Title: CHEMICAL REACTIONS
1CHEMICAL REACTIONS
Reactants Zn I2
Product Zn I2
2Introduction
- Chemical reactions occur when bonds between atoms
are formed or broken - Chemical reactions involve changes in matter, the
making of new materials with new properties, and
energy changes. - Chemical reactions are written in symbolic form
- How can you tell a chemical reaction is
happening?
- Color, heat/light, bubbles
3Energy is in the bonds!
- Exothermic rxns bonds broken and energy is
released
- Endothermic rxns bonds made and energy is stored
4Parts of a Reaction Equation
- reactants (molecules on left of arrow)
- products (molecules on right of arrow).
- sign separates molecules on same side
- ? is read as yields
- Ex carbon plus oxygen react to yield carbon
dioxide -
- C O2 ? CO2
5Other symbols
- Coefficients - The numbers in front
- Show relative amounts of reactants products
- Shows the recipe
- 4 Al (s) 3 O2 (g) ---gt 2 Al2O3 (s)
- Letters (s), (g), and (l) are the physical states
of compounds.
6Chemical Equations
- 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.
7Balancing Equations
- When balancing a chemical reaction you may add
coefficients in front of the compounds to balance
the reaction, but you may not change the
subscripts. - Changing the subscripts changes the compound.
Subscripts are determined by the valence
electrons (charges for ionic or sharing for
covalent)
8Subscripts vs. Coefficients
- The subscripts tell you how many atoms of a
particular element are in a compound. The
coefficient tells you about the quantity, or
number, of molecules of the compound.
9Steps to Balancing Equations
- DO NOT CHANGE THE FORMULAS!
- Always start on the left.
- Compare the number of atoms for each element on
either side of the reaction - Add or change COEFFICIENTS to balance.
- Every time you make a change, go back to the
beginning. - If polyatomic ions are present on both sides,
treat them as one unit. - Check your answer to see if
- The numbers of atoms on both sides of the
equation are now balanced. - The coefficients are in the lowest possible whole
number ratios. (reduced)
10Balancing Equations
2
2
- ___ H2(g) ___ O2(g) ---gt ___ H2O(l)
What Happened to the Other Oxygen Atom????? This
equation is not balanced! What coefficients need
to be added to balance this equation?
112
3
- ___ Al(s) ___ Br2(l) ---gt ___ Al2Br6(s)
12Balancing Equations
5
- ____C3H8(g) _____ O2(g)
----gt _____CO2(g) _____ H2O(g)
3
4
2
11
5.5
____B4H10(g) _____ O2(g)
----gt ___ B2O3(g) _____ H2O(g)
4
10
2
5
13Balancing Equations
- Sodium phosphate iron (III) oxide ? sodium
oxide iron (III) phosphate
Na3PO4 Fe2O3 ----gt
Na2O FePO4
2
3
2
14Now Try These
Which Is Balanced?
Mg O2 ? MgO 2Mg O2 ? 2MgO
Mg ½O2 ? MgO Mg2 O2 ? 2MgO
4Mg 2 O2 ? 4MgO
5
a) P4 O2 ? P4O10 b) Li H2O ? H2
LiOH c) Bi(NO3)3 K2S ? Bi2S3
KNO3 d) C2H6 O2 ? CO2 H2O
2
2
2
2
6
3
2
3
3.5
C2H6 O2 ? CO2 H2O
2
7
4
6
15Balance these skeleton equations
- a) Mg 2HCl ? MgCl2 H2
- b) 3Ca N2 ? Ca3N2
- c) NH4NO3 ? N2O 2H2O
- d) 2BiCl3 3H2S ? Bi2S3 6HCl
- e) 2C4H10 13O2 ? 8CO2 10H2O
- f) 6O2 C6H12O6 ? 6CO2 6H2O
- g) 3NO2 H2O ? 2HNO3 NO
- h) Cr2(SO4)3 6NaOH ? 2Cr(OH)3 3Na2SO4
- i) Al4C3 12H2O ? 3CH4 4Al(OH)3
16Here are some more to balance
- a) 2KNO3 ? 2KNO2 O2
- b) 2Pb(NO3)2 ? 2PbO 4NO2 O2
- c) P4 6I2 ? 4PI3
- d) 3MgO 2H3PO4 ? Mg3(PO4)2 3H2O
- e) Br2 2KI ? I2 2KBr
- f) Ca(OH)2 2HNO3 ? Ca(NO3)2 2H2O
- g) Bi2O3 3H2 ? 2Bi 3H2O
- h) 3Fe 2O2 ? Fe3O4
- i) 2CaO 5C ? 2CaC2 CO2
17- a) 2Li 2H2O H2 2LiOH
- b) P4 5O2 P4O10
- c) 2C2H6 7O2 4CO2 6H2O
- d) CS2 3O2 CO2 2SO2
- e) 2AsCl3 3H2S As2S3 6HCl
- f) 3AgNO3 FeCl3 3AgCl Fe(NO3)3
- g) 2KClO3 2KCl 3O2
- h) 2SO2 O2 2SO3