Chemical formulas and equations notes
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Transcript Chemical formulas and equations notes
Chemical Formulas and Equations
Parts of a formula
Coefficient: the number in front of the
symbol, which tells you how many
molecules there are.
Subscript: The number after the
symbol, which tells you how many
atoms there are for each element.
Determining how many atoms
Multiply the coefficient by the
subscript
Use a 1 for any coefficient or
subscript that is missing
Example
5H2
1. Coefficient:
2. Subscript:
3. Element:
4. How many atoms?
Example
5H2
1. Coefficient: 5
2. Subscript: 2
3. Element: hydrogen
4. How many atoms? 5 x 2 = 10
Practice
3 CO2
2. N2O
3. 5MgCl2
4. 2 C6H12O6
1.
Try the ones on the back of the page!
Practice
3 CO2
2. N2O
3. 5MgCl2
4. 2 C6H12O6
1.
C = 3, O = 6
N = 2, O = 1
Mg = 5, Cl = 10
C = 12, H = 24, O = 12
Try the ones on the back of the page!
Chemical equations
A chemical equation is a short way to describe a chemical
reaction
Reactants: the starting materials in a chemical reaction (before
the arrow)
Products: the new substances made in a chemical reaction
(after the arrow)
Example: C + O2
CO2
Reactants: C (carbon) and O2 (oxygen)
Products: CO2 (carbon dioxide)
Chemical equations continued
What does the arrow mean?
Yields or gives you
What does the “+” mean?
“and”
Law of conservation of mass:
Atoms are not created nor destroyed
You have to have the same number of each element on both
sides of the equation
Let’s practice
Take out the last sheet you picked up on your way in
Let’s do the first one together