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Chapter 8 Balancing Chemical Equations 8.1 Chemical Equations   Chemical equations represent, with symbols and formulas, the reactants and products in a chemical reaction.  reactants  products Requirements for all chemical equations:    must show all reactants and products formulas must be correct Law of Conservation of Mass must be satisfied (equation must be balanced) Chemical Equations  Balanced Equations – use coefficients  H2 + Cl2  2 HCl   Hydrogen reacts with chlorine to yield hydrochloric acid Symbols used in equations  2Na(s) + Cl2(g)  2NaCl(s)  NaCl(aq) - solution of sodium chloride in water H2O(l) – liquid water   g or ↑ = gas Chemical Equations  More symbols       = one way reactions ↔ = reversible reaction ΔH = heat cat = catalyst (a substance that speeds up a reaction without being used up in the reaction) S or ppt or ↓ = precipitate (solid - only found on products side) Chemical Equations  Significance of chemical equations  H2(g) + Cl2(g)  2 HCl (g) means…    Atoms: 2 atoms of hydrogen gas react with 2 atoms of chlorine gas and yields 2 atoms of hydrogen, 2 atoms of chlorine Molecules: 1 molecule of hydrogen gas reacts with 1 molecule of chlorine gas and yields 2 molecules of hydrochloric acid Molar mass: H = 2.0; Cl = 71.0; HCl = 73.0 Balancing Chemical Equations  Helpful hints to balancing….  1 atom at a time Balance atoms that appear only 1X per side first Balance polyatomic ions as whole units Balance diatomic elements last  Save H + O for last    Balancing Chemical Equations  Examples  __ H2(g)  __H2O(l) +__O2(g)  __(NH4)2CO3 (aq)+__CaCl2(s)  __CaCO3(s) +__NH4Cl(aq) Balancing Chemical Reactions  __Al(s) + __Br2(g)   __C2H5OH(g) + __O2(g)  __CO2(g) +__H2O(l) __AlBr3(s) Balancing Chemical Reactions  NOT IN PACKET!!  _C3H6 + _ O2  _ CO2 + _H2O Balancing Chemical Equations  Tin (IV) oxide + Carbon  Tin + Carbon monoxide  SnO2(aq) + C(s)  Sn(s) + CO(g)  SnO2(aq) + 2C(s)  Sn(s) + 2CO(g) Balancing Chemical Equations  Aqueous Iron (III) Chlorate reacts with solid calcium to yield calcium chlorate and solid iron  Fe(ClO3)3(aq) + Ca (s)  Ca(ClO3)2(aq) + Fe(s)  2Fe(ClO3)3(aq) + 3Ca (s)  3Ca(ClO3)2(aq) + 2Fe(s) 8.2 Types of Chemical Reactions  5 types      synthesis decomposition combustion single replacement double replacement  Remember: You must first find the correct products, then balance the equation! Types of Chemical Reactions  Synthesis (direct combination) - needs energy to happen (usually heat)  General formula  A +  2H2 + B ---> AB O2 → 2H2O Types of Chemical Reactions  Synthesis Examples  BaS  Ba + S  Mg + Cl2  Al + Cl2  AlCl 3  Na + O2  Na2O   MgCl2 REMEMBER TO BALANCE!!!!!!!!!! Types of Chemical Reactions  Decomposition (analysis) - needs energy to happen (usually heat or electricity)  general formula  AB ---> A  2H2O → 2H2 + B + O2 Types of Chemical Reactions  Examples  FeCl3  Fe + Cl2  HgO  CuSO4 · 5 H2O  Hg + O2 CuSO4(s) + H2O(g) Types of Chemical Reactions  Combustion - the reaction of hydrocarbons and oxygen  General Formula  CxH y + O2  CO2 + H2O Types of Chemical Reactions  CH4 + O2 → CO2 + H2O  C3H8 + O2 → CO2 + H2O  C4H10 + O2 → CO2 + H2O  C2H5OH + O2 → CO2 + H2O Types of Chemical Reactions  Single replacement - take place in aqueous solutions - need very little energy to happen  Two Types   Positive Ions Switch  AB + M  MB + A Negative Ions Switch  MB + X  MX + B Types of Chemical Reactions  Positive Ions Switch  HI(aq) + Mg(s)   AlCl3(aq) + Ca(s)   Ca(s) + MgI2(aq) + I2(s) CaCl2(aq) + Al(s) HOH(l)  Ca(OH)2(aq) + H2(g) Types of Chemical Reactions  Negative Ions Switch  NaCl + F2   BaS + O2  NaF + Cl2 BaO + S Types of Chemical Reactions  Double Replacement - aqueous solution - little energy - usually forms one soluble ionic product (aka - aqueous) and either a ppt, water, or a gas that bubbles out of water  General Formula (molecule + molecule)   AB + CD  AgNO3 + NaCl → CB AgCl + + AD NaNO3 Types of Chemical Reactions  FeCl3 + NaOH  Fe(OH)3 + NaCl  H2SO4 + NaOH  HOH + Na2SO4  NH4Cl + NaOH  NH4OH + NaCl 8.3 Activity Series of the Elements  Another Lie!! : )  Some reactions happen and some don’t!   Assume all synthesis, decomposition, and combustions happen Not all single or double displacement occur   Single Replacement  Use activity series Double Replacement  Use solubility table Activity Series of the Elements  Rules for the single replacement activity series:  Any single element above an element in a compound will replace it.  The top 5 elements react with water.  Metals above H react with acids (molecules that start with H – not water).  The nonmetal reactivity series is F> Cl > Br... Activity Series of the Elements  Ca + H2O →  Al + H2O →  Al + HI → Ca(OH)2 + No Rxn AlI3 + H2 H2 Activity Series of the Elements  Cu + HI  No Rxn  NaCl + F2  NaF + Cl2  NaF + Cl2 → No Rxn Solubility Table of the Elements  Rules for double replacement reactions using a solubility table:    If one of the products formed is water, the reaction happens. If a gas is formed, the reaction happens. If an insoluble product forms (I or Ss), the reaction happens Solubility Table of the Elements  Na2CrO4 + KCl →  FeCl3 + KOH  HCl + No Rxn → Fe(OH)3(ppt) + KCl(aq) NaOH → H2O(l) + NaCl(s) Solubility Trends  Cations    Anions      very soluble - Na, K, ammonium very insoluble- Ag, Pb, Hg, transitions very soluble – nitrate for monatomicsF>Cl>Br .... very insoluble - carbonate, hydroxide, phosphate, sulfate sulfides - decompose General trend  As size decreases, solubility increases OR Heavier stuff doesn’t dissolve well Showing Energy Changes in Equations  endothermic  A + B + heat C    ΔH is positive exothermic  A + B   ΔH is negative C + heat Some helpful notes on writing phases in chemical reactions        Metals are solids (except Hg, Br) SR and DR reactions, reactants that are compounds are always aqueous. SR and DR reactions, products that are compounds should have their phases identified using a solubility chart (aqueous vs. precipitate) S and D reactions, ionic compounds are solids. In C reactions, the water, CO2, and O2 are gases. The hydrocarbon is hard to tell, but is usually a liquid after C=6 or higher. Most other covalent compounds are gases. Acids (chemicals starting with hydrogen) are always aqueous
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            