1 / 19

Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations

Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations. CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University. Overview. Balancing Chemical Reactions. Chemical Reactions. Parts of a Chemical Reaction (R → P) Reactants are found on the left side

boyd
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations

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 3 Molecules, Compounds, & Chemical Equations CHE 123: General Chemistry I Dr. Jerome Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University

  2. Overview • Balancing Chemical Reactions

  3. Chemical Reactions • Parts of a Chemical Reaction(R → P) • Reactants are found on the left side • Products are found on the right side • Arrow means “yields”, “produces”, “reacts to form”, etc. • Remember basic format using Axiom #4

  4. Chemical Reactions • Axiom #4 RRPP Principle • Reactants React with one another so that • Products are Produced.

  5. Chemical Reactions Revisited • Components of a Chemical Reaction • Reactants • Arrow (“yields” or “produces” ) • Products • Physical States • (s) = solid • (l) = liquid • (g) = gas • (aq) = aqueous (dissolved in water) • Reaction Conditions

  6. Balancing Chemical Equations • The changes that matter undergo are at the heart of chemistry. • Chemical Reactions are a result of reactant atoms rearranging to form products. • All chemical reactions must be balanced so as to obey the law of conservation of matter (mass).

  7. Balancing Chemical Equations • Reactions are balanced using coefficients. • Example: A2 + B2→ A2B unbalanced 2 A2 + B2→2 A2B balanced

  8. Balancing Chemical Equations

  9. Balancing Chemical Equations

  10. Balancing Chemical Equations • Four General Classes of Reactions • Synthesis • Decomposition • Single Replacement • Double Replacement (Metathesis)

  11. Balancing Chemical Equations • Synthesis (A + B → AB) • Try these for practice Al + O2→ Al2O3 Al + Br2→ AlBr3

  12. Balancing Chemical Equations • Decomposition (AB → A + B) • Heat usually required (Δ means heat) • Exact opposite of synthesis Practice Problem Δ KClO3→ KCl + O2

  13. Balancing Chemical Equations • Single Replacement (A + BC → AC + B) Yet more practice. Al + H2SO4→ H2 + Al2(SO4)3

  14. Balancing Chemical Equations • Double Replacement (AB + CD → AD + CB) • Also called a Metathesis Reaction Try this one now FeCl3 + NH4OH → Fe(OH)3 + NH4Cl

More Related