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UNIT 12: CLASSIFICATION OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS 1
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Chemical Reactions a process that involves changes in the structure and energy content of atoms, molecules, or ions but not their nuclei. 2
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Most reactions occur in the aqueous phase (in water) because the particles can move about and interact with each other. 3
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Remember This? Dissolving- a solvent surrounds a solute. Watch This 4
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Formation of Solutions -Dissolving A solute dissolving in a solvent requires energy. It can be an endothermic or exothermic process. Is it a chemical reaction? 5
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Formation of Solutions- Dissolving Covalent molecules … DO NOT break apart when dissolved. Ionic Compounds… DO break apart when dissolved (this is considered a chemical change) 6
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Molarity A unit of concentration The number of moles of solute dissolved in 1.00 L of solution. Molarity (M) = Moles of solute Liter of solution 7
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Practice Problem What is the molarity if 2.0 moles of glucose are added to 5.0 L of solution? 8
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Practice Problem Molarity (M) = Moles of solute Liter of solution 2.0 moles =.40 M 5.0 L 9
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How to prepare a solution 10 Grams = Molarity X Liter X Molar Mass of Solute solute Watch This
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How to prepare a solution 11 To make a concentrated solution more dilute use this formula M 1 V 1 = M 2 V 2 M 1 = concentrated solution V 1 = amount of concentrated solution need to make dilute solution M 2 = dilute solution V 2 – amount of diluted solution wanted.
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Law of Conservation of Matter matter cannot be created or destroyed, it can only change forms. Therefore, in a chemical reaction the number of atoms, the mass and the charge must be conserved. Watch This reactants products Activated complex 12
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EQUATIONS Balancing Equations – In order to be balanced, the type and number of atoms must match on the reactant and product side 13
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Balancing Equations- Taking inventory Reactants 4 hydrogen 2 oxygen Products 4 hydrogen 2 oxygen In order to be balanced, the type and number of atoms must match on the reactant and product side 14
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Tutorial and Practice Tutorial Watch This Practice 15
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__H 2 S(g) + __SO 2 (g) __S(s) + __H 2 O(g) Reactants Products 16
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__Fe 2 O 3 (s) + __H 2 (g) __Fe(s) + __H 2 O(g) ReactantsProducts 17
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Types of Reactions Combination/Synthesis/Composition A + B AB Decomposition AB A + B Single Replacement C+ AB AC + B Double Replacement AB + CD AD + CB Combustion C x H y + O 2 CO 2 + H 2 O Redox – any of the above where the oxidation number of two species changes 18 +
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Watch This 19
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Double Replacement Clue: Do-See-Doh AB + CD AD + CB 23
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Combination 1 Also known as composition or synthesis; one product http://genchem.chem.wisc.edu/demonstrations/Gen_Chem_Pages/04chemrxnpage/chemicalreactions.htm ___K (s) +___Br 2 (l) ___KBr (s) 24
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Combination 2 ____Zn (s) + ___I 2 (l) ____ ZnI 2 (s) http://genchem.chem.wisc.edu/demonstrations/Gen_Chem_Pages/04chemrxnpage/chemicalreactions.htm 25
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Decomposition Single reactant breaks down into two or more simpler substances 26
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Single Replacement A single element replaces another element in a compound. Must use activity series to determine if reaction will take place. More active will replace less active. ___Cu (s)+ __AgNO 3 (aq) __Cu(NO 3 ) 2 (aq)+ ___Ag (s) Remember: Metal can only replace metal (or hydrogen) Nonmetal can only replace nonmetal SR animation 27
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Using the activity series: Watch This Watch This. For a single replacement to occur, the solo metal must be more reactive than the metal it replaces. The higher up on the list, the more reactive it is. 28
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Single Replacement For a single replacement to occur, the solo nonmetal must be more reactive than the nonmetal it replaces. The higher up on the list, the more reactive it is. 29
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Double Replacement Two reacting compounds, with metals trading places. A precipitate (insoluble solid) is formed. ___AgNO 3 (aq)+ ____NaCl (s) ____NaNO 3 (aq)+ ____AgCl (s) 30
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Determining solubility of products Use the solubility rules on the back of the periodic table. The solubility rules are organized by the anion in the compound. Find the anion. * this is the negative ion * Determine if, based on the cation, the compound is soluble (aq) or insoluble (s) in water. Write the (aq) or (s) after the compound Practice: AgCl K(NO 3 ) PbS 31
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Solubility Shortcuts – here’s all you need to remember: All group 1 metals All nitrates (NO 3 - ) All acetates (C 2 H 3 O 2 - ) All ammonium (NH 4 + ) ARE ALWAYS SOLUBLE (aq) Remember HAP Stands for Mercury (Hg), Silver (Ag) and Lead (Pb) Compounds with these elements are usually INSOLUBLE (s) 32
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Try these: NaC 2 H 3 O 2 Hg(OH) 2 MgBr 2 (NH 4 ) 2 SO 4 33
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Combustion _C 3 H 8 + _O 2 _ CO 2 + _H 2 O + energy A combustion reaction is when oxygen combines with another compound to form water and carbon dioxide. It is highly exothermic. 34
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OXIDATION-REDUCTION REACTIONS a reaction where electrons are transferred between reactants and products Watch This 35
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OXIDATION-REDUCTION REACTIONS a. Loss of Electrons is OXIDATION i. oxidation number increases across the arrow. b. Gain of Electrons is REDUCTION i. oxidation number decreases across the arrow. *LEO the Lion Says GER- These must occur together. Can’t have one without the other. 36
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OXIDATION-REDUCTION REACTIONS Oxidation Number (Oxidation State) – a method of keeping track of electrons gained (reduced) and lost (oxidized). 37
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OXIDATION-REDUCTION REACTIONS Rules for assigning oxidation numbers a. Atoms in their elemental form have an oxidation number of zero. Cu = 0 b. Monatomic ions have an oxidation number equal to their charge. K +1 = +1. c. Nonmetals have negative oxidation numbers. i. Oxygen is -2 in all compounds with the exceptions of peroxides in which it is -1 ii. Hydrogen is usually +1 with nonmetals Hydrogen is usually -1 with metals d. The sum of the oxidation number in an neutral compound is zero. 38
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OXIDATION-REDUCTION REACTIONS How to identify a redox reaction. a. Determine the oxidation number of each element in each compound. b. Compare the reactants and products. c. If there is a change in the oxidation number of any species, then it is redox. d. Number increases across arrow = oxidation LEO e. Number decreases across arrow = reduction GER 39
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OXIDATION-REDUCTION REACTIONS Practice- are the following redox reactions? ______ a. NaCl + AgNO 3 --> NaNO 3 +AgCl ______ b. FeCl 2 + Cl 2 FeCl 3 40
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