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Chemical Reactions. Chemical Reactions :. Chemical Changes involve a re-arrangement of atoms producing new substances with new properties. A chemical change cannot easily be reversed. A physical change does not produce a new substance and can be easily reversed
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Chemical Reactions: • Chemical Changes involve a re-arrangement of atoms producing new substances with new properties. • A chemical change cannot easily be reversed.
A physical change does not produce a new substance and can be easily reversed • Examples of physical changes include boiling, melting, freezing, dissolving….
The Equation: Original Substances → New Substances (Reactants) (Products) A(s) + B(l) → C(g) + D(aq) Where: + Reads “plus” or “and” or “reacted with” → Reads “yields” or “produces” • Solid • Liquid • Gas (aq) aqueous (dissolved in water)
Word Equation: Carbon Dioxide Water Baking Soda Vinegar Salt
Skeleton Equation: CO2 H2O NaHCO3 CH3COOH NaC2H3O2
Balanced Equation: CO2 H2O NaHCO3 CH3COOH Balance this equation for bonus marks NaC2H3O2
Balancing equations: • The number of atoms in the reactants and number of the atoms in products must balance. • Place the correct coefficients in front of each formula (you do not need to write 1’s) to balance the reactants and products ___K + ___O2→ ___K2O K= K= O= O=
Balancing equations • You can also balance from left to right • Remember you cannot change the subscripts in the formulas of the compounds. ___Fe2O3→ ___Fe + ___O2
Other hints: • Save balancing the hydrogen and oxygen until the end for very large equations ___Al(OH)3 + ___H2CO3→ ___Al2(CO3)3 + ___H2O
Other hints: • You can reduce coefficients, but it is an all or nothing process! __Mg(OH)2 + __ HCl → __ MgCl2 + __ H20
Assignment: • Workbook: • Read p 74-76 • Questions P77 Q1-20, p78 Q1-12 • Be careful of diatomic molecules (H2, O2…) • Use Pencil…or things will get messy!
Classifying chemical reactions: Intro: Compound: when two or more different elements are combined ex: H2O, CaCO3, Al2(SO4)3 Free element: when an element is not combined with another (Al, Fe, Zn) • Sometimes a free element can be combined with itself • Cl2, O2, H2 (diatomic molecules) • even P4 and S8
1) Synthesis: • When free elements combine into a compound Free + Free → Compound A + B → AB 2Al + 3Cl2 → 2AlCl3 4K + O2 → 2K2O
2) Decomposition: • The opposite of synthesis • When a compound breaks up into free elements. Compound → Free + Free + … AB → A + B 2NaCl → 2 Na + Cl2 8CaSO4 → 8Ca + S8 + 16O2
3) Single Replacement: • When a free element and a compound react. A + BC → Free + Compound → Na + MgCl2 → CaI2 + O2 →
4) Double Replacement • When two compounds react AB + XY → BaBr2 + K2O → Na2CO3 + MgCl2 → Compound + Compound → 2 new compounds
5) Neutralization: • A special double replacement reaction between an ACID and a BASE Acid andBase→Salt and Water HCl +NaOH→NaCl + H2O
Assignment: • p 123 quick check • P 131 Q# 1-3