1 / 40

Chapter 10 Notes, Part I

Chapter 10 Notes, Part I. Parts of an equation Types of reactions. What is a chemical reaction?. A chemical reaction: the act of changing substances into new substances with new and different chemical and physical properties. A Chemical Equation.

tamra
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 10 Notes, Part I

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 10 Notes, Part I Parts of an equation Types of reactions

  2. What is a chemical reaction? • A chemical reaction: the act of changing substances into new substances with new and different chemical and physical properties.

  3. A Chemical Equation • A chemical equation : shows what is going on in a chemical reaction. • Instead of writing down the entire sentence “hydrogen reacts with oxygen to form dihydrogen monoxide (water)”, you could write…

  4. reactants The substances you have before a chemical reaction occurs (found on the left side of the equation) products The substances you have after a chemical reaction occurs (found on the right side of the equation) 2H2 + O2a2H2O

  5. subscripts How many atoms of an element are in a compound coefficients How many substances are in the reaction 2H2 + O2a2H2O

  6. 2H2 + O2a2H2O The arrow reads as “produces”, “yields” or “reacts to form”

  7. Word Equation • This indicates the reactants and products of chemical reactions. reactant 1 + reactant 2 → product 1 iron (s) + chlorine (g) → iron(III) chloride (s) This reads: “Iron and chlorine react to produce iron(III) chloride.”

  8. Skeleton Equation • Uses chemical formulas instead of words to identify your reactants and products. Word: iron (s) + chlorine (g) → iron(III) chloride (s) Skeleton: Fe (s) + Cl2 (g) → FeCl3 (s)

  9. Chemical Equation • A skeleton equation that shows that the number of atoms of each reactant and each product is equal on both sides of the arrow, also called balanced. Word: iron (s) + chlorine (g) → iron(III) chloride (s) Skeleton: Fe (s) + Cl2 (g) → FeCl3 (s) Chemical: 2Fe (s) + 3Cl2 (g) → 2 FeCl3

  10. Iron reacts with oxygen gas to produce iron (III) oxide 4Fe + 3O2a2Fe2O3

  11. Other symbols in an Equation • (s) = substance is solid • (l) = substance is liquid • (g) = substance is a gas • (aq) = substance is dissolved in water • D = heat • A formula written above or below an arrow means it is a catalyst (a substance that speeds up a reaction without being used up by it.)

  12. Types of reactions • There are five types of reactions • Synthesis • Decomposition • Single replacement • Double replacement • Combustion

  13. Synthesis Reaction • Synthesis reaction: 2 or more elements or compounds combine to form a single substance. • It will follow the form A + BaAB • Example: Fe + SaFeS

  14. Decomposition Reaction • 1 substance breaks down into 2 or more substances. • It will follow the pattern ABaA + B • Example: CaCO3aCaO+CO2

  15. Single Replacement Reaction • 1 element replaces another element in a compound. • Generally follows the formula: AB + CaA + CB • Example: Mg+Zn(NO3)2aZn+Mg(NO3)2

  16. Double Replacement Reaction • The exchange of 2 positive ions between 2 reacting compounds, forming two new compounds as a product. • Generally follows the formula: AB + CDaAD + CB • Example: Na2S+Cd(NO3)2a2NaNO3 + CdS

  17. Double Replacement Reaction Example: Na2S+Cd(NO3)2a2NaNO3 + CdS *Activity Series: A specific metal can replace any metal listed below it, but not a metal above it. Na Cd (btwn Fe & Ni)

  18. Combustion Reaction • A compound reacts with oxygen to producing energy as heat and light. • Most of the time, it is a hydrocarbon reacting with oxygen, and the outcome is always carbon dioxide and water • Follows the form: A + O2aCO2 + H2O • Example: CH4 + O2aCO2+ 2H2O

  19. What type of reaction is: • NaCN + H2SO4a 2HCN + Na2SO4 • Zn + 2HCl a ZnCl2 + H2 • 2C2H6 + 7O2a 4CO2 + 6H2O • 2H2 + O2a 2H2O

  20. Tell which of the five types of reactions the following are:

  21. 2Na + 2H2O a 2NaOH + H2 Single replacement

  22. Fe + S a FeS synthesis

  23. Al(OH)3 + 3NaCl a AlCl3 + 3NaOH Double replacement

  24. CH4 + 2O2a CO2 + 2H2O combustion

  25. KClO2a KCl + O2 decomposition

  26. 4Fe + 3O2a 2Fe2O3 synthesis

  27. NaOH + HCl a NaCl + H2O Double replacement

  28. 2C2H2 + 5O2a 4CO2 + 2H2O combustion

  29. H2 + Cl2a 2HCl synthesis

  30. MgO + 2KF a MgF2 + K2O Double replacement

  31. Na + Al(NO3)3aNaNO3 + Al Single replacement

  32. 2PbO2a 2PbO + 3O2 decomposition

  33. Ba(CN)2 + H2SO4a BaSO4 + HCN Double replacement

  34. C3H8 + 5O2a 3CO2 + 4H2O combustion

  35. 4Li + O2a 2Li2O synthesis

  36. 2Ag + 2HCl a 2AgCl + H2 Single replacement

  37. 2H2O2a 2H2O + O2 decomposition

  38. C2H2 + O2a CO2 + H2O combustion

  39. 2HBr a H2 + Br2 decomposition

  40. CrSO4 + 2AgNO3a Cr(NO3)2 + Ag2SO4 Double replacement

More Related