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6: Chemical Reactions

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    441839
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    • 6.1: Chemical Equations
      Chemical reactions occur when one or more chemicals combine to form one or more new chemicals. The law of conservation of matter is obeyed when writing chemical equations to describe chemical reactions.
    • 6.2: Balancing Chemical Equations
      Chemical reactions are represented by chemical equations that list reactants and products. Proper chemical equations are balanced; the same number of each element’s atoms appears on each side of the equation.
    • 6.3: The Mole (aka Avogadro's Number)
    • 6.4: Mole-to-Mole Conversions
      Previously, you learned to balance chemical equations by comparing the numbers of each type of atom in the reactants and products. The coefficients in front of the chemical formulas represent the numbers of molecules or formula units (depending on the type of substance). In this section, we will extend the meaning of the coefficients in a chemical equation.
    • 6.5: Molar Mass
    • 6.6: Conversions Between Moles and Mass
    • 6.7: Redox Reactions
      Chemical reactions in which electrons are transferred are called oxidation-reduction, or redox, reactions. Oxidation is the loss of electrons. Reduction is the gain of electrons. Oxidation and reduction always occur together, even though they can be written as separate chemical equations.
    • 6.8: Recognizing Redox Reactions
      Oxidation numbers, indicating if an atom is neural, electron-rich, or electron-poor, are assigned to atoms in a redox equation. Keeping track of oxidation numbers on the reactant and product sides of a chemical equation provide information to determine what species is oxidized and what species is reduced.
    • 6.9: Practice Problems- Writing and Balancing Chemical Equations


    6: Chemical Reactions is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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