ∆H= + or shown as a reactant

Page 8: Agenda: 3/27

Notes: Chemical Change must take place.

• Indicators of chemical change:

1: change in temperature

2: producing bubbles (gas) without boiling

3: change in color

4: a precipitate is formed (solid from 2 liquids)

Page 9: Agenda: 3/27

Introduction: Chemical EquationsTheir Job: Way to represent the relative amounts of reactants and products and their relative amounts in a reaction.

4 Al (s) + 3 O2 (g) ---> 2 Al2O3 (s)

The numbers in the front are called coefficients.

____________The letters (s), (g), and (l) are the physical states of compounds.

Page 10: Agenda: 3/27

Word Equation for the reaction:The carbon reacts with oxygen to yield carbon dioxide.Chemical equation: C + O2 CO2

This contains the same information as the English sentence but has quantitative meaning as well.

The charcoal used in a grill isbasically carbon.

Page 11: Agenda: 3/27

Notes: Chemical Equations• Way to represent the relative amounts of reactant and

product. (A recipe)

• Satisfies the Law of Conservation of Matter (Mass)

Atoms are not created nor destroyed in a chemical reaction (just re-arranged)

Mass is neither created nor destroyed in a chemical reaction.

There must be the same amount of mass on the product side (after the reaction) as the reactant side (before the reaction.)

Page 12: Agenda: 3/27

• Solid ___• Liquid ____• Gas ___• Aqueous solution (aq)• Reversible reactions• Reactants are heated

• Catalyst H2SO4

• Escaping gas ()

Notes: Symbols Used in Equations

Page 13: Agenda: 3/27

Because of the principle of the conservation of matter,

an equation must be balanced.

It must have the same number of atoms of the same kind on both sides.

Introduction: Chemical Equations

Lavoisier, 1788

Page 14: Agenda: 3/27

BALANCING CHEMICAL REACTIONS

Page 15: Agenda: 3/27

Balancing EquationsBalancing Equations

___ Al(s) + ___ Br2(l) ---> ___ Al2Br6(s)

Page 16: Agenda: 3/27

• When balancing a chemical reaction Coefficients are added in front of a compounds to balance the reaction, but

you may not change the subscripts.

• Changing the subscripts changes the compound.

Important in Balancing Equations

Page 17: Agenda: 3/27

Subscripts vs. Coefficients

• The subscripts shows: ?

• The coefficient shows: ?

Page 18: Agenda: 3/27

Why balance chemical reactions?• Law of Conservation of Matter:

• matter is neither created nor destroyed in __ ________ _________.

• In a chemical reaction, atoms are combined, separated and/or rearranged.

• Not atoms are lost or gained in a chemical reaction.

Page 19: Agenda: 3/27

In a balanced reaction• Chemical reactions are shown with symbols (formulas in

an equation) • Starting materials = reactants • Produces, yields = arrow• End materials = products

• # atoms of reactants= # atoms of products

Page 20: Agenda: 3/27

Steps to balance equations:• Start with correct formulas for the compounds.

• Never, never change the formula (subscripts) • Put a box around the formulas as a reminder.

• Count how many atoms of each type of element on each side of the equation.

• Use multipliers (called coefficients) in front of the formulas on each side of the equation until the number on each side matches up.

Page 21: Agenda: 3/27

Notes: Methane and oxygen produces carbon dioxide and water.1. Correct formulas and symbols.• Put box around each formula.

2. Count the number of atoms on both sides of the equation

Methane + oxygen carbon dioxide + water

Page 22: Agenda: 3/27

Notes: Methane and oxygen produces carbon dioxide and water.3. Balance the equation using coefficients.(Coefficients are multipliers in front of the compounds)

4. Use the smallest whole number possible.

Page 23: Agenda: 3/27
Page 24: Agenda: 3/27

Examples: • Copper and silver (I) nitrate combine to yield copper (II)

nitrate and silver.

Page 25: Agenda: 3/27

Examples• The reactants magnesium and aluminum chloride produce

aluminum and magnesium chloride.

Page 26: Agenda: 3/27

Examples for your notes: • Carbon reacts with oxygen to produce carbon dioxide.

Page 27: Agenda: 3/27

Practice balancing equations• ____ Ca + ____ O₂ ____ CaO

• ____ Br₂ + ____ LiF ____ LiBr + ____ F₂

• ____ V + ____ ZnBr₂ ____ VBr₃ + ____ Zn

Page 28: Agenda: 3/27

• ____ Li + ____ Pb(OH)₂ ____ Pb + ____ LiOH

• ____ C₄H₈ + ____ O₂ ____ CO₂ + ____ H₂O

• ____ Ga(OH)₃ + ____ KF ____ KOH + ____ GaF₃

Page 29: Agenda: 3/27

Chemical EquationsChemical Equations4 Al(s) + 3 O2(g) ---> 2 Al2O3(s)

This equation means

4 Al atoms + 3 O2 molecules ---produces--->

2 molecules of Al2O3

AND/OR

4 moles of Al + 3 moles of O2 ---produces--->

2 moles of Al2O3

Page 30: Agenda: 3/27

Balancing EquationsBalancing Equations

____C3H8(g) + _____ O2(g) ---->

_____CO2(g) + _____ H2O(g)

____B4H10(g) + _____ O2(g) ---->

___ B2O3(g) + _____ H2O(g)

Page 31: Agenda: 3/27

Balancing EquationsBalancing EquationsSodium phosphate + iron (III) oxide sodium oxide +

iron (III) phosphate

Na3PO4 + Fe2O3 ---->

Na2O + FePO4

Page 32: Agenda: 3/27

____ P + O2 → P4O10 ____ Mg + O2 → MgO

____ HgO → Hg + O2 ____ Al2O3 → Al + O2

____ Cl2 + NaBr → NaCl + Br2 ____ H2 + N2 → NH3

Balancing chemical reactions

Page 33: Agenda: 3/27

____ Na + Br2 → NaBr ____ CuCl2 + H2S → CuS + HCl 

____ HgO + Cl2 → HgCl + O2 ____ C + H2 → CH4

 

____ KClO3  →   KCl  +  O2  ____ S8 + F2 → SF6

 

____ BaCl2   +   Na2 SO4 →     NaCl   +   BaSO4


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