Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the...

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Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions

Transcript of Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the...

Page 2: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

10.1 Reactions and EquationsChemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to form different substances

Page 4: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

Evidence of a Chemical Reaction

1. Temperature change

•Exothermic - Release of energy in the form of heat or light

•Endothermic – absorb heat (feels cold)

Page 6: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

Chemical Equations

Reactant- starting substances in a reaction

Product- substances formed during the reaction

Na + Cl2 NaCl

Reactants Products

Page 7: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

An arrow reads as yields and separates reactants from products and indicates direction of reaction --points to right

Reactants YIELD ProductsReactants Products(left side) (right side)

Page 8: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

When there are two or more reactants or products a plus sign separates each reactant or product.

reactant 1 + reactant 2 --- product 1 + product 2

and yields and

(s) Solid (l) Liquid(g) Gas (aq) Aqueous – dissolved in water

Page 9: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

Word Equations

Uses words to indicate the reactants and products of chemical reactions.

Ex: Iron + chlorine → iron (III)

chlorideRead: “iron and chlorine react to

produce iron (III) chloride”

Page 10: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

Skeleton Equations

Uses chemical formulas to identify reactants and products

Ex:Fe (s) + Cl2 (g) → FeCl3 (s)

Usually they are not balanced!!

Page 11: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

Chemical Equations

Chemical Equation- uses chemical formulas to show the identities and relative amounts of the substances involved in a chemical reaction.

Page 12: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

C. Balancing a Chemical Equation

The equation must show that the number of atoms of each reactant and each product are equal on BOTH sides of the arrow.

Page 13: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

To balance an equation you must find the correct coefficients for the chemical formulas in the skeleton equation.

2Fe (s) + 3Cl2 (g) → 2FeCl3 (s)

coefficients

Page 14: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

Coefficient- number written in front of a reactant or product

1. Is a whole number (not a fraction)

2. Tells smallest number of particles of the substance involved in the reaction

Page 15: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

Steps for Balancing Equations

1.Write the skeleton equation for the reaction.

Page 16: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

A suggestion:Draw boxes around all the chemical formulas. This is the step that people frequently don't do. If it helps YOU… Ignore them. You're drawing those boxes so that you'll be sure not to mess around with the formulas to balance the equation. Here's what the equation looks like:

Page 17: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

2. Count the atoms of the elements in the reactants (before).

3. Count the atoms of the elements in the products (after).

Make an element inventory!!!!!

Page 18: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

4. Write/Change the coefficients in front of each of the boxes until the inventory for each element is the same both before and after the reaction. Now, what happens when we put a number in front of a formula? Basically, anything in that box is multiplied by that number.

5 H2 5 x 2 = 10 Hydrogen

Keep changing the coefficients until the number of atoms of each element is equal on both sides of the equation.

H2

Page 19: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

We can see that on the left side of the inventory, there is one atom of sodium and on the right there are two. The solution: Stick a "2" in front of the sodium hydroxide on the left side of the equation so that the numbers of sodium atoms are the same on both sides of the equation.

Then update your inventory!! But the others still don't match up. What to do?

Page 20: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

Using your amazing powers of mathematics (and hopefully not needing to use a calculator), you can see that two multiplied by the number two becomes four. That's what you need to do. How? Put a "2" in front of the water on the right side of the equation to make the hydrogens balance out. Now that this is done, you should make a new inventory that looks something like this:

Since both sides of the inventory match, the equation is now balanced!

Page 21: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

5. NEVER change a subscript!! You can’t change any subscripts because that would change the chemical composition of a molecule, which would change the entire reaction and create something different altogether.

Page 22: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

6.Write the coefficients in front of the substances in the equation in their lowest possible ratio.4H2O + 4Fe 2Fe2O3 + 4H2

All the coefficients are divisible by 2Should be: 2H2O + 2Fe Fe2O3 +2H2

7. Check your work!

Page 23: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

10.2 Classifying Chemical Reactions

video- 5 chem rx animations.mp4

Page 24: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

Synthesis Reaction- a chemical reaction in which two or more substances react to produce a single product

Ex: 2Na (s) + Cl2 (g) → 2NaCl (s)

Two or more reactants become one product

Page 26: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

Combustion Reaction-Oxygen combines with a

substance and releases energy in the form of heat and light

Ex: 2H2 (g) + O2 (g) → 2H2O

The products are always Carbon dioxide CO2 and Water

H2O

Page 29: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

Decomposition Reaction- a single compound breaks down into two or more elements or new compounds

Ex: 2NaN3 (s) → 2Na (s) + 3N2 (g)

Page 30: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.
Page 31: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

Mercury(II) oxide Mercury + Oxygen

Page 32: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

Single-replacement Reaction- a reaction in which the atoms of one element replace the atoms of another element in a compound

Ex: Cu (s) + 2AgNO3 (aq) → 2Ag (s) + Cu(NO3)2 (aq)

element + cmpd element + cmpd

Page 33: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.
Page 34: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

2 Al + 3 CuCl2 2 AlCl3 + 3 Cu

Page 35: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

Double-replacement Reaction- positive and negative ions of two compounds switch places.

Ex: KCN (aq) + HBr (aq) → KBr (aq) + HCN (g) cmpd cmpd cmpd cmpd

Page 36: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.
Page 37: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

Precipitate – a solid produced during a chemical reaction in a solution

All Double-replacement reactions produce:

•Precipitate

•Gas

•Water

Page 38: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

10.3 Reactions in Aqueous Solutions

Page 39: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

When a substance dissolves in water a solution forms.Solution – homogeneous mixture (looks the same throughout)

Page 40: Chapter 10 Chemical Reactions. 10.1 Reactions and Equations Chemical Reaction- process by which the atoms of one or more substances are rearranged to.

Solute – substances dissolved in water.Solvent – the most plentiful substance

in the solution, usually water.Aqueous solution – a solution in which

the solvent is water.