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Page 1: Ch10 chemicalreactionssection2
Page 2: Ch10 chemicalreactionssection2

Matter and Change

• Chapter Nine: Acids, Bases and Solutions

• Chapter Ten: Chemical Reactions

• Chapter Eleven: The Chemistry of Living Things

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Chapter Ten: Chemical Reactions

• 10.1 Understanding Chemical Reactions

• 10.2 Energy and Chemical Reactions

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Investigation 10B

• How do scientists describe what happens in a chemical reaction?

Conservation of Mass

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10.2 Energy and chemical reactions

• All chemical reactions involve energy.

– Burning is a chemical reaction that gives off energy in the form of heat and light.

– In plants, photosynthesis is a reaction that uses energy from sunlight.

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10.2 Types of energy in reactions

• If forming new bonds releases more energy than it takes to break the old bonds, the reaction is exothermic.

• Exothermic reactions tend to keep going because each reaction releases enough energy to start the reaction in neighboring molecules.

How can the energy from an exothermic reaction be useful?

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10.2 Types of energy in reactions

• Endothermic reactions absorb energy. • These reactions need energy to keep going.

Where does the energy needed for this reaction come from?

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10.2 Activation energy• Activation energy is the energy needed to start a

reaction and break chemical bonds in the reactants.– This is why a flammable material, like gasoline, does

not burn without a spark or flame. – The spark supplies the activation energy to start the

reaction.

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10.2 Activation energy

• This diagram shows how the energy flows in the reaction of hydrogen and oxygen.

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10.2 Addition reactions

• In an addition reaction, two or more substances combine to form a new compound.

• The process of creating large molecules from small ones is called polymerization.

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10.2 Decomposition reactions

• A chemical reaction in which a single compound is broken down to produce two or more smaller compounds is called a decomposition reaction.

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10.2 Reaction symbols

• The small symbols in the parentheses (s, l, g, aq) next to each chemical formula indicate the phase of each substance in the reaction.

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10.2 Displacement reactions

• In single-displacement reactions, one element replaces a similar element in a compound.

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10.2 Precipitation reactions

• A precipitate is a new solid product that comes out of solution in a chemical reaction.

• The formation of a cloudy precipitate is evidence that a double-displacement reaction has occurred.

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10.2 Precipitation

• The limewater test for carbon dioxide is a precipitation reaction.

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10.2 Petroleum refining

• The refining process separates petroleum into molecules with different numbers of carbon atoms.

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10.2 Petroleum refining

• These are some of the molecules found in gasoline.

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10.2 Combustion reactions• In a perfect reaction, all the hydrocarbon

molecules are completely burned to into carbon dioxide and water.

• In an engine not all the fuel burns completely and pollutants such as carbon monoxide are also formed.

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10.2 Nuclear reactions

• Nuclear reactions change the nucleus of an atom.

• Because they affect the nucleus itself, nuclear reactions can change one element into a different element.

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Chemistry Connection

The Science of Hot and Cold Packs

Have you ever used a hot or cold pack? Although it’s seem like magic, it’s really a mini chemistry lab inside that plastic wrapper.

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Activity

• Most hot and cold packs work by breaking a membrane that separates a solid and water.

Explore Hot and Cold Packs