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Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions
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Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions. 8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions a process in which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance.

Dec 27, 2015

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Clifford Stone
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Page 1: Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions. 8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions a process in which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance.

Chapter 8:

Chemical Equations and Reactions

Page 2: Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions. 8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions a process in which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance.

8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions

• Chemical reaction- a process in a process in which 1 or more substances are which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance converted into a NEW substance with with differentdifferent chemical and chemical and physical propertiesphysical properties.

• Is an uncooked egg and a cooked egg exactly the same??

Page 3: Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions. 8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions a process in which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance.

• In a chemical reaction there are 2 types of substances: reactants and products.– The substance that enters into the reaction is the

REACTANT.– The new substance(s) produced by the reactions

is/are the PRODUCT(s).

Ex. HH22 + Cl + Cl22 → 2 HCl2 HCl

Reactants Products

• Chemical equation- describes what is describes what is happening in a chemical reaction. IDs happening in a chemical reaction. IDs the reactants and products.the reactants and products.

Page 4: Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions. 8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions a process in which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance.

Indications of a Chemical Reaction

1. Evolution of Light

2. Production of a Gas

Page 5: Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions. 8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions a process in which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance.

3. Formation of a Precipitate

4. Color Change

Page 6: Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions. 8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions a process in which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance.

Characteristics of Chemical Equations

1. The equation must represent known facts

2. The equation must contain the correct formulas for the reactants and products.

3. The law of Conservation of mass must be satisfied.– In order to balance the equation… you must

use COEFFICIENTSCOEFFICIENTS- whole #s written before whole #s written before the formula of reactant or products.the formula of reactant or products.

Page 7: Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions. 8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions a process in which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance.

Word Equations• Simplest type of equation; give names of

reactants and products.

Aluminum ++ Hydrochloric acid →→ Aluminum chloride ++

Hydrogen

• On the REACTANTs side the ++ reads “reacts withreacts with”• On the PRODUCTs side the ++ reads “andand”

• The →→ reads “yieldsyields”, “formsforms” or “producesproduces”

Page 8: Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions. 8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions a process in which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance.

Formula Equations• More common than word equations; uses

formulas instead of names. AKA- chemical equation.

– Al  + HCl  →  AlCl3  +  H2

• You would still “read” the equation the same as the word equation

• Ex Reactants Products 2CH4 ++ 4O2 →→ 2CO2 ++ 4H2O

You read the equation as Methane reacts withreacts with oxygen to formto form carbon dioxide andand water.

Page 9: Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions. 8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions a process in which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance.

Writing Complete Chemical Equations

• Indicate the states of matter of the reactants and products. – Use (g) for gaseous substances. – Use (s) for solids. – Use (l) for liquids. – Use (aq) for species in solution in water. Write the state of matter immediately

following the formula of the substance it describes.

Additional symbols table p.246

Page 10: Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions. 8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions a process in which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance.

Significance of a Chemical Equation

1. The coefficients for a chemical rxn indicate relative, not absolute, amounts of reactants and products.

HH22 + Cl + Cl22 → 2 HCl2 HCl

Shows the smallest whole # ratio of Shows the smallest whole # ratio of the molecules:the molecules:

11moleculemolecule HH22, 1 , 1 moleculemolecule ClCl22, 2 , 2 moleculesmolecules HClHCl

Page 11: Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions. 8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions a process in which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance.

• 2. The relative masses of the reactants and products of a chemical reaction can be determined from the reaction's coefficients.

• 3. The reverse reaction for a chemical equation has the same relative amounts of substance as the forward reaction.

Page 12: Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions. 8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions a process in which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance.

Balancing Chemical Reactions1. ID names of reactants & products, write word

equation.2. Convert word equation to formula equation.3. Balance formula equation according to the law

of conservation of mass. Balance the different types of atoms one at a time. 1st balance atoms of elements that appear once on each side of

equation Balance polyatomic ions that appear on both sides of equation as

a unit Balance H & O atoms last.

4. Count atoms to be sure the equation is balanced.

Page 13: Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions. 8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions a process in which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance.

Practice• Ca + O2 → CaO

– 22Ca + O2 → 22CaO

• Mg + N2 → Mg3N2

– 33Mg + N2 → Mg3N2

• CH4 + O2 → CO2 + H2O

– CH4 + 22O2 → CO2 + 22H2O

• FeCl2 + Na3PO4 → NaCl + Fe3(PO4)2

– 33FeCl2 + 22Na3PO4 → 66NaCl + Fe3(PO4)2

Page 14: Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions. 8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions a process in which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance.

8.2 Types of Chemical Rxns

• There are 4 general types of Chemical rxns: Direct Combination, Decomposition, Single-replacement and Double-replacement.

• Each type is distinguished by how the products are formed.

Page 15: Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions. 8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions a process in which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance.

Direct Combinationaka Synthesis Rxn

– Synthesis rxns. combine substances.

– General Synthesis (combination) rxn formula• A + B → ABex. 2Na + Cl2 → 2NaCl

2Mg+O2 → 2MgO2C(s) +2O2(g) → 2CO2 (g)CaO+H2O → Ca(OH)2

It’s always 2 substances that react to form 1 new substance.

Page 16: Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions. 8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions a process in which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance.

Decomposition Rxn

– Decomposition rxns - Break substances apart.

– General rxn formula:• AB → A + BEx. 2H2O → 2H2 + O2

H2CO3 → H2O + CO2

2KClO3 → 2KCl + 3O2

• It’s always 1 substance breaks down to form 2 new substances.

Page 17: Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions. 8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions a process in which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance.

Single- Replacement rxns

• Single Replacement rxn - a rxn in which one element takes the place of another element in a compound– General equation: • AX + B → BX + A

Ex. 3CuCl2 + 2Al → 2AlCl3 + 3Cu2AgNO3(aq) + Zn(s) → 2Ag(s) +

Zn(NO3)2(aq)

Mg(s) + 2HCl(aq) → MgCl2(aq) + H2(g)

Page 18: Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions. 8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions a process in which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance.

Double-Replacement rxns

• Double-Replacement rxns - a rxn in which a substance is formed from the exchange of 2 atoms or ions between 2 compounds.– General formula• AX + BY → AY + BX

Ex. Pb(NO3)2 + K2CrO4 → PbCrO4 + 2KNO3

Page 19: Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions. 8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions a process in which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance.

Combustion Rxn– Combustion Rxns use O2 as a

reactant and always produce CO2 & H2O. In combustion rxns, the products depend on the amount of O2.

– General Combustion rxn formula:

• CnH2n+2 + O2 → CO2 + H2O

Ex. 2CH4 + 4O2 → 2CO2 + 4H2O

Page 20: Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions. 8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions a process in which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance.

8.3 Activity Series of the Elements

• Activity series- a list of elements organized according to the ease with which the elements undergo certain chemical reactions.

Page 21: Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions. 8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions a process in which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance.

• For metals: greater activity = easy to lose an electron.

• For non-metals: greater activity = easy to gain an electron.

Page 22: Chapter 8: Chemical Equations and Reactions. 8.1 Describing Chemical Reactions a process in which 1 or more substances are converted into a NEW substance.

Predict the products of these Single Replacement rxns.

– zinc + lead (II) nitrate– iron + zinc sulphate– lead + copper (II) nitrate– magnesium + zinc chloride– copper + sodium chloride– zinc + iron (II) sulphate– gold + silver nitrate– magnesium + calcium nitrate