Science, asked by Abhigursal, 2 months ago

Explain law of conservation of mass​

Answers

Answered by surbhi8542
0

Answer:

The law of conservation of mass states that mass in an isolated system is neither created nor destroyed by chemical reactions or physical transformations. According to the law of conservation of mass, the mass of the products in a chemical reaction must equal the mass of the reactants

Answered by hassanalihassanali06
0

Answer:

Law Conservation of Mass;

The law of conservation of mass states that matter cannot be created or destroyed in a chemical reaction

"According to law of conservation of mass: Mass of reactants = Mass of products."

Examples;

. For example, when wood burns, the mass of the soot, ashes, and gases equals the original mass of the charcoal and the oxygen when it first reacted. So the mass of the product equals the mass of the reactant.

Combustion process;

: Burning of wood is a conservation of mass as the burning of wood involves Oxygen, Carbon dioxide, water vapor and ashes.

Chemical reactions:

To get one molecule of H2O (water) with the molecular weight of 10, Hydrogen with molecular weight 2 is added with Oxygen whose molecular weight is 8, thereby conserving the mass.

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