Balancing Equations
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Transcript Balancing Equations
Balancing Equations
Chemical Reactions
Chemical rxns occur when bonds (between
electrons of atoms) are formed or broken
Chemical rxns involve:
changes
making new materials with new properties
energy
in the chemical composition of matter
changes:
Bond breaking absorbs Energy (endothermic)
Bond making releases Energy (exothermic)
Note:
The overall change in energy for certain rxns can be
found on Ref. Table I
Chemical Equations
Depict the kind of reactants and products
and their relative amounts in a reaction.
4 Al (s) + 3 O2 (g) → 2 Al2O3 (s)
The numbers in the front are called
stoichiometric coefficients
Symbols Used in Equations
Solid
(s), Liquid (l), Gas (g)
Aqueous
solution (aq) (dissolved in water)
Catalyst
H2SO4
Escaping
gas ()
Change
(
or
Pt
of heat energy
or + 3kJ or – 3kJ)
*there is no subtraction…a negative sign means released/exothermic
Express a chemical equation as follows:
Reactants Products
The arrow is equivalent to an “=“ math. When
describing the equation use the word “yields” or
“produces” instead of equals
Ex:
C + O2 CO2
This reads “carbon plus oxygen react to yield carbon dioxide”
Because of the principle of the
conservation of matter an
equation must be balanced.
matter can’t be created or
destroyed
Must have the same number of
each type of atom on both sides.
Must have same # grams of
matter on both sides!!
Lavoisier, 1788
Coefficients not Subscripts
When balancing add coefficients in front of
compounds to balance the atoms in the
reaction
DO NOT change the subscripts of the
formulas.
Changing
subscripts changes the compound.
Subscripts: tell you how many atoms of a particular
element are in a compound.
Coefficient: tells you about the quantity, or number, of
molecules of the compound.
Balancing a chemical equation:
DO NOT CHANGE THE FORMULAS!
Find number of atoms for an element on left side.
Compare those against number of the atoms of the same
element on right side.
Place coefficients in front of formulas so that left side has
the same number of atoms as the right side for EACH
element
Check your answer to see if:
The numbers of atoms on both sides of the equation
balanced.
The coefficients are in the lowest possible whole
number ratios.
Helpful hints for balancing equations:
Take
one element at a time, working left to right.
Save
H for next to last, and O until last.
IF
everything balances except for O, and there is no way
to balance O with a whole number, double all the
coefficients and try again.
Useful in combustion reactions!
(Shortcut)
Polyatomic ions that appear on both sides of
the equation should be balanced as independent units
Just circle them and think of them as one thing
Balancing Equations
___ H2(g) + ___ O2(g) → ___ H2O(l)
What happened to the other Oxygen atom?????
This equation is not balanced!
Balance Equation
Na + Cl2
Na = 1
Cl = 2
NaCl
Na = 1
Cl = 1
The number of sodium atoms balance but
the chlorine does not. Use coefficients in
order to balance this equation.
Inserting Coefficients
Na + Cl2
2 NaCl
Na = 1
Cl = 2
Na = 2
Cl = 2
Now chlorine balances but the sodium does
not! So we go back and balance the sodium.
Finally balanced!
2Na + Cl2
2 NaCl
Na = 2
Cl = 2
Na = 2
Cl = 2
Since the number of each element on the
reactant side and the product side of the
equation are equal, the equation is balanced.
Balance Practice
(Page 2 in Chemical Equations Packet)
___Al2O3 + ___H2 → ___H2O + ___Al
___MgI2 + ___K → ___KI + ___Mg
___AlF3 → ___Al + ___F2
Balance Practice
(Page 2 in Chemical Equations Packet)
___Na2CO3 + ___Mg → ___MgCO3 + ___Na
___ZnO → ___Zn + ___O2
___Fe + ___O2 → ___Fe2O3
Balancing Practice
For more help go to:
http://richardbowles.tripod.com/chemistry/
balance.htm#part0
For some fun balancing equations go to:
http://www.mpcfaculty.net/mark_bishop/b
alancing_equations_tutorial.htm