Chemical Reactions
What are the products of a chemical reaction?
1 investigate a variety of reactions to identify possible indicators of a chemical change
Chemical Change- Common Signs:
Micro: rearrangement of atoms or new substances formed
Macro:
- Gas is produced
- Solid precipitate produces
- Change in colour
- Change in temperature (significant)
- Solid disappears
- Odour produced
2 use modelling to demonstrate
- the rearrangement of atoms to form new substances
- the conservation of atoms in a chemical reaction
Ball and Stick model:
1. Chemical change and reactions involve the rearrangement of atoms
2. Adherence to the law of conservation of energy
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3 conduct investigations to predict and identify the products of a range of reactions, for example:
- synthesis
- decomposition
- combustion
- precipitation
- acid/base reactions
- acid/carbonate reactions
Synthesis Reaction
Definition: combination of multiple reactants to form a single product (e.g. the formation of water
from hydrogen and oxygen)
- The formation of new bonds releases energy making them exothermic
,Predicting The Product:
- Non-metals in the top right will react with most metals to form ionic compounds
- Metals do not react chemically with other metals
- Non metals often react with other non metals to form covalent compounds (e.g. halogens
reach with hydrogen to form hydrogen halides)
Decomposition Reaction
Definition: A single compound decomposing into two or more elements or compounds (e.g. the
breaking of water to hydrogen and oxygen using electrolysis)
- Required energy to break bonds making them endothermic
Types Of Decomposition Reactions:
- Thermal Decomposition (heating)
➔ Easily decomposes hydroxides (oxides and water), most carbonates (oxide+
carbon dioxides), nitrates (oxides, nitrogen dioxide, oxygen)
➔ E.g. 𝐶𝑎𝐶𝑂3(𝑠)→𝐶𝑎𝑂 (𝑠) + 𝐶𝑂2 (𝑔)
- Electrolysis (electric current through them in the molten state or in solution)
➔ Electrolysis of water
- Decomposition By Light (exposure to light)
➔ Some pure substances can be decomposed by solids
➔ E.g. sunlight decomposes silver chloride into a black solid
2𝐴𝑔𝐶𝑙 (𝑠)→2𝐴𝑔 (𝑠) + 𝐶𝑙2 (𝑔)
Combustion Reaction
, Definition: the burning of elements or compounds in oxygen, at a temperature well above room
temperature (e.g. the burning of methane and octane)
- Produce energy- Exothermic
Precipitation Reaction
Definition: involve the formation of a precipitate (insoluble salt) from two aqueous solutions
- Can be either endo or exothermic
1. Two aqueous salts reacting together in a double replacement reaction with the cations and
anions switching partners
2. SNAPP solubility ruled to tell which is soluble or insoluble
Acid Base Reaction (Neutralisation Reactions)