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D ESCRIBING C HEMICAL R EACTIONS Chapter 6 Section 2.

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DESCRIBING CHEMICAL REACTIONS Chapter 6 Section 2
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Page 1: D ESCRIBING C HEMICAL R EACTIONS Chapter 6 Section 2.

DESCRIBING CHEMICAL REACTIONS 

Chapter 6 Section 2

Page 2: D ESCRIBING C HEMICAL R EACTIONS Chapter 6 Section 2.

WHAT ARE CHEMICAL EQUATIONS?

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

Page 3: D ESCRIBING C HEMICAL R EACTIONS Chapter 6 Section 2.

Uses chemical formulas with subscripts and coefficients to summarize a reaction

Page 4: D ESCRIBING C HEMICAL R EACTIONS Chapter 6 Section 2.

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

Page 5: D ESCRIBING C HEMICAL R EACTIONS Chapter 6 Section 2.

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

Page 6: D ESCRIBING C HEMICAL R EACTIONS Chapter 6 Section 2.

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

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

Page 7: D ESCRIBING C HEMICAL R EACTIONS Chapter 6 Section 2.

CONVERSION OF MASS

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

Page 8: D ESCRIBING C HEMICAL R EACTIONS Chapter 6 Section 2.

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

Page 9: D ESCRIBING C HEMICAL R EACTIONS Chapter 6 Section 2.

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

Page 10: D ESCRIBING C HEMICAL R EACTIONS Chapter 6 Section 2.

OPEN AND CLOSED SYSTEMS

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

Burning match

Page 11: D ESCRIBING C HEMICAL R EACTIONS Chapter 6 Section 2.

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

Eg: reaction is sealed in a plastic bag

Page 12: D ESCRIBING C HEMICAL R EACTIONS Chapter 6 Section 2.

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

Page 13: D ESCRIBING C HEMICAL R EACTIONS Chapter 6 Section 2.

4 Step process

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

___H₂ + ___O₂ ----> ____H₂0

                                                            

Page 14: D ESCRIBING C HEMICAL R EACTIONS Chapter 6 Section 2.

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

Page 15: D ESCRIBING C HEMICAL R EACTIONS Chapter 6 Section 2.

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

Page 16: D ESCRIBING C HEMICAL R EACTIONS Chapter 6 Section 2.

Step 4: Check your work

Page 17: D ESCRIBING C HEMICAL R EACTIONS Chapter 6 Section 2.

CLASSIFYING CHEMICAL REACTIONS

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

2H₂ + O₂ ---> 2 H₂O

Page 18: D ESCRIBING C HEMICAL R EACTIONS Chapter 6 Section 2.

Decomposition: Breaks down compounds into simpler products

2H₂O₂ ----> 2H₂O + O₂

Page 19: D ESCRIBING C HEMICAL R EACTIONS Chapter 6 Section 2.

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


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