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Compounds, Chemical Formulas, and Chemical Equations. Prior Knowledge. Recall our study of elements on the periodic table. . Period Table of the Elements. Link what you know to something new. Let’s Compare Elements and compounds. Salt water, rust.
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Prior Knowledge Recall our study of elements on the periodic table.
Link what you know to something new Let’s Compare Elements and compounds
Salt water, rust http://www.24hourmuseum.org.uk/content/images/2004_0300.JPG http://www.mortonsalt.com/images/products/IodizedPlain_Salt.jpg http://gallery.hd.org/_exhibits/natural-science/_more1998/_more01/water-drops-1-AJHD.jpg
Hydrogen Peroxide • Use to cleanse a cut or scrape on your skin • H2 O2 http://web1.caryacademy.org/chemistry/rushin/StudentProjects/CompoundWebSites/2000/HydrogenPeroxide/home.htm
Compound • Two or more elements combined chemically.
Sometimes elements or compounds chemically combine. This can be show using chemical formulas and chemical equations.
Examples of Chemical Formulas and Equations • CO2 + H2O = (H2CO3) Carbon dioxide + water = carbonic acid (soda fizz) • Ag + S = Ag2S Silver + sulfur = sulfur sulfide (tarnish)
When you take the cap off a bottle of soda, bubbles rise to the top of the bottle as carbonic acid breaks down into carbon dioxide and water.
Chemical formula • Scientific short way of describing the chemical content of a substance. Number and letters stand for how many and what kinds of atoms are in one molecule of the chemical. For example: In CO2, the C stands for carbon and the O stands for Oxygen. There are two atoms of oxygen and one atom of hydrogen.
Chemical Equation • Is a statement that uses chemical formulas to express the identities and quantities of the substances involved in a chemical or physical change
Engage • Balloon gas
Explore Sweet Models Lab
Explain • Review vocabulary • Provide examples of compounds, chemical formulas and chemical equations • Relevance
Elaborate So Happy Together!
Evaluate 1. In a molecule of fruit sugar, C6H12O6, how many carbon atom are there? Hydrogen? Oxygen? 2. Which formulas represent compounds? Elements? (NaCl, Ag, Co, CO, SO2, AgBr) 3. Nitrogen in the air is two nitrogen atoms attached together, N2. Is this nitrogen a compound or element? How do you know?
4. How many molecules of copper are produced from two molecules of Cu2O? 5. What happens to atoms in a chemical reaction? 6. What physical properties can change in a chemical reaction?