Chemistry, asked by travelneeds, 1 year ago

hey mates.....!
please answer me....
is this differenciation right...??

Attachments:

PSN03: no u re wrong.....
PSN03: *valid
PSN03: the 3rd point is not valid
travelneeds: please give me an appropriate answer...
PSN03: ok...so chemical reactions involve transfer of electrons....they obey conservation of mass whereas nuclear reactions do the opposite
PSN03: we can't comment on energy cause there are some exceptions...but still the 2nd one is valid
travelneeds: thankyou so much for helping me...
travelneeds: very good explanation......now i understood the concept clearly
PSN03: welcome dude...anytime :-)
travelneeds: ☺☺

Answers

Answered by PSN03
0

so chemical reactions involve transfer of electrons

they obey law of conservation of mass whereas nuclear reactions do the opposite

Nuclear reactions do not involve transfer of electron

some nuclear reactions might give up totally different products with no signs of ractants whereas chemical reactions have the reactants and products same.

the first point of yours is valid...

actually there is no energy change in the overall reaction so a better point would be to say nuclear reactions are highly exothermic and requires nuclear reactors for controlled reactions.

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