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7: Chemical Reactions

  • Page ID
    494721
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    • 7.1: The Chemical Equations
      In a chemical change, new substances are formed. In order for this to occur, the chemical bonds of the substances break, and the atoms that compose them separate and rearrange themselves into new substances with new chemical bonds. When this process occurs, we call it a chemical reaction. A chemical reaction is the process in which one or more substances are changed into one or more new substances.
    • 7.2: Balancing Chemical Equations
      Even though chemical compounds are broken up and new compounds are formed during a chemical reaction, atoms in the reactants do not disappear, nor do new atoms appear to form the products. In chemical reactions, atoms are never created or destroyed. The same atoms that were present in the reactants are present in the products—they are merely reorganized into different arrangements.
    • 7.3: Acid Base Reaction
      An acid-base reaction is one in which a hydrogen ion is transferred from one chemical species to another. Such reactions are of central importance to numerous natural and technological processes, ranging from the chemical transformations that take place within cells and the lakes and oceans, to the industrial-scale production of fertilizers, pharmaceuticals, and other substances essential to society.
    • 7.4: Redox Reaction
      The term oxidation was originally used to describe chemical reactions involving O2, but its meaning has evolved to refer to a broad and important reaction class known as oxidation-reduction (redox) reactions.
    • 7.5: Combustion Reactions
      A combustion reaction is a reaction in which a substance reacts with oxygen gas, releasing energy in the form of light and heat. Combustion reactions involve O2 as one reactant. The combustion of hydrogen gas producing water vapor qualifies as a combustion reaction.
    • 7.6: Content in Context
      In this unit, we'll explore how air pollutants interact with other chemicals in the atmosphere to form new pollutants. Now that you're familiar with chemical reactions, we'll apply that knowledge to understand processes like how nitrogen oxides react with volatile organic compounds...


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