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Published byReynold Lewis Modified over 9 years ago
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Law of Conservation of Mass & Balancing Equations
LG: I can use the law of conservation to explain why chemical reactions need to be balanced
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Law of Conservation of Mass
During a chemical reaction, the atoms of the reactants are rearranged to form the products. H2 + Cl2 2 HCl No atoms are gained or lost; therefore no mass is gained or lost. This principal is known as the law of conservation of mass.
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Law of Conservation of Mass
Some reactions appear ‘unbalanced’ at first: Chemical Equation: Mg HCl MgCl H2 Particle Picture: Chemists fix this problem by ‘balancing’ the equation to show that all atoms in the reactants are still present in the products: Chemical Equation: Mg HCl MgCl H2 Unbalanced equations are called skeleton equation “because thy show the bare bones” of what’s happening
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Balancing Equations Example 1 Skeleton NaCl + BeF2 → NaF + BeCl2 Equation Balanced Particle Picture Balanced Equation Discuss rules of balancing – if you need more of a particular atom, you have to add more reactant or product MOLECULES. Can only change coefficients, not subscripts.
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Balancing Equations Strategies:
Balancing by inspection - Balance particle in this order: Atoms that are not part of a polyatomic ion, and not H or O Next, balance polyatomic ions Last, balance H and O Example 2 Cu O2 → CuO Example 3 Al(NO3) H2SO → HNO Al2(SO4)3
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Balancing Equations Example 4
Sodium phosphate reacts with calcium chloride to produce calcium phosphate and sodium chloride Word Equation Chemical Equation (& balance it!)
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Balancing Equations Practice!
H2 + N2 NH3 Cu + AgNO3 Ag + Cu(NO3)2 NH4 + O2 H2O + NO2 C3H6 + O2 CO2 + H2O CaCO3 + HCl CaCl2 + H2O + CO2 Show how to balance using ‘half an oxygen’
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Homework! Old Book: Pg. 215 # 3, 4 (don’t worry about ‘mole ratio’)
New Book: Pg. 155 # 3ab, 5 (don’t worry about states in #3)
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