Title: Chemical Equations
1Chemical Equations Reactions
2I. Chemical Reactions
- Definition a process by which 1 or more
substances, called reactants, are changed into 1
or more substances, called products, with
different physical chemical properties. - Evidence of a Chemical Reaction
- Color change
- Formation of a precipitate, ppt
- Release of a gas
- Energy change heat, light, sound
- Odor change
- Reactions are started by the addition of energy
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4II. Chemical Equation
- Form
- Reactant Reactant ? Product Product
- Symbols (s), (l), (g), (aq)
- NR
-
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6Writing Chemical Equations
- Two moles of water at room temperature are
exposed to an electric current and produces two
moles of hydrogen gas and one mole of oxygen gas. -
- When two moles of aluminum pellets are added to
three moles of a copper(II) chloride solution, 3
moles of copper precipitate out and two moles of
aluminum chloride remain in solution.
2 H2O(l) ? 2 H2(g) 1 O2(g)
2 Al(s) 3 CuCl2(aq) ? 3 Cu(s) 2 AlCl3(aq)
7Characteristics of A Balanced Chemical Equations
- The equation must represent known facts. All
substances have been identified. - The equation must contain the correct symbols
and/or formulas for the reactants and products - Can be either a word equation or a formula
equation - The law of conservation of mass must be
satisfied. This provides the basis for balancing
chemical equations. 1st formulated by Antoine
Lavoisier - TOTAL MASS REACTANTS TOTAL MASS PRODUCTS
- Number of atoms of EACH element is the SAME on
both sides of the equation.
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9Balancing Chemical Equations
- Balance using coefficients after correct formulas
are written. - Coefficients are usually the smallest whole
number required when interpreted at the
molecular level - Balance atoms one at a time
- Balance the atoms that are combined and appear
only once on each side. - Balance polyatomics that appear on both sides
- Balance H and O atoms last
- NEVER CHANGE SUBSCRIPTS!!!
- Count atoms to be sure that the
- equation is balanced
10BALANCING Examples
- sodium chlorine ? sodium chloride
- CH4 (g) O2 (g) ? CO2 (g) H2O(l)
- K(s) H2O(l) ? KOH(aq) H2(g)
- HOH
- AgNO3(aq) Cu(s) ? Cu(NO3)2(aq) Ag(s)
11Interpretation of a Balanced Equation
- 2Mg(s) O2(g) ? 2MgO(s)
- 2 atoms of solid magnesium react with
- 1 molecule of oxygen gas to form
- 2 formula units of solid magnesium oxide
- OR
- 2 moles of solid magnesium react with
- 1 moles of oxygen gas to form
- 2 moles of solid magnesium oxide
- Reaction Ratios
12Classifying Chemical Reactions
- Pattern for prediction based
- on the kind of reactants
- Combustion or Burning complete combustion
always produces carbon dioxide and water! - Hydrocarbons
- CxHy O2 ? CO2 H2O
- Alcohols
- CxHyOH O2 ? CO2 H2O
- Sugars
- C6H12O6 O2 ? CO2 H2O
- C12H22O11 O2 ? CO2 H2O
13Synthesis or Composition
- 2/more reactants ? 1 product
- Element Element ? Compound
- A B ? AB
- 2 Na Cl2 ? 2 NaCl
- 4 Al 3 O2 ? 2 Al2O3
14SynthesisCompound Compound ? Compound
- EXAMPLE 1 metal oxide carbon dioxide ? metal
carbonate CaO CO2 ? CaCO3 - EXAMPLE 2 metal oxide water ? a base
(hydroxide) - Na2O H2O ? 2 NaOH
- H(OH)
- EXAMPLE 3 nonmetal oxide water ? an acid
- SO3 H2O ? H2SO4
- Determine oxidation numbers for molecular
compounds and oxyacids
15Decomposition Binary Compounds
- 1. Binary Compound ? 2 elements
- AB ? A B
- 2 H2O ? 2 H2 O2
-
- 2 HgO ? 2 Hg O2
16Decomposition - Ternary CompoundsTernary
Compound ? Compound Element/Compound
- EXAMPLE 1 metal chlorate ? metal chloride
oxygen - 2KClO3 ? 2KCl 3O2
- EXAMPLE 2 metal carbonate ? metal oxide
carbon dioxide - CaCO3 ? CaO
CO2 - EXAMPLE 3 metal hydroxide ? metal oxide
water -
- Mg(OH)2 ? MgO H2O (Except
Group IA metals) - EXAMPLE 4 acids ? nonmetal oxide water
- H2CO3 ? CO2 H2O
- EXAMPLE 5 Hydrogen Peroxide 2H2O2 ?
2H2O O2
17Single Replacement or Single Displacement
- Element Compound ? New Compound New Element
- Metals A BC ? AC B
- Active metals displace less active metals or
hydrogen from their compounds in aqueous
solution. Refer to the Activity Series. - a. 2Al 3CuCl2 ? 2AlCl3 3Cu
- b. metal H2O ? metal hydroxide
H2 -
- An active metal (top of series to calcium) will
react with water to form the hydroxide of the
metal and hydrogen gas. - 2Na 2HOH ? 2NaOH H2
-
18Single Replacement or Single Displacement
- 2. Nonmetals
- D EF ? ED F
- Cl2 2NaBr ? 2NaCl Br2
- Many nonmetals displace less active nonmetals
from combination with a metal or other cation.
Order of decreasing activity is - F2 ? Cl2 ? Br2 ? I2 ? S8
19Double Replacement or Double Displacement or
Metathesis
- Compound Compound ? New Compound New
Compound - AB CD ? AD CB
-
- AgNO3 NaCl ? AgCl
NaNO3 - AgNO3 (aq) NaCl (aq) ? AgCl (s)
NaNO3 (aq) -
- The driving force for these reactions is if it
produces a - A precipitate (ppt) See Solubility Table
- Water
- Gas Only HCl and NH3 are soluble in water. All
other gases (CO2 and H2S) are sufficiently
insoluble to force a reaction to occur if they
are found as a product.
20Thermochemistry
- The study of the changes in energy that accompany
a chemical reaction and physical changes. - Chemical Reactions involve changes in energy that
result from - Bond breaking that requires energy (absorbs) from
the surroundings. - Bond making that produces energy (releases) to
the surroundings. - Changes in energy result in an energy flow or
transfer.
21Types of Reactions
- Exothermic Reactions a reaction that releases
heat into their surroundings. - Heat is a product of the reaction and temperature
of the surroundings increase. - This occurs during bond formation.
22Types of Reactions
- Endothermic Reactions a reaction that absorbs
heat from the surroundings. - Heat acts as a reactant and temperature of the
surroundings decreases. - This occurs during bond breaking.
23Energy Chemical EquationsCoefficients are
always interpreted as moles. Physical states are
written influences the overall energy
exchanged. Very specific!
- Exothermic release energy E product
- CaCl2(s) ? Ca2 (aq) 2Cl-1(aq) 88.0kJ
- Combustion reactions are ALWAYS exothermic
- C3H8 5O2 ? 3CO2 4H2O 2043 kJ
- Endothermic absorbs energy E reactant
- 2NH4Cl(s) Ba(OH)28H2O(s) 63.9 kJ ?
- BaCl2(s) 2NH3(g) 10H2O
- Rewrite for 1 mole of Cl-1
- ½ CaCl2(s) ? ½ Ca2 (aq) 1 Cl-1(aq)
44.0kJ
24Heat and Enthalpy Changes
- Enthalpy (H) the heat content of a system at
constant pressure. - There is no way to directly measure the enthalpy
of a substance or system. - Unit J
- Enthalpy Change (?H) is the heat absorbed or
released in a physical or chemical change at
constant pressure. - ?H Hproducts - Hreactants
- This can be measured.
- ?H is also known as the heat of the reaction.
- Difference between the stored energy of the
reactants and the products.
25 Enthalpy Diagrams
1
2
261 2
Which has a higher enthalpy? Products or Reactants R P
b. Was heat absorbed or released? R A
c. Is this an endothermic or exothermic reaction? Exo Endo
d. Is ?H for this reaction positive or negative? -
e. Would the ?H be on the left or right side of the yield sign? R L
f. Is the reverse reaction exothermic or endothermic? Endo Exo
27Rewrite each equation with the heat term in the
reaction as a reactant or product
THERMOCHEMICAL equation
28Enthalpy Diagrams
BaCl2 2NH3 10H2O
CaCl2
-88.0 kJ
63.9 kJ
Ca2 2Cl-
2NH4Cl Ba(OH)2 8H2O
Exothermic
Endothermic
29Reaction Progress
- Collision Theory
- In order for a reaction to occur, the particles
must collide - A successful or effective collision occurs when
- The collision is energetic enough
- The particles collide with the correct
orientation - During a collision, kinetic energy is converted
to potential energy - The minimum energy needed for a successful
collision activation energy (Ea)
30Reaction Pathways or Potential Energy (heat
content) Diagrams
31Reaction Pathways or Potential Energy (heat
content) Diagrams
32Answer the following questions based on the
potential energy diagram shown here
- Does the graph represent an endothermic or
exothermic reaction? - Label the position of the reactants, products,
and activated complex. - Determine the heat of reaction, ?H, (enthalpy
change) for this reaction. - Determine the activation energy, Ea for this
reaction. - How much energy is released or absorbed during
the reaction? - How much energy is required for this reaction to
occur?
33Practice
- Sketch a potential energy curve that is
represented by the following values of ?H and Ea.
You may make up appropriate values for the y-axis
(potential energy). - ?Hforward -20 kJ
- Earev 80 kJ
- Activated Complex 120 kJ
- Is this an endothermic or exothermic reaction?
34Enthalpy Diagram - Formative Assessment 1
- Sketch a potential energy curve that is
represented by the following values of ?H and Ea. - ?Hreverse -10 kJ
- Eaforward 40 kJ
- Activated Complex 50 kJ
- Is this an endothermic or exothermic reaction?
35Enthalpy Diagram - Formative Assessment 2
- Based on your diagram, determine
- Endo or Exo?
- ?Hforward
- Eaforward
- ?Hreverse
- Eareverse
36Calculating ?H using Bond Energy
- 2 H2 O2 ? 2 H2O
- Bonds Formed
- Bonds Broken
- Using Bond Energy Table, determine ?H.
- ?H -482 kJ (482 kJ released exothermic)
37Hesss Law
- The enthalpy change for a reaction is the sum of
the enthalpy changes for a series of reactions
that adds up to the overall reaction. - This is also called the Law of Heat of Summation
(S) - 3. This allows you to determine the enthalpy
change for a reaction by indirect means when a
direct method cannot be done.
38Steps for using Hesss Law
- Write a balanced equation.
- Identify the compounds.
- Write the reaction from the table so the compound
is a reactant or product as it appears in the
balanced equation. - Write appropriate ?H for each sub equation.
- If needed, multiply the sub equation and the
associated ?Hs (coefficients). - If you reverse the equation, change the sign of
the enthalpy change. - Add the sub equations to arrive at the desired
balanced equation. - Add ?Hs of each sub equation to calculate the ?H
for the desired balanced equation.
39Calculate ?H for the following example
- 1) XeF2 F2 ? XeF4 ?H ?
- Xe F2 ? XeF2 ?H -123 kJ
- Xe 2F2 ? XeF4 ?H -262 kJ
- 2) C H2O ? CO H2 ?H ?
- 2CO ? 2C O2 ?H 222 kJ
- 2H2 O2 ? 2H2O ?H -484 kJ
XeF2 F2 ? XeF4 ?H -139 kJ
C H2O ? CO H2 ?H 131 kJ
40Calculate ?H for the following example
- 3) CO O2 ? 2 CO2 ?H ?
- 2C O2 ? 2CO ?H -222 kJ
- CO2 ? C O2 ?H 394 kJ
- 4) H2O2 H2 ? 2 H2O ?H ?
- H2O ½ O2 ? H2O2 ?H 94.6 kJ
- 2H2 O2 ? 2H2O ?H -484kJ
CO O2 ? 2 CO2 ?H -394 kJ
H2O2 H2 ? 2H2O ?H -336.6kJ