predicting products of chemical reactions honors chemistry ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

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Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1- 16.4

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Page 1: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Predicting Productsof

Chemical Reactions

Honors Chemistry

Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Page 2: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Identify the type of reaction.

This is key to predicting products. The type of reaction will be a guide to the

products that will form in the chemical reaction.

The reason is the products for each type of reaction follow a pattern.

After you predict the products don’t forget to make sure the equation is balanced.

Page 3: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Synthesis Reactions

Remember the general equation? General Equation A + B AB We can predict the products if the

reactants are two elements. (Look at how they would form ionic or covalent compounds)

Page 4: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Examples:

Mg + N2

Ca + Cl2

Al + O2

Mg3N2

CaCl2

Al2O3

3

34 2

Page 5: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Decomposition Reactions

General Equation AB A + B You can predict the products if it is a

binary compound• Made up of only two elements

• The reactant compound breaks apart into its elements

Page 6: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Examples:

HgO

NaCl

electricity

Hg + O22 2

2 2 Na + Cl2

Page 7: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Combustion Reactions

There are a lot of different combustion reactions

The important things to remember are: • Oxygen will always be one of the reactants

• A release of energy in the form of light and heat will occur

• When oxygen reacts with hydrocarbons usually carbon dioxide and water (along with light and heat) will be the products

Page 8: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Examples:

Mg (s) + O2

C2H6 (g) + O2

MgO22

CO2 + H2O6472

Page 9: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Single-replacement Reactions

General General Equation:Equation: A + BX A + BX AX + B AX + B

Use the activity Use the activity series (for metals) series (for metals) or periodic table or periodic table (for nonmetals) to (for nonmetals) to see if the reaction see if the reaction can occur.can occur.

Page 10: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Examples:

Pb + KCl

Al + CuSO4

F2 + HCl

Page 11: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

More examples:

K + Mg(OH)2

Zn + HCl

Br2 + HCl

Page 12: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Double-replacement Reactions

General Equation:General Equation: AX + BY AX + BY AY + BX AY + BX The ions change places to form two new The ions change places to form two new

compounds.compounds. One of the products will usually be either:One of the products will usually be either:

- a precipitate (solid)

- a gas that bubbles out.

- a covalent compound (usually water).

You will need to use the solubility rules to see You will need to use the solubility rules to see if the reaction will occur.if the reaction will occur.

Page 13: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Examples :

CaCl2 + NaOH

CuCl2 + K2S

Page 14: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Neutralization Reactions

General Equation:General Equation: Acid (aq) + Base (aq) Salt (aq) + Water (l)

Generally the salt is an ionic compound made up of a cation from a base and an anion from an acid.

The water is formed from the H from the acid and the OH from the base.

Page 15: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Practice Examples:

Nitric acid and cesium hydroxide

HBr (aq) + Ca(OH)2 (aq)

Page 16: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

More Practice Examples:

sulfuric acid + potassium hydroxide

H2CO3 (aq) + NH4OH (aq)

Page 17: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4
Page 18: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Reactions in Aqueous Solutions

Many reactions occur when substances are dissolved in water.

In aqueous solutions water is the solvent

The compounds dissolved in water are the solute.

Page 19: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Aqueous solutions of molecular compounds

Some solutions have molecular compounds as the solute.• Ex: sugar (C6H12O6) and ethanol (C2H5OH)

These substances dissolve in water but do not break apart.

They do not undergo a chemical change. Other substances, like some ionic compounds

do undergo a chemical change when they dissolve.

Page 20: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Aqueous solutions of Ionic Compounds, Acids & Bases

Ionic compounds, acids & bases fall apart into ions when they dissolve in water• This is called dissociation

• They conduct electricity when dissolved – this makes them electrolytes.

So when we write them as (aq) they are really separated ions in solution

EX:• NaOH (aq) is really Na+ (aq) and OH- (aq) in solution

• K2SO4 (aq) is really 2 K+ (aq) and SO42- (aq) in

solution

Page 21: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

A A

A

B

BB

Page 22: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

The ions separate so they can interact and form new products.

Solids (s), liquids (l), and gases (g) that form are NOTNOT separated, only aqueous solutions (aq) are separated.

To show the details of reactions that involve ions in aqueous solutions chemists use ionic equations.

Page 23: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Complete Ionic Equation This shows ALL the particles in the solutions. Every aqueous compound is written as separate ions All the particles must be accounted for (balanced) Solids, liquids and gases are written as whole compounds

(NOT SEPARATED) – we can determine these from the solubility rules!

EXAMPLE:

MgCl2(aq) + PbSO4(aq) →MgSO4(aq) + PbCl2(s)Is really:

Mg2+(aq) + 2 Cl-(aq) + Pb2+(aq) + SO2-4(aq) →

Mg2+(aq) + SO2-4(aq) + PbCl2(s)

Page 24: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Net Ionic Equation

This simplifies the complete ionic equation.

It includes only the particles that participate in the reaction.• It shows the ions that form precipitates,

gases, water, or other molecular compounds.

We cross out everything that is the same on both sides of the equation.

Page 25: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Ions that do not combine to form a solid, a gas or any other molecular compound are called spectator ions

Net ionic equations need to be balanced in terms of both mass (numbers and types of elements) and charge.

Page 26: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Let’s go back to our original example:

MgCl2(aq) + PbSO4(aq) →MgSO4(aq) + PbCl2(s)

Mg2+(aq) + 2 Cl-(aq) + Pb2+(aq) + SO2-4(aq) →

Mg2+(aq) + SO2-4(aq) + PbCl2(s)

Let’s make the net ionic equation –

cross out the particles that are the same on both sides of the chemical equation to simplify!

Net Ionic Equation:

Pb2+ (aq) + 2Cl- (aq) PbCl2 (s)

Page 27: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

NOW FOR SOME SAMPLE PROBLEMS:

Write complete and net ionic equations for the following reactions!

Page 28: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Complete ionic equation:

FeBr3(aq) + 3 KOH(aq) →3 KBr (aq) + Fe(OH)3(s)

Fe3+(aq)Br-(aq) 3 K+(aq)3 OH-(aq)

+ + + →

+

3 Br-(aq) Fe(OH)3(s)

+

3 K+(aq)

Page 29: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Net Ionic Equation:

Page 30: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Write the complete ionic equation for:

CaCl2(aq) + MgSO4(aq) →CaSO4(s) + MgCl2(aq)

Page 31: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Net Ionic Equation:

Page 32: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Write the complete ionic equation for:

Ba(OH)2(aq) + H2SO4(aq) →BaSO4(s) + H2O(l)

Page 33: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Net Ionic Equation:

Page 34: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Write the complete ionic equation for: KI (aq) + AgNO3 (aq) AgI (s) + KNO3 (aq)

Page 35: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Net Ionic Equation:

Page 36: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4
Page 37: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

LEARNING CHECK:

Page 38: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

What is the complete ionic equation for the following chemical equation?

BaCl2(aq) + Na2SO4(aq) → BaSO4(s) + 2NaCl(aq)

a. BaCl2(aq) + 2Na+(aq) + SO42-(aq) → 2Na+(aq) +

2Cl-(aq) + BaSO4(s)

b. Ba2+(aq) + Cl-(aq) + Na2SO4 (aq) → Na+(aq) +

Cl-(aq) + BaSO4(s)

c. Ba2+(aq) + SO42-(aq) → BaSO4(s)

d. Ba2+(aq) + 2Cl-(aq) + 2Na+(aq) + SO42-(aq) →

2Na+(aq) + 2Cl-(aq) + BaSO4(s)

Page 39: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

What is the net ionic equation for the following chemical equation?

BaCl2(aq) + Na2SO4(aq) → BaSO4(s) + 2NaCl(aq)

a. BaCl2(aq) + 2Na+(aq) + SO42-(aq) →

2Na+(aq) + 2Cl-(aq) + BaSO4(s)

b. Ba2+(aq) + Cl-(aq) + Na2SO4 (aq) →

Na+(aq) + Cl-(aq) + BaSO4(s)

c. Ba2+(aq) + SO42-(aq) → BaSO4(s)

d. Ba2+(aq) + 2Cl-(aq) + 2Na+(aq) + SO42-(aq) →

2Na+(aq) + 2Cl-(aq) + BaSO4(s)

Page 40: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Section 20.1Oxidation – reduction reactions (Redox):

LEO says GER • Lose e- is Oxidation

• Gain e- is Reduction

OIL – RIG• Oxidation is Loss (of e-)

• Reduction is Gain (of e-)

Page 41: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Rules for assigning oxidation numbers:

Page 42: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Assign Oxidation Numbers for the elements in the following

H2O

KCl

Na2SO4

PO43-

H = +1 O = -2

K = +1 Cl = -1

O = -2 S = +6 Na = +2

O = -2 P = +5

Page 43: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Determine what got oxidized or reduced in the reactions

Cd (s) + NiO (s) CdO (s) + Ni (s)

Oxidized ______ Reduced ______

Cd Ni

Page 44: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Heats of Reactions - Thermochemistry

Enthalpy (H) • The amount of heat in a system at constant pressure

Endothermic = + enthalpyExothermic = - enthalpy

Page 45: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Hess’s Law

Using reactions with known enthalpy values you can determine the enthalpy of a new reaction.

Page 46: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Examples of Hess Law Calc.Determine H

2CO(g) + 2NO(g) 2CO2(g) + N2(g) H= ?

Use:2CO (g) + O2 (g) 2CO2 (g) H = -566.0 kJ

N2 (g) + O (g) 2NO (g) H = 180.6 kJ

Answer: -746.6 kJ

Page 47: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

More Examples

Page 48: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Chapter Reactions Summary

Page 49: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

An equation:

Describes a reaction Must be balanced to follow the

Law of Conservation of Mass Can only be balanced by changing

the coefficients. Has special symbols to indicate state,

and if catalyst or energy is required.

Page 50: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Reactions

Scientists can tell what type they are by the reactants.

Single Replacement happens based on the activity series

Double Replacement happens if the product is a solid precipitate, water, or a gas. Use the solubility rules to see which product does not dissolve.

Page 51: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Replacement Reactions A substance will not always replace another in a

reaction. This is because substances differ in how they

can react with other substances. • This mainly occurs with metals and the halogens

Use an activity series to see if a reaction will occur.

On the activity series the most active elements are at the top and the least are at the bottom.

Page 52: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Predicting Products of Chemical Rxns. & Writing Equations

1. Determine the rxn. type by looking at the reactants.

2. Determine the products based on type

3. Use charges to write formulas of ionic compound & Don’t forget about diatomic elements!

4. Use coefficients to balance the equation.

Page 53: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Solubility Rules

1. All nitrates are soluble.

2. All compounds of Group 1 metals and the ammonium ion, NH4

+, are soluble.

3. All chlorides are soluble except: AgCl, Hg2Cl2 and PbCl2.

4. All sulfates are soluble except: PbSO4, BaSO4, and SrSO4.

Page 54: Predicting Products of Chemical Reactions Honors Chemistry Ch 10, 20.1, 16.1-16.4

Solubility Rules

5. All hydroxides and sulfides are insoluble except those of the Group 1 metals and the ammonium ion.

6. All carbonates and phosphates are insoluble except those of the Group 1 metals and the ammonium ion.