Chemistry, asked by sama3, 1 year ago

how to solve chemical equation


Ankeeru: can i give u an example

Answers

Answered by Ankeeru
1
When you write an equation for a chemical reaction, the two sides of the equation should balance — you need the same number of each kind of element on both sides. If you carry out a chemical reaction and carefully sum up the masses of all the reactants, and then compare the sum to the sum of the masses of all the products, you see that they’re the same.
A law in chemistry, the Law of Conservation of Mass, states, “In an ordinary chemical reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed.” This means that you have neither gained nor lost any atoms during the reaction. They may be combined differently, but they’re still there.

One chemical reaction is called the Haber process, a method for preparing ammonia by reacting nitrogen gas with hydrogen gas:

N²(g) + H²(g) ⇒NH³(g).

This equation shows you what happens in the reaction, but it doesn’t show you how much of each element you need to produce the ammonia. To find out how much of each element you need, you have to balance the equation — make sure that the number of atoms on the left side of the equation equals the number of atoms on the right.



i hope it helps u ...........
Answered by edwinthomas060
1
In general, to balance an equation, here are the things we need to do:Count the atoms of each element in the reactants and the products.Use coefficients; place them in front of the compounds as needed.


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