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• Ch. 7 & 8 Notes -- Chemical Reactions Chemical equations give information in two major areas: Reactants products 1. _____________ and ______________ of the reaction. amount 2. Coefficients of a balanced chemical equation tell us the ______ of the substances involved. Example of a Balanced Chemical Equation: 2H2 (g) + O2 (g) 2H2O (g) Review: Reactants are on the ______ left side of the arrow, and the right yields products are on the __________ side. The arrow means “________”, or “reacts to produce” when read aloud. • • • From our example, hydrogen reacts with oxygen in a ___:___ 2 1 ratio. moles or The coefficients represent either the number of _________ molecules present. liters if the substances are The coefficients can also represent _________ gases. (1 mole = 6.02 x 1023 molecules, 1 mole of gas= 22.4 Liters) Common Symbols used in Chemical Equations + → (See Table 8.1) = used to separate 2 reactants or 2 products from each other = “yields” or “reacts to produce” = _____________ reaction (like a rechargeable battery) reversible (s) (l) (g) (aq) = phase of matter: (solid, liquid, gas, or “aqueous”) heat = ___________ supplied to the reaction MnO2 = a catalyst, (in this case, MnO2), is used to ________ speed ____ up the reaction. = _______ gas given off as a product solid precipitate produced = ______ Decoding Common Chemical Equation Symbols Practice Problems: Describe the following reactions using complete sentences. a) NaHCO3 (s) + HCl (aq) NaCl (aq) + H2O (l) + CO2 Solid sodium bicarbonate plus aqueous hydrochloric acid yields aqueous sodium chloride plus water plus carbon dioxide gas. b) H2SO4 (aq) + BaCl2 (aq) HCl (aq) + BaSO4 (s) Aqueous sulfuric acid plus aqueous barium chloride yields aqueous hydrochloric acid plus solid barium sulfate. c) Write a chemical equation from the following description: “Sodium plus bromine, when heated, reacts to produce solid sodium bromide.” Na(s) + Br2 (l) NaBr (s) Balancing Chemical Equations Why do you have to balance a chemical equation? • Law of Conservation of Matter (or Mass): “Matter is neither ____________ nor _______________ in chemical reactions.” created destroyed joined • During a chemical reaction, atoms are either _________, ______________, or rearranged. The _____________ and type of separated number each atom stays the same. How do you balance a chemical equation? • __________________ are placed in front of the substances involved Coefficients in the chemical reaction to get the same number of atoms of each element on both sides of the equation. This number will multiply the number of atoms there are in a formula. Rules for Balancing Chemical Equations (1) Coefficients can only be placed ___ in _________ front of a chemical formula. Practice Problems: How many atoms of each type are indicated in the following compounds? (a) 2 (NH4)3PO4 6 N= ___ 24 P= ___ 2 O= ___ 8 H= ___ (b) 4 KC2H3O2 4 C= ___ 8 H= ___ 12 O= ___ 8 K= ___ (c) 3 Ca(NO3)2 Ca= ___ 3 N= ___ 6 O= ___ 18 Rules for Balancing Chemical Equations (2) You cannot change a ________________!! subscript Example : 2 H2 + O2 2 H2O H2 O2 To balance oxygen, you cannot change water’s formula to_________! (3) You cannot place the coefficient in the ______________ of a middle formula!! Example : 2Al + N2 2 AlN To balance nitrogen, you cannot put a 2 in the middle to make _______. Al2N whole # ratio. (4) Reduce the coefficients to the simplest ____________ ___ Example: 4H2 + 2O2 4H2O can be reduced to… __H 2 2 + __O 1 2 __H 2 2O Rules for Balancing Chemical Equations (5) Get rid of any ____________! Coefficients must be _________ fractions whole #’s • You can’t have a _______________ of a molecule or atom! fraction Example: 2 x ( 1H2 + ½O2 1H2O ) __ 2 H2 + __O 1 2 __H 2 2O changes to… Balancing Equations: “Helpful Hints” a) Balance elements that appear in more than one compound ________. last 1 ___(NH 4)2CO3 2 ___NH 3 + 1 ___CO 2 + 1 2O ___H ion “___________” chunks b) Balance _____ as though it were one item as long as the ion stays together as a group on each side of the yields arrow. 2 3 ___Al + ___CuSO 4 1 2(SO4)3 + ___Al 3 ___Cu start _________ over and begin c) If you can’t seem to get it balanced, _________ with a different element the next time, or put a “2” somewhere and then try again. 2 2 2O ___Li + ___H 2 1 2 ___LiOH + ___H d) This is what I’ll constantly be telling you to do if you are stuck and you need my help... “Pick an element to balance. How many are on Fix it the left side? How many are on the right side? ________ ____!” 2 ___Fe(OH) 3 1 2O3 + ___H 3 2O ___Fe Balancing Equations: “Helpful Hints” e) My goofy “balancing song” may help: 2 on the left and a ___on 3 3 on the “If there’s a ___ the right, you put a ___ left and a ___ 2 on the right, (makin’ money!)” ___Al 4 + ___O 3 2 ___Al 2 2O3 f) If you see only C’s H’s and O’s, balance them in this order: C, H, O. 2 x (___C H 1 ) + ___O 5/2 2 ___CO 2 2 + ___H 1 2O ___C 2 2H2 + ___O 5 2 ___CO 4 2 + ___H 2 2O 2 2 Five General Types of Reactions 1) ________________________: Decomposition • one ______________ compound into simpler A reaction that breaks apart ______ substances, (usually two elements or an element and a smaller compound.) + General Form: _____ AX ___ A + ___ X H2 + _____ O2 Examples: H O _____ 2 O2 KCl + _____ KClO3 _____ Remember that “HONClBrIF” elements are diatomic when alone!! Categories of Decomposition (and Composition ) Reactions a) carbonates metallic oxide + CO2 CaO + _____ CO2 CaCO3 _____ b) chlorates metallic chloride + O2 NaCl + _____ O2 NaClO3 _____ c) hydroxides metallic oxide + H2O MgO + _____ H2O Mg(OH)2 _____ d) oxy acids nonmetal oxide + H2O SO3 + _____ H2O H2SO4 _____ e) binary compounds 2 elements Na + _____ Cl2 NaCl _____ • • • Every time you try to write the formula for a new compound, you charges of the ions and ___________ cross must look up the ___________ them if they are different!! Balance it _________ AFTER you get all the correct formulas written first! Don’t forget about the HONClBrIF’s! General Types of Reactions (Continued) 2) _______________: Composition (sometimes called “Combination” or “Synthesis”) • • two __________________, substances A reaction of _____ typically a metal and a nonmetal to form ______ one ______________. compound It is the opposite of decomposition. (The same categories of reactions from above apply, just in reverse.) + General Form: Examples: A + ___ X _____ AX ___ Al + AlCl3 Cl2 _______ 2 elements binary compound PbO + H2O metallic + water oxide Pb(OH)2 ______ hydroxide General Types of Reactions (Continued) 3) _____________ Single Replacement: • one ______________ compound one ____________ element A reaction between ____ and ___ that produces a different _____________ compound and ______________. element General Forms: ____ AX + __ Y ____ AY + + __ X AX B ____ BX + __ A ____ + __ + • • • • more The element that is trying to replace the other must be ________ reactive _______________ than the one it is replacing. You must use the Activity Series to see if the reaction will happen. Table 8.2 _________ Higher ___ up = more reactive Elements from ____ Li to ____ Na can displace hydrogen in water to form a metallic hydroxide and H2 gas. Activity Series Single Replacement Reactions Examples: NaCl NaF + _____ Cl2 + F2 _____ FeCl2 + KCl + _____ Fe K _____ HCl + H2 Zn ZnCl _____ 2 + _____ HCl + no reaction Au _____ + _____ Na H2 _____ NaOH + _____ Fe no reaction _____ + _____ AgNO3 + Cu CuNO Ag _____3 + _____ H2O + H(OH) H2O + General Types of Reactions (Continued) 4) _______________ Double Replacement: (sometimes called “Ionic”) • • two ________________ compounds A reaction between _____ that are dissolved in water that produces _____ two ________________ compounds , one of which is ________________. insoluble Water or a gas may be one of the two compounds being produced. BX(s) (aq)+ BY (aq) AY (aq) + ____ General Form: AX ____ ____ ____ + • • + You must use the Solubility Chart to see which product is the precipitate. Solubility Chart Key Examples: CaCl2 (aq) I or _____= sS ___ precipitate 3)2 (aq) + ________ AgCl + AgNO3 (aq) Ca(NO _________ NaCl (aq) + ________ H2O (l) NaOH (aq) + HCl (aq) ________ Double Replacement Reaction General Types of Reactions (Continued) 5) _________________: Combustion • • • A reaction between a Carbon/Hydrogen (and sometimes Oxygen) O2 _________________ compound with _____. CO2 + ________ H2O The products are always the same… ________ This reaction is too easy!! Don’t miss it! General Form: Examples: C2H2 CO2 + ____ H2O CxHy + O2 ____ + C7H6O + CO2 + _______ H2O O2 _______ CO2 + _______ H2O O2 _______ Writing Net Ionic Equations for Double Replacement Reactions • • A “net ionic equation” only shows the _________ ions that were used to make the precipitate. Some ions were always dissolved in water. These are called “________________ ions”. (They don’t do anything, so we can spectator ignore them.) Example: CaCl2 (aq) + 2AgNO3 (aq) Ca(NO3)2 (aq) + 2AgCl (s) Ionic Equation Written as Ions Dissolved in Water: +2 − + Ca 2NO3 −(aq) ___ Ca+2(aq) + _____ 2NO3 −(aq) + _________ 2AgCl (s) ___ (aq) + 2Cl ___ (aq) + 2Ag ___ (aq) + _____ • Cancel out the spectator ions, and you are left with the Net Ionic Equation! − + 2Cl 2Ag 2AgCl(s) (aq) (aq) ________ + _________ __________ Writing Net Ionic Equations for Double Replacement Reactions Practice Problem: Write the net ionic equation for the following reaction. KNO3 (aq)+ _________ BaCO3 K2CO3 (aq) + Ba(NO3)2 (aq) _________ −2 +2 CO 3 (aq) + Ba BaCO3 (aq) Net Ionic Equation = ____________________________________