Unit 4: Chemical Reactions

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50 Terms

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Chemical equation

A symbolic representation of a chemical reaction showing reactants, products, and their relative amounts using formulas and coefficients.

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Balanced chemical equation

A chemical equation in which the number of atoms of each element is the same on both sides, reflecting conservation of atoms.

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Coefficient

A number placed in front of a chemical formula in an equation that indicates relative amounts (mole ratios) of reactants and products.

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Mole ratio

A ratio of moles of two substances in a reaction, taken from the coefficients of a balanced chemical equation.

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Conservation of atoms

Principle that atoms are rearranged in chemical reactions but not created or destroyed in ordinary chemical processes.

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State symbols

Notation in equations—(s), (l), (g), (aq)—that indicates physical state and often hints at driving forces (e.g., precipitate or gas formation).

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Aqueous (aq)

State symbol meaning dissolved in water as ions and/or molecules; important for determining which species dissociate in ionic equations.

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Precipitate

An insoluble solid that forms from mixing solutions; often a driving force for an aqueous reaction and written with (s).

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Diatomic elements

Elements that exist naturally as two-atom molecules in their standard form: H2, N2, O2, F2, Cl2, Br2, I2.

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Balancing by coefficients (not subscripts)

Balancing equations by changing coefficients (counts of particles), not subscripts (which would change the identity of the substance).

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Reaction type

A classification (e.g., synthesis, decomposition, combustion) used to help predict products and explain reactions, not just patterns to memorize.

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Synthesis (combination) reaction

Reaction in which two or more reactants form a single product; general pattern A + B → AB.

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Decomposition reaction

Reaction in which one compound breaks into two or more products; general pattern AB → A + B (often requires heat).

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Combustion reaction

Reaction with O2 that typically forms oxides; used frequently for predicting products and practicing balancing.

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Hydrocarbon combustion

Combustion of a compound containing C and H (and sometimes O) that produces CO2 and H2O (for complete combustion).

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Precipitation reaction

An aqueous reaction where ions combine to form an insoluble ionic compound (solid precipitate) when two solutions are mixed.

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Solubility guidelines

Rules that help predict whether an ionic compound is soluble (aq) or insoluble (s), determining whether a precipitate forms.

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Acid–base neutralization

Reaction where an acid (H+ source) reacts with a base (OH− source) to form water and a salt; water formation is a common driving force.

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Net ionic equation

An equation showing only the species that undergo chemical change in aqueous solution, with spectator ions removed.

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Molecular equation

Equation written with compounds as intact formulas (not split into ions), including state symbols.

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Complete ionic equation

Equation in which strong electrolytes are written as separate ions; used to identify and cancel spectator ions.

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Spectator ion

An ion that appears unchanged on both sides of the complete ionic equation and does not participate in the chemical change.

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Strong electrolyte

A substance that dissociates or ionizes essentially completely in water (many soluble ionic compounds and strong acids), so it is written as ions in ionic equations.

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Weak electrolyte

A substance that only partially ionizes in water (weak acids/bases); often written mainly as molecules in net ionic equations.

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Nonelectrolyte

A substance that dissolves as neutral molecules and produces essentially no ions in solution (e.g., sugar).

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Driving forces in aqueous reactions

Factors that favor reaction in water by removing species from solution: formation of a precipitate, a gas, or a weak electrolyte (especially water).

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Stoichiometry

Quantitative relationship between reactants and products using a balanced equation’s coefficients as mole ratios.

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Limiting reactant

The reactant consumed first, which stops the reaction and determines the maximum amount of product that can form.

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Theoretical yield

The maximum possible amount of product predicted by stoichiometry from the limiting reactant.

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Excess reactant

A reactant present in more than the stoichiometric amount; it remains after the limiting reactant is used up.

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Percent yield

A measure of reaction efficiency: (actual yield ÷ theoretical yield) × 100%.

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Percent error

Comparison of experimental to expected value: |experimental − expected| ÷ expected × 100%.

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Molarity (M)

Solution concentration defined as moles of solute per liter of solution: M = n/V.

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Solution stoichiometry (n = MV)

Method to find moles from solution volume and molarity: n = M·V (with V in liters).

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Titration

A technique where a solution of known concentration reacts with an unknown until stoichiometric completion, allowing determination of the unknown concentration.

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Titrant

The solution of known concentration added during a titration (often delivered from a buret).

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Analyte

The substance/solution of unknown concentration being measured in a titration.

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Equivalence point

Point in a titration where stoichiometric amounts have reacted according to the balanced equation (defined by moles, not equal volumes).

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Brønsted–Lowry acid–base theory

Model in which acids donate H+ (protons) and bases accept H+; acid–base reactions form conjugate pairs differing by one H+.

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Conjugate acid–base pair

Two species related by gain/loss of one H+ (e.g., HC2H3O2 / C2H3O2−).

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Amphoteric

Able to act as either an acid or a base depending on the reaction partner; water is a common amphoteric substance.

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Dilution (M1V1 = M2V2)

Relationship for dilution (adding solvent) where moles of solute are conserved; not used for chemical reaction stoichiometry.

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Gravimetric analysis

Determining amount of an analyte by converting it to a precipitate of known formula, measuring precipitate mass, and using stoichiometry to find the analyte amount.

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Combustion analysis

Determining composition (often of C/H/O compounds) by combusting a sample and using measured CO2 and H2O to calculate moles of C and H (and O by mass difference if needed).

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Empirical formula

The simplest whole-number ratio of atoms in a compound, often found by converting element amounts to moles and reducing ratios.

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Oxidation state

A bookkeeping value assigned to atoms to track electron distribution; used to identify redox processes by changes in oxidation numbers.

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Oxidation

Process in which oxidation state increases (loss of electrons) in a redox reaction.

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Reduction

Process in which oxidation state decreases (gain of electrons) in a redox reaction.

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Half-reaction

An equation showing either oxidation or reduction alone, explicitly including electrons to track electron transfer.

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Redox titration (permanganate endpoint)

A titration based on oxidation–reduction; MnO4− is purple and a persistent faint pink color indicates slight excess permanganate at the endpoint.