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Review-Molecular Formula. Nicotine, a component of tobacco, has an empirical formula of C 5 H 7 N. The molar mass of nicotine is 162 g. What is its molecular formula? A compound contain 64.9% C, 13.5% H, and 21.6% O. Its molecular mass is 74 g. Find the molecular formula.
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Review-Molecular Formula • Nicotine, a component of tobacco, has an empirical formula of C5H7N. The molar mass of nicotine is 162 g. What is its molecular formula? • A compound contain 64.9% C, 13.5% H, and 21.6% O. Its molecular mass is 74 g. Find the molecular formula.
Chapter Objectives • 1. To learn to write chemical equations • 2. To correctly interpret chemical equations
Chemical Reactions • In a chemical reaction, substances join together to form new substances • The original substances present are called REACTANTS • The new substances formed are called PRODUCTS
Discussion of Chemical Reactions • The general form of an equation is: • Reactants Products • The is read as “yields” or “reacts to produce”
Discussion of Chemical Reactions • A + B C • Substance “A” and “B” react to produce substance “C”
Additional Symbols in Chemical Reactions • + used to separate reactants or products • (s) means chemical is in solid state • (l) means chemical is in liquid state
Additional Symbols in Chemical Reactions • (g) means chemical is in gas state • (aq) means chemical is dissolved in water • *See Table 10-1 in book (page 278)
Other Symbols • means something is added to the reaction • Usually this is heat • Pt means a catalyst (Pt) is added
Skeleton Equations • Skeleton (Formula) Equation- the rough form of an equation • It only shows the framework for the chemical reaction
Write Skeleton Equations • Sodium metal reacts with Oxygen gas to form solid Sodium Oxide • Solid sulfur reacts with Fluorine gas to form gaseous Sulfur Hexafluoride when heated • Nitrogen reacts with Hydrogen to form Ammonia (NH3) gas. Heat is required.
Types of Reactions • There are five general types of reactions: • Synthesis • Decomposition • Single Displacement • Double Displacement • Combustion
Synthesis Reactions • Synthesis reactions are also called combination reactions • A synthesis reaction occurs when two substances combine to form a new compound
Synthesis Reaction Continued • The general form of a synthesis reaction is: • A + X AX • Substance “AX” is the only substance formed
Examples of Synthesis Reactions • 2 Mg (s) + O2 (g) 2 MgO (s) • Fe (s) + Cl2 (g) FeCl2 (s) • U (s) + 3 F2 (g) UF6 (g)
Decomposition Reaction • In decomposition reactions, one substance breaks down (decomposes) into two or more simpler substances
Decomposition Reactions Cont. • General Form of Decomposition Reaction: • AX A + X
Examples of Decomposition Reactions • 2 HgO (s) 2 Hg (l) + O2 (g) • Ca(OH)2 CaO (s) + H2O (g) • H2SO4 (aq) SO3 (g) + H2O (l)
Single Replacement Reaction • In a single replacement reaction (also called a displacement reaction), an element reacts with a compound • A + BX AX + B
Examples of Single Replacement Reactions • Mg + Zn(NO3)2 Mg(NO3)2 + Zn • Mg + 2 AgNO3 Mg(NO3)2 (aq) + 2 Ag
Rules for Single Replacement Reactions • Not all single replacement reactions occur • You can determine if a reaction will occur by knowing the activity series of metals
Rules for Single Replacement • The activity series tell you if one metal can replace another metal in a reaction • The Activity Series is ordered • Any metal that is above another metal in the activity series WILL REPLACE the less reactive metal
Li K Ca Na Mg Al Zn Fe Pb H* Cu Hg Ag Activity Series
Predict if the following reactions will occur • 1. Fe + H2O • 2. Mg + LiNO3 • 3. Na + AgCl
Double Displacement Reactions • In a double displacement reaction, two compounds react • The compounds swap elements with each other
Double Displacement Cont • Compounds contain a positive and negative part • In a double displacement, the positive parts swap places with each other as do the negative parts
Examples • PbCl2 (s) + Li2SO4 (aq) PbSO4 (s) + 2 LiCl (aq) • ZnBr2 (aq) + 2 AgNO3 (aq) Zn(NO3)2 (aq) + 2 AgBr (s)
Combustion Reactions • In a combustion reaction, a Hydrocarbon (compound containing Hydrogen and Carbon) reacts with Oxygen (O2) • The products are CO2 and H2O
Example • 2 C6H6 + 15 O212 CO2 + 6 H2O • *Combustion Reactions commonly require large coefficients
Ionic Equations • Most ionic compound dissociate (or break apart) when dissolved in water to form its component ions • For example: NaCl (aq) really looks like Na+(aq) and Cl- (aq)
Soluble Vs. Precipitate • Soluble means that the compound breaks down into its ions in water • Ex) NaCl is soluble so it forms Na+ and Cl- • Insoluble means that the compound doesn’t break down in water
Precipitate Reactions • In double replacement reactions, often one of the product will be insoluble • The insoluble product is referred to as a precipitate • Precipitate Rules are on the EOC sheet
Practice • Determine if soluble or insoluble: • A) NaCl B) K2O • C) Fe(NO3)3 D) AgCl • E) BaS F) Cd(OH)2 • G) FeCl3 H) PbCO3
Ionic Equations Continued • To write a Complete Ionic Equation: • Write the aqueous substances as ions (leave any substances in gas, liquids, & solids alone) • Example: • AgNO3 (aq) + NaCl (aq) AgCl (s) + NaNO3 (aq)
Writing Ionic Equations • 1. (NH4)2S (aq) + Cd(NO3)2 (aq) NH4NO3 (???) + CdS (???) • 2. Zn(NO3)2 (aq) + (NH4)2S (aq) ZnS (???) + NH4NO3 (???)
Spectator Ions • Spectator Ions-Ions that are not directly involved in a reaction • Spectator ions show up on both sides of the equation • Spectator Ions cancel out
NET Ionic Equations • Net Ionic Equation-Indicate the particles that actually take part in a reaction • The Net Ionic Equation does NOT include spectator ions • Net Ionic Equations must be balanced according to atoms and charge
Write Net Ionic Equations • 1. (NH4)2S (aq) + Cd(NO3)2 (aq) • 2. Zn(NO3)2 (aq) + (NH4)2S (aq)