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Chapter 5 Chemical Reactions

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Demonstrate how to balance chemical equations. Interpret equations to determine number of moles ... Never change a subscript to balance an equation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 5 Chemical Reactions


1
Chapter 5Chemical Reactions
  • Douglass High School

2
Section 5.1Nature of Chemical Reactions
  • OBJECTIVES
  • Recognize signs that a chemical Rx is taking
    place
  • Explain chemical changes in terms of structure
    and motion of atoms and molecules
  • Describe the difference between exothermic and
    endothermic Rx

3
Chemical Reactions Change Substances
  • When a chemical Rx takes place the results are
    different from the products you started with
  • When substances undergo chemical changes to form
    brand new substances
  • You can tell a Rx is taking place if
  • You see bubbles
  • You see a solid form
  • You release energy in the form of heat or light

4
All chemical reactions
  • Have two parts
  • Reactants - the substances you start with
  • Products- the substances you end up with
  • The reactants turn into the products
  • Can be described several ways
  • 1. In a sentence
  • Copper reacts with chlorine to form copper (II)
    chloride.
  • 2. In a word equation
  • Copper chlorine ? copper (II) chloride

5
Energy and Reactions
  • Energy is used to break the bonds of the
    reactants
  • Activation energy
  • Once the bonds are broken, energy is released
    when new bonds are formed
  • It is always conserved (1st Law)
  • Rx that release energy are exothermic
  • Rx that absorb energy are endothermic

6
Section 5.2Reaction Types
  • OBJECTIVES
  • Distinguish among five general types of Rx
  • Predict the products of some Rx
  • Describe Rx that transfer or share electrons

7
1 - Synthesis Reactions
  • Combine/put together reactants
  • 2 substances combine to make one compound
  • Ca O2 ? CaO
  • SO3 H2O ? H2SO4
  • We can predict the products if they are two
    elements
  • Mg N2 ? __?__

8
2 - Decomposition Reactions
  • Decompose fall apart
  • One reactant falls apart into two or more
    elements or compounds
  • NaCl Na Cl2
  • CaCO3 CaO CO2
  • Note that energy is usually required to decompose

9
2 - Decomposition Reactions
  • Can predict the products if it is a binary
    compound
  • Made up of only two elements
  • Falls apart into its elements
  • If the compound has more than two elements you
    must be given one of the products
  • The other product will be from the missing pieces

10
3 - Combustion
  • Means add oxygen
  • A compound composed of only C, H, and maybe O is
    reacted with oxygen
  • If the combustion is complete, the products will
    be CO2 and H2O
  • If the combustion is incomplete, the products
    will be CO (possibly just C) and H2O

11
4 - Single Replacement
  • One element replaces another
  • Reactants must be an element and a compound
  • Products will be a different element and a
    different compound
  • Na KCl ? K NaCl
  • F2 LiCl ? LiF Cl2

12
4 Single Replacement
  • Metals replace other metals (and hydrogen)
  • K AlN ?
  • Zn HCl ?
  • Think of water as HOH
  • Metals replace one of the H, combine with
    hydroxide
  • Na HOH ?
  • We can tell whether a reaction will happen
  • Some chemicals are more active than others
  • More active replaces less active

13
4 - Single Replacement
  • Nonmetals can replace other nonmetals
  • Limited to F2 , Cl2 , Br2 , I2 (halogens)
  • Higher replaces lower
  • F2 HCl ?
  • Br2 KCl ?

14
5 - Double Replacement
  • Two things replace each other
  • Reactants must be two ionic compounds or acids
  • NaOH FeCl3 ?
  • The positive ions change place
  • NaOH FeCl3 ? Fe3 OH- Na1 Cl-1
  • NaOH FeCl3 ? Fe(OH)3 NaCl

15
5 - Double Replacement
  • Has certain driving forces
  • Will only happen if one of the products
  • doesnt dissolve in water and forms a solid (a
    precipitate), or
  • is a gas that bubbles out, or
  • is a covalent compound (usually water)

16
How to recognize which type
  • Look at the reactants
  • E E Synthesis
  • C Decomposition
  • C O2 Combustion
  • E C Single replacement
  • C C Double replacement

17
Examples
  • H2 O2 ?
  • H2O ?
  • Zn H2SO4 ?
  • HgO ?
  • KBr Cl2 ?
  • AgNO3 NaCl ?
  • Mg(OH)2 H2SO3 ?

18
Section 8.3Balancing Chemical Equations
  • OBJECTIVES
  • Demonstrate how to balance chemical equations
  • Interpret equations to determine number of moles
  • Explain how the Law of Definite Proportions
    allows for predictions of amounts
  • Identify mole ratios
  • Calculate relative masses of reactants and
    products

19
Symbols in equations
  • Arrow separates the reactants from the products
  • Read reacts to form
  • The plus sign and

20
An equation...
  • Describes a reaction
  • Must be balanced in order to follow the Law of
    Conservation of Mass
  • Can only be balanced by changing the coefficients
  • You can NOT change the chemical formulas
  • Must match up the number of atoms on the left and
    right side of the reaction arrow

21
Skeleton Equation
  • Uses formulas and symbols to describe a reaction
  • Doesnt indicate how many
  • All chemical equations are sentences that
    describe reactions

22
Balanced Equation
  • Atoms cant be created or destroyed
  • A balanced equation has the same number of each
    element on both sides of the equation

23

O

C
C
O
O
O
  • C O2 CO2
  • This equation is already balanced
  • What if it isnt?

24

O

C
C
O
O
  • C O2 CO
  • We need one more oxygen in the products
  • Cant change the formula, because it describes
    what it is (carbon monoxide in this example)

25
C
O

O

C
O
C
O
  • Must be used to make another CO
  • But where did the other C come from?

26
C
C
O

O

O
C
O
C
  • Must have started with two C
  • 2 C O2 2 CO

27
Rules for balancing
  • Assemble, write the correct formulas for all the
    reactants and products
  • Count the number of atoms of each type appearing
    on both sides
  • Balance the elements one at a time by adding
    coefficients (the numbers in front) - save H and
    O until LAST!
  • Check to make sure it is balanced

28
Never
  • Never change a subscript to balance an equation
  • If you change the formula you are describing a
    different reaction
  • H2O is a different compound than H2O2
  • Never put a coefficient in the middle of a
    formula
  • 2 NaCl is okay, Na2Cl is not

29
Example
H2
H2O
O2

Make a table to keep track of where you are at
30
Example
H2
H2O
O2

R
P
H
2
2
O
2
1
Need twice as much O in the product
31
Example
H2
H2O
O2

2
R
P
H
2
2
O
2
1
Changes the O
32
Example
H2
H2O
O2

2
R
P
H
2
2
O
2
1
2
Also changes the H
33
Example
H2
H2O
O2

2
R
P
H
2
2
4
O
2
1
2
Need twice as much H in the reactant
34
Example
H2
H2O
O2

2
2
R
P
H
2
2
4
O
2
1
2
Recount
35
Example
H2
H2O
O2

2
2
R
P
H
2
2
4
4
O
2
1
2
The equation is balanced, has the same number of
each kind of atom on both sides
36
Example
H2
H2O
O2

2
2
R
P
H
2
2
4
4
O
2
1
2
This is the answer
Not this
37
Balancing Examples
  • _AgNO3 _Cu ? _Cu(NO3)2 _Ag
  • _Mg _N2 ? _Mg3N2
  • _P _O2 ? _P4O10
  • _Na _H2O ? _H2 _NaOH
  • _CH4 _O2 ? _CO2 _H2O

38
Write and Balance (Synthesis)
  • Ca Cl2 ?
  • Fe O2 ? iron (II) oxide
  • Al O2 ?
  • Remember that the first step is to write the
    correct formulas
  • Then balance by using coefficients only

39
Complete and balance
  • Assume all of the following reactions take place
  • CaCl2 NaOH ?
  • CuCl2 K2S ?
  • KOH Fe(NO3)3 ?
  • (NH4)2SO4 BaF2 ?

40
Law of Definite Proportions
  • A compound always contains the same elements in
    the same proportions, regardless of how the
    compound is made or how much of the compound is
    formed
  • Water is always water H2O
  • Mole ratio is derived from the coefficients
  • The coefficient tells you have many moles you
    need of that compound in the Rx

41
Section 5.4Rates of Change
  • Objectives
  • Describe the factors affecting Rx rates
  • Explain the effect of a catalyst on a chemical Rx
  • Explain chemical equilibrium in terms of equal
    forward and reverse Rx rates
  • Apply Le Chateliers principle

42
Factors affecting Rates of Change
  • For any Rx to occur particles must collide with
    one another
  • What factors will speed up those collisions?
  • Higher temperature
  • Large surface area
  • Concentrated solutions
  • Higher pressure
  • Size and shape of reactants
  • Small molecules react faster
  • Catalysts

43
What is a catalyst?
  • A substance that speeds up a reaction, without
    being changed or used up by the reaction
  • Enzymes are biological or protein catalysts
  • Enzymes are very specific
  • Most stop working above 45oC

44
Equilibrium Systems
  • indicates a reversible reaction
  • These are Rx that dont continue until completion
  • Wood burns until it is done (completed)
  • Rx at equilibrium have the same rate going
    forward and backward
  • Carbonation in a soda bottle
  • This is a balanced state of RATES

45
Le Chateliers Principle
  • If a change is made to a system in chemical
    equilibrium, the equilibrium shifts to oppose the
    change until a new equilibrium is reached
  • Every action has an equal and opposite reaction

46
The End.
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