Chemical equation
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A
chemical equation is the symbolic representation of a
chemical reaction in the form of symbols and formulae, wherein the
reactant entities are given on the left-hand side and the
product entities on the right-hand side.
[1] The coefficients next to the symbols and formulae of entities are the absolute values of the
stoichiometric numbers. The first chemical equation was diagrammed by
Jean Beguin in 1615.
[2]
Formation of chemical reaction
A chemical equation consists of the
chemical formulas
of the reactants (the starting substances) and the chemical formula of
the products (substances formed in the chemical reaction). The two are
separated by an
arrow symbol (

, usually read as "yields") and each individual substance's chemical formula is separated from others by a
plus sign.
As an example, the equation for the reaction of
hydrochloric acid with
sodium can be denoted:
- 2 HCl + 2 Na → 2 NaCl + H
2
This equation would be read as "two HCl plus two Na yields two NaCl
and H two." But, for equations involving complex chemicals, rather than
reading the letter and its subscript, the chemical formulas are read
using
IUPAC nomenclature. Using IUPAC nomenclature, this equation would be read as "hydrochloric acid plus sodium yields
sodium chloride and
hydrogen gas."
This equation indicates that sodium and HCl react to form NaCl and H
2.
It also indicates that two sodium molecules are required for every two
hydrochloric acid molecules and the reaction will form two sodium
chloride molecules and one
diatomic molecule of hydrogen gas molecule for every two hydrochloric acid and two sodium molecules that react. The
stoichiometric coefficients (the numbers in front of the chemical formulas) result from the
law of conservation of mass and the
law of conservation of charge (see "Balancing Chemical Equation" section below for more information).
Common symbols
Symbols are used to differentiate between different types of reactions. To denote the type of reaction:
[1]
- "
" symbol is used to denote a stoichiometric relation.
- "
" symbol is used to denote a net forward reaction.
- "
" symbol is used to denote a reaction in both directions.
- "
" symbol is used to denote an equilibrium.
The physical state of chemicals is also very commonly stated in
parentheses after the chemical symbol, especially for ionic reactions.
When stating physical state, (s) denotes a solid, (l) denotes a liquid,
(g) denotes a gas and (aq) denotes an
aqueous solution.
If the reaction requires energy, it is indicated above the arrow. A capital Greek letter delta (

) is put on the reaction arrow to show that energy in the form of heat is added to the reaction.

is used if the energy is added in the form of light. Other symbols are used for other specific types of energy or radiation.
Balancing chemical equations
As seen from the equation
CH
4 + 2
O
2 →
CO
2 + 2
H
2O, a coefficient of 2 must be placed before the
oxygen gas on the reactants side and before the
water
on the products side in order for, as per the law of conservation of
mass, the quantity of each element does not change during the reaction
P4O10 + 6
H2O → 4
H3PO4
This chemical equation is being balanced by first multiplying H
3PO
4 by four to match the number of P atoms, and then multiplying H
2O by six to match the numbers of H and O atoms.
The
law of conservation of mass
dictates that the quantity of each element does not change in a
chemical reaction. Thus, each side of the chemical equation must
represent the same quantity of any particular element. Likewise, the
charge is conserved in a chemical reaction. Therefore, the same charge
must be present on both sides of the balanced equation.
One balances a chemical equation by changing the scalar number for
each chemical formula. Simple chemical equations can be balanced by
inspection, that is, by trial and error. Another technique involves
solving a
system of linear equations.
Balanced equations are written with smallest whole-number
coefficients. If there is no coefficient before a chemical formula, the
coefficient 1 is understood.
The method of inspection can be outlined as putting a coefficient of 1
in front of the most complex chemical formula and putting the other
coefficients before everything else such that both sides of the arrows
have the same number of each atom. If any
fractional coefficient exists, multiply every coefficient with the smallest number required to make them whole, typically the
denominator of the fractional coefficient for a reaction with a single fractional coefficient.
As an example, seen in the above image, the burning of methane would be balanced by putting a coefficient of 1 before the CH
4:
- 1 CH4 + O2 → CO2 + H2O
Since there is one carbon on each side of the arrow, the first atom (carbon) is balanced.
Looking at the next atom (hydrogen), the right-hand side has two
atoms, while the left-hand side has four. To balance the hydrogens, 2
goes in front of the H
2O, which yields:
- 1 CH4 + O2 → CO2 + 2 H2O
Inspection of the last atom to be balanced (oxygen) shows that the
right-hand side has four atoms, while the left-hand side has two. It can
be balanced by putting a 2 before O
2, giving the balanced equation:
- CH4 + 2 O2 → CO2 + 2 H2O
This equation does not have any coefficients in front of CH
4 and CO
2, since a coefficient of 1 is dropped.
Matrix Method
Generally, any chemical equation involving
J different molecules can be written as:

where
Rj is the symbol for the
j-th molecule, and ν
j is the stoichiometric coefficient for the
j-th molecule, positive for products, negative for reactants (or vice-versa). A properly balanced chemical equation will then obey:

where the composition matrix
aij is the number of atoms of element
i in molecule
j. Any vector which, when operated upon by the composition matrix yields a zero vector, is said to be a member of the
kernel or null space of the operator. Any member ν
j of the null space of
aij will serve to balance a chemical equation involving the set of
J
molecules comprising the system. A "preferred" stoichiometric vector is
one for which all of its elements can converted to integers with no
common divisors by multiplication by a suitable constant.
Generally, the composition matrix is degenerate: That is to say, not
all of its rows will be linearly independent. In other words, the
rank (
JR) of the composition matrix is generally less than its number of columns (
J). By the
rank-nullity theorem, the null space of
aij will have
J-JR dimensions and this number is called the nullity (
JN) of
aij. The problem of balancing a chemical equation then becomes the problem of determining the
JN-dimensional null space of the composition matrix. It is important to note that only for
JN=1, will there be a unique solution. For
JN>1 there will be an infinite number of solutions to the balancing problem, but only
JN of them will be independent: If
JN
independent solutions to the balancing problem can be found, then any
other solution will be a linear combination of these solutions. If
JN=0, there will be no solution to the balancing problem.
Techniques have been developed
[3][4] to quickly calculate a set of
JN
independent solutions to the balancing problem and are superior to the
inspection and algebraic method in that they are determinative and yield
all solutions to the balancing problem.
Ionic equations
An ionic equation is a chemical equation in which
electrolytes are written as dissociated
ions. Ionic equations are used for
single and
double displacement reactions that occur in
aqueous solutions.
For example, in the following precipitation reaction:

the full ionic equation is:

In this reaction, the Ca
2+ and the NO
3−
ions remain in solution and are not part of the reaction. That is,
these ions are identical on both the reactant and product side of the
chemical equation. Because such ions do not participate in the reaction,
they are called
spectator ions. A
net ionic
equation is the full ionic equation from which the spectator ions have
been removed. The net ionic equation of the proceeding reactions is:

or, in
reduced balanced form,

In a
neutralization or
acid/
base reaction, the net ionic equation will usually be:
- H+(aq) + OH−(aq) → H2O(l)
There are a few acid/base reactions that produce a precipitate in
addition to the water molecule shown above. An example is the reaction
of
barium hydroxide with
phosphoric acid,
which produces not only water but also the insoluble salt barium
phosphate. In this reaction, there are no spectator ions, so the net
ionic equation is the same as the full ionic equation.


Double displacement reactions that feature a
carbonate reacting with an acid have the net ionic equation:

If every ion is a "spectator ion" then there was no reaction, and the net ionic equation is null.
Generally, if
zj is the multiple of elementary charge on the
j-th molecule, charge neutrality may be written as:

where the
νj are the stoichiometric coefficients described above. The
zj may be incorporated
[3][5] as an additional row in the
aij matrix described above, and a properly balanced ionic equation will then also obey:

No comments:
Post a Comment