Amount of Substance (Chemical Equations)
0 Pages | Leaving School | 01/05/2024

Chemical EquationsChemical Equations

Chemical Equations


Chemical equations In a chemical reaction, elements or compounds react with one another and other elements and/or compounds are formed.

They involve electrons moving between species. The nuclei, on the other hand, always remain intact.

All chemical reactions can be represented in the form of a chemical equation. Through a chemical equation you can see what species were involved in the reaction and how they reacted. All chemical equations are composed of:

  • the identities of all reactants and products
  • the reaction coefficients
  • the state symbols

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The identities of all the reactants and products

All species involved in the reaction should be shown while those that were not should be left out. The reactants are written on the left-hand side of the arrow and the products on the right-hand side.

Due to the fact that the nuclei do not change, the number of atoms must be equal in number on both sides of the equation. Atoms can be transferred between species but they cannot be created or destroyed.

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The reaction coefficients

Atoms, elements and compounds combine with one another in simple ratios composed of whole numbers. Reaction coefficients represent the ratio in which species react and in which products are created. They come before the chemical formula of a species within an equation. If there is no coefficient stated then the assumption is that it is equal to 1.

Calculating what the reaction coefficients of a reaction are is called balancing the equation. The total number of atoms on both sides must be balanced.

Reaction coefficients do not show the actual amounts of substances reacting but the way in which they react.

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The state symbols

State symbols show the physical state of each species involved in a reaction and must be included. For A-level chemistry you should know the following four:

  • solid (s)
  • liquid (l)
  • gas (g)
  • aqueous (aq)

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Ionic Equations

All lot of the time, when a reaction takes place in an aqueous solution the equation does not involve all the ions included in the reaction. This is because some species remain in the aqueous solution both before and after the reaction but play no part in the actual reaction. They are called spectator ions.

This type of equation can be very useful in the simplification of precipitation reactions and acid-base reactions. In fact, any reaction between strong acids and strong alkalis has an identical ionic equation.

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