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2.1 Science and Technology in Society 2.2 Changes in Matter 2.3 Balancing Chemical Reactions 2.4 Chemical Amount 2.5 Classifying Chemical Reactions 2.6 Chemical Reactions in Solution. Chemical Reactions. 2.2 Changes in Matter. Types of Changes in Matter. Physical Changes Change in State
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2.1 Science and Technology in Society 2.2 Changes in Matter 2.3 Balancing Chemical Reactions 2.4 Chemical Amount 2.5 Classifying Chemical Reactions 2.6 Chemical Reactions in Solution
Chemical Reactions 2.2 Changes in Matter
Types of Changes in Matter • Physical Changes • Change in State • No new substance
Types of Changes in Matter • Nuclear Changes • Changes within the nucleus • Fusion and Fission (applets)
Types of Changes in Matter • Chemical Changes • A change in chemical bonds • Hoffman Demo
Signs of a Chemical Change • Production of heat and light • Formation of a gas • Formation of a precipitate • Colour change
Why Do Reactions Occur? • The kinetic molecular theory states that matter is made up of tiny particles in continuous random motion. • The average kinetic energy (the energy of motion) of the particles depends on the temperature of the particles.
Types of Particle Motion • Translational motion: the motion of a particle in a straight line • Rotational movement: a spinning or turning of a molecule.
Motion Continued: • Vibrational movement: the back and forth motion within a molecule • These types of particle movement can be discussed with the three states of matter
KMT Continued: • The particles this theory refers to may be atoms (Na), ions (Na+) or molecules (CO2). • As the particles move, they collide with each other and objects in their path.
Collision Theory • Reaction rate depends on the collisions between reacting particles. • Successful collisions occur if the particles... • collide with each other • have the correct orientation • have enough kinetic energy to break bonds
Collision Theory Activation Energy • Activation Energy (Ea) • minimum energy required for a reaction to occur
Collision Theory Ea • Activation Energy • depends on reactants • low Ea = fast rxn rate
Factors Affecting Rxn Rate • Surface Area • high SA = fast rxn rate • more opportunities for collisions • Increase surface area by… • using smaller particles • dissolving in water
Factors Affecting Rxn Rate • Concentration • high conc = fast rxn rate • more opportunities for collisions
Factors Affecting Rxn Rate • Temperature • high temp = fast rxn rate • high KE • fast-moving particles • more likely to reach activation energy
Factors Affecting Rxn Rate • Temperature Analogy: 2-car collision 5 mph “fender bender” 50 mph “high-speed crash”
Factors Affecting Rxn Rate • Catalyst • substance that increases rxn rate without being consumed in the rxn • lowers the activation energy • Burn a sugar cube with a catalyst
Exothermic Reaction energyreleased • reaction thatreleases energy • products have lower energy than reactants 2H2(l) + O2(l) 2H2O(g) + energy
Endothermic Reaction energyabsorbed • reaction that absorbs energy • reactants have lower energy than products 2Al2O3+ energy 4Al + 3O2
Law of Conservation of Mass • mass is neither created nor destroyed in a chemical reaction • total mass stays the same • atoms can only rearrange 4 H 2 O 4 H 2 O 36 g 4 g 32 g
Chemical Reactions 2.3 Balancing Chemical Reaction Equations
Chemical Equations • Chemical reactions are represented by chemical equations • A chemical equation lists all of the compounds that participate in the reaction.
Chemical Equations A+B C+D REACTANTS PRODUCTS
Writing Equations 2H2(g) + O2(g) 2H2O(g) • Identify the substances involved. • Use symbols to show: • How many? - coefficient • Of what? - chemical formula • In what state? - physical state
Writing Equations Two atoms of aluminum react with three units of aqueous copper(II) chloride to produce three atoms of copper and two units of aqueous aluminum chloride. • How many? • Of what? • In what state? 3 2 Al (s) + 3 CuCl2 (aq) Cu (s) + 2 AlCl3 (aq)
Describing Equations Zn(s) + 2HCl(aq) ZnCl2(aq) + H2(g) to produce • How many? • Of what? • In what state? One mole of solid zinc reacts with two moles of aqueous hydrochloric acid one mole of aqueous zinc chloride and one mole of hydrogen gas.
Balancing Steps 1. Write the unbalanced equation. 2. Count atoms on each side. 3. Add coefficients to make #s equal. Coefficient subscript = # of atoms 4. Reduce coefficients to lowest possible ratio, if necessary. 5. Double check atom balance!!!
Helpful Tips • Balance one element at a time. • Update ALL atom counts after adding a coefficient. • If an element appears more than once per side, balance it last. • Balance polyatomic ions as single units. • “1 SO4” instead of “1 S” and “4 O”
Balancing Example Al + CuCl2 Cu + AlCl3 Al Cu Cl Aluminum and copper(II) chloride react to form copper and aluminum chloride. 2 3 3 2 2 6 1 1 1 1 2 3 2 3 6 3
2.4 Chemical Amount The Mole
VERY A large amount!!!! What is the Mole? • A counting number (like a dozen) • Avogadro’s number (NA) • 1 mol = 6.02 1023 items
A mole of a compound is an observable quantity. It can be weighed and used in experiments. LEFT: Proceeding clockwise from the top, samples containing one mole each of copper, aluminum, iron, sulfur, iodine, and (in the center) mercury.
HOW LARGE IS IT??? A. What is the Mole? • 1 mole of pennies would cover the Earth 1/4 mile deep! • 1 mole of hockey pucks would equal the mass of the moon! • 1 mole of basketballs would fill a bag the size of the earth!
One mole = 6.02 x 1023 atoms, molecules, or ions (Avogadro’s number) • When coefficients are used to balance chemical equations, they express a mole-to-mole ratio of the products and reactants.
These numbers do not represent the exact number of moles for the reactants or products, but rather give a ratio we can use to compare quantities.
Molar Mass • Mass of 1 mole of an element or compound. • Atomic mass tells the... • atomic mass units per atom (amu) • grams per mole (g/mol) • Round to 2 decimal places
Molar Mass Examples 12.01 g/mol 26.98 g/mol 65.39 g/mol • carbon • aluminum • zinc
Molar Mass Examples • water • sodium chloride • H2O • 2(1.01) + 16.00 = 18.02 g/mol • NaCl • 22.99 + 35.45 = 58.44 g/mol
Molar Mass Examples • sodium bicarbonate • sucrose • NaHCO3 • 22.99 + 1.01 + 12.01 + 3(16.00) = 84.01 g/mol • C12H22O11 • 12(12.01) + 22(1.01) + 11(16.00) = 342.34 g/mol
MASS IN GRAMS MOLES NUMBER OF PARTICLES Molar Conversions molar mass 6.02 1023 (g/mol) (particles/mol)
Molar Conversions n = m/M n = number of moles m = mass (g) M = Molar Mass (g/mol)
Molar Conversions p = n * NA n = number of moles p = particles NA = Avogadro's number (6.02 x 1023 particles per mole)
Molar Conversion Examples • How many moles of carbon are in 26 g of carbon? 26 g C 1 mol C 12.01 g C = 2.2 mol C
Molar Conversion Examples • How many molecules are in 2.50 moles of C12H22O11? 6.02 1023 molecules 1 mol 2.50 mol = 1.51 1024 molecules C12H22O11
Molar Conversion Examples • Find the mass of 2.1 1024 molecules of NaHCO3. 2.1 1024 molecules 1 mol 6.02 1023 molecules 84.01 g 1 mol = 290 g NaHCO3
Chemical Reactions 2.5 Classifying Chemical Reactions
Combustion • the burning of any substance in O2 to produce heat A + O2 B CH4(g) + 2O2(g) CO2(g) + 2H2O(g)