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Chapter 7Chemical Reactions

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Reactions can be either endothermic or exothermic. Endothermic Reactions. Use Heat ... Exothermic Reaction Demo. Light Emission is Evidence of a Chemical Reaction ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 7Chemical Reactions


1
Chapter 7Chemical Reactions
  • Dr. Ellen Wilson
  • CHE-1000-58793
  • Fall 2007

2
What is a chemical reaction?
  • A change of one or more substances into
  • different substances

3
How Do We Know a Chemical Reaction Has Occurred?
4
Precipitation is Evidence of a Chemical Reaction
5
Color Change is Evidence of a Chemical Reaction
  • Pb(NO3)2(aq) 2NaI(aq) ?PbI2(s) 2NaNO3(aq)

6
Color Change is Evidence of a Chemical Reaction
7
Gas Evolution is Evidence of a Chemical Reaction
8
This is the Same Reaction that Makes a Baking
Soda Volcano!
9
Gas Evolution is Evidence of a Chemical Reaction
10
Heat Transfer is Evidence of a Chemical Reaction
  • Reactions can be either endothermic or exothermic

11
Endothermic Reactions Use Heat
12
Endothermic Reaction Demo
13
Exothermic Reactions Give Off Heat
14
Exothermic Reactions Give Off Heat
15
Exothermic Reaction Demo
16
  • Light Emission is Evidence of a Chemical Reaction

17
The Color of a Firework Depends on the Salt Added
to It
18
The Color of a Firework Depends on the Salt Added
to It
19
Categories of Chemical Reactions
20
Synthesis
  • A B ? C
  • Ca(s) Cl2(g) ? CaCl2(s)

21
Decomposition
  • A ? B C
  • 2NaN3(s) ? 2Na(s) 3N2(g)

22
Single-Displacement
  • one element replaces another
  • 2Al(s) Fe2O3(s) ? Al2O3(s) 2Fe(s)

23
Double-Displacement
  • two elements exchange places
  • Pb(NO3)2(aq) 2NaI(aq) ?PbI2(s) 2NaNO3(aq)

24
Which Type of Reaction?
25
Which Type of Reaction?
26
Which Type of Reaction?
27
Which Type of Reaction?
28
Chemical Equation
  • A chemical reaction is represented by a balanced,
    chemical equation

29
What Does a Chemical Equation Look Like?
30
Synthesis
  • A B ? C
  • Ca(s) Cl2(g) ? CaCl2(s)

31
Decomposition
  • A ? B C
  • 2NaN3(s) ? 2Na(s) 3N2(g)

32
Single-Displacement
  • one element replaces another
  • 2Al(s) Fe2O3(s) ? Al2O3(s) 2Fe(s)

33
Double-Displacement
  • two elements exchange places
  • Pb(NO3)2(aq) 2NaI(aq) ?PbI2(s) 2NaNO3(aq)

34
Chemical Equations
  • What does a chemical equation tell us?
  • CH4(g) 2O2(g) ? CO2(g) 2H2O(g)
  • Atoms Molecules
  • Moles of atoms/molecules
  • Avogadros number of atoms/molecules
  • Grams of substances

35
Balancing Chemical Equations
  • A chemical equation MUST be balanced in order to
    be
  • of any use to us

36
Balancing Chemical Equations
  • Tips and Hints
  • write the unbalanced equation, compare numbers of
    like atoms on each side
  • start with the most complicated molecule
  • use coefficients so that the same number of each
    type of atom appears on both sides of the
    equation
  • do not change the subscripts of any of the
    reactants or products

37
Unbalanced Chemical Equation
  • C2H5OH(l) O2(g) ? CO2(g) H2O(g)

38
Balancing Chemical Equations
  • C2H5OH(l) O2(g) ? 2CO2(g) H2O(g)

39
Balancing Chemical Equations
  • C2H5OH(l) O2(g) ? 2CO2(g) 3 H2O(g)

40
Balancing Chemical Equations
  • C2H5OH(l) 3O2(g) ? 2CO2(g) 3 H2O(g)

41
Unbalanced Chemical Equation
  • NH3(g) CuO(s) ? N2(g) Cu(s) H2O(g)

42
Balancing Chemical Equations
  • 2NH3(g) CuO(s) ? N2(g) Cu(s) H2O(g)

43
Balancing Chemical Equations
  • 2NH3(g) CuO(s) ? N2(g) Cu(s) 3H2O(g)

44
Balancing Chemical Equations
  • 2NH3(g) 3CuO(s) ? N2(g) Cu(s) 3H2O(g)

45
Balancing Chemical Equations
  • 2NH3(g) 3CuO(s) ? N2(g) 3Cu(s) 3H2O(g)

46
Unbalanced Chemical Equation
  • NH3(g) O2(g) ? NO(g) H2O(g)

47
Balancing Chemical Equations
  • 2NH3(g) O2(g) ? NO(g) 3H2O(g)

48
Balancing Chemical Equations
  • 2NH3(g) O2(g) ? 2NO(g) 3H2O(g)

49
Balancing Chemical Equations
  • 2NH3(g) 5/2O2(g) ? 2NO(g) 3H2O(g)

50
Balancing Chemical Equations
  • Never leave a fraction in a chemical equation
    multiply by some number to make the fraction a
    whole number

51
Balancing Chemical Equations
  • 4NH3(g) 5O2(g) ? 4NO(g) 6H2O(g)

52
Types of Chemical Reactions
53
What is an Aqueous Solution?
54
  • What Does It Mean to Dissolve?

55
What is Dissociation?
56
Which Compounds are Soluble?
57
Which are Insoluble?
58
What is a Precipitation Reaction?
59
What is a Precipitation Reaction?
  • A precipitation reaction
  • is the combination of two
  • aqueous (aq) solutions
  • that results in the formation
  • of an insoluble (s) product

60
What is a Precipitation Reaction?
61
What is a Precipitation Reaction?
  • A precipitation reaction is a
  • double-displacement reaction

62
Examples of Precipitation Reactions
63
Balanced Chemical Equation
64
Examples of Precipitation Reactions
65
Balanced Chemical Equation
66
Examples of Precipitation Reactions
67
Balanced Chemical Equation
68
Examples of Precipitation Reactions
69
Balanced Chemical Equation
70
Examples of Precipitation Reactions
71
Balanced Chemical Equation
72
Types of Chemical Equations
73
Molecular Equation
74
Complete and Net Ionic Equations
75
Molecular Equation
76
Complete and Net Ionic Equations
77
Molecular Equation
78
Complete and Net Ionic Equations
79
Molecular Equation
80
Complete and Net Ionic Equations
81
What is an Acid-Base Reaction?
82
What is an Acid?
  • From Chapter 5, a compound that contains
  • hydrogen plus one nonmetal or
  • hydrogen plus an oxygen-containing polyatomic
    anion
  • A compound that dissociates in water to give a
    hydrogen ion and an anion

83
What is an Acid?
84
Acids
85
Some Common Acids
86
What is a Base?
  • A compound that contains a
  • metal plus a hydroxide group
  • A compound that dissociates in water to give a
    metal cation and a hydroxide anion

87
What Is A Base?
88
Bases
89
Some Common Bases
90
Examples of Acid-Base Reactions
91
Examples of Acid-Base Reactions
92
Examples of Acid-Base Reactions
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