CH 8 Chemical Equations and Reactions Section 3 Classifying Chemical Reactions.

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CH 8 Chemical Equations and Reactions Section 3 Classifying Chemical Reactions

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Single Replacement  Also called “displacement” Generic form: A + BC  AC + B  A single element (A) reacts with a compound (BC), and replaces an element from the compound. [A kicks out B]

Transcript of CH 8 Chemical Equations and Reactions Section 3 Classifying Chemical Reactions.

Page 1: CH 8 Chemical Equations and Reactions Section 3 Classifying Chemical Reactions.

CH 8 Chemical Equations and

ReactionsSection 3

Classifying Chemical Reactions

Page 2: CH 8 Chemical Equations and Reactions Section 3 Classifying Chemical Reactions.

5 reaction types:Single Replacement (displacement)Double Replacement (displacement)CombustionSynthesisDecomposition

Page 3: CH 8 Chemical Equations and Reactions Section 3 Classifying Chemical Reactions.

Single Replacement Also called “displacement”

Generic form:

A + BC AC + B

A single element (A) reacts with a compound (BC), and replaces an element from the compound.

[A kicks out B]

Page 4: CH 8 Chemical Equations and Reactions Section 3 Classifying Chemical Reactions.

Single Replacement cont. A pure metal may replace a metal (or H) in

a compound.

Cu + AgNO3 identify the pure metal:identify the metal (or H) in the compound:

Copper is a candidate to replace silver, and it will.Cu + AgNO3 Ag + CuNO3

Page 5: CH 8 Chemical Equations and Reactions Section 3 Classifying Chemical Reactions.

Single Replacement: Activity Series Not all metals are active enough to

replace a metal (or H) in a compound. The activity series ranks the elements in

order of “strength”, those high on the list will replace those below.

Page 6: CH 8 Chemical Equations and Reactions Section 3 Classifying Chemical Reactions.

Single Replacement Reactions Identify the element in the compound to

be replaced

A) Li + CuCl2

B) Fe + AgNO3

Page 7: CH 8 Chemical Equations and Reactions Section 3 Classifying Chemical Reactions.

1. Li2. K3. Ba4. Sr5. Ca6. Na7. Mg8. Al9. Mn10. Zn11. Cr12. Fe13. Co14. Ni15. Sn16. Pb17. H18. Cu19. Hg20. Ag21. Pt22. Au

Activity Series of Metals

Page 8: CH 8 Chemical Equations and Reactions Section 3 Classifying Chemical Reactions.

1. Li2. K3. Ba4. Sr5. Ca6. Na7. Mg8. Al9. Mn10. Zn11. Cr12. Fe13. Co14. Ni15. Sn16. Pb17. H18. Cu19. Sn20. Ag21. Pt22. Au

1. Li2. K3. Ba4. Sr5. Ca6. Na7. Mg8. Al9. Mn

10.Zn11.Cr12.Fe13.Co14.Ni15.Sn16.Pb17.H18.Cu19.Hg20.Ag21.Pt22.Au

Page 9: CH 8 Chemical Equations and Reactions Section 3 Classifying Chemical Reactions.

Practice: Will calcium replace Cobalt? Will Sodium replace magnesium? Will Lead replace Zinc? Will Lithium replace… Will gold replace… Will sodium replace Potassium?

Page 10: CH 8 Chemical Equations and Reactions Section 3 Classifying Chemical Reactions.

Practice equations Aluminum is dipped into Zinc Nitrate solution.

Sodium is placed into cold water.

Gold is added to a solution of calcium chloride.

Magnesium is dipped into nickel (II) chloride solution.

Lead is placed into an iron (III) nitrate solution.

Zinc is added to a solution of copper (II) sulfate.

Page 11: CH 8 Chemical Equations and Reactions Section 3 Classifying Chemical Reactions.

Predict the products of the following reactions: Ca + CuSO4

Al + KNO3

Page 12: CH 8 Chemical Equations and Reactions Section 3 Classifying Chemical Reactions.

Single replacementthe “other” activity series A more active

halogen will replace a less active halogen

1. F2. Cl3. Br4. I5. At

Cl2 + KI

Cl2 + KF

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Decomposition Reactions

Binary CompoundsBinary Compounds Break into the elements 2 HgO 2 Hg + O2

Ternary Compounds…escaping gasTernary Compounds…escaping gas Metal CarbonateMetal Carbonate breaks into metal oxide and CO2

CaCO3 CaO + CO2

Generic form: AB A + B

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Determine the reaction category, Predict the products and balance them.Br2 + NaI

CH4 + O2

C6H14 + O2

Page 15: CH 8 Chemical Equations and Reactions Section 3 Classifying Chemical Reactions.

Combustion ReactionsGeneric form: CxHy + O2 CO2 + H2O

A hydrocarbon uses oxygen from the air to produce Carbon Dioxide and Water.

C2H6 + O2 CO2 + H2O

Complete combustion always produces carbon dioxide and water.

A “hydrocarbon” may also include an oxygen

C3H7OH + O2 CO2 + H2O

Page 16: CH 8 Chemical Equations and Reactions Section 3 Classifying Chemical Reactions.

Synthesis (Combination) 2 elements2 elements combine to form an ionic

compound.2 K + Cl2 2 KCl

A metal oxidemetal oxide and waterwater combine to form a base. (a base is a hydroxide compound)

MgO + HOH Mg(OH)2

Li2O + HOH 2 LiOH

Generic Form: A + B AB

Page 17: CH 8 Chemical Equations and Reactions Section 3 Classifying Chemical Reactions.

Synthesis (Combination)A non-metal oxidenon-metal oxide and waterwater combine to form

an acid. (an acid starts with “H”) CO2 + H2O H2CO3

Carbon dioxide + water Carbonic acid

SO2 + H2O H2SO3 Sulfur Dioxide + water Sulfurous acid

Page 18: CH 8 Chemical Equations and Reactions Section 3 Classifying Chemical Reactions.

Double Replacement Reactions

2 ionic compounds2 ionic compounds “switch + partners”. A solid precipitate, a gas, or water forms

Ba(NO3)2 + Na2SO4

BaSO4 + NaNO3

Make sure the new ionic compounds have no net

charge.

Generic form: AB + CD AD + CB

Page 19: CH 8 Chemical Equations and Reactions Section 3 Classifying Chemical Reactions.

Types of Chemical Reactions Lab

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Pb(NO3)2 + KI

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Mg + HCl

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H2O2

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NaHCO3 (+heat)

Page 24: CH 8 Chemical Equations and Reactions Section 3 Classifying Chemical Reactions.

Electrolysis of H2O