What are the laws of chemical combination? how dalton's atomic theory explains these laws?
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Here is your answer ⤵⤵⤵⤵⤵
John Dalton based his theory on two laws. They are explained below:
Law of Conservation of Mass⤵⤵⤵
According to the law of conservation of mass, the matter is neither created nor destroyed. This means, in a chemical reaction, amount of elements remains same in starting when only reactants there and at the completion of the reaction when product formed. We always use the “Law of conservation of mass” when we balance chemical equations.
Law of Constant Composition⤵⤵⤵
According to the law of constant composition, a pure compound will always have the same proportion of the same elements. For example, table salt with the molecular formula of NaCl holds the same proportions of the elements Na (sodium) and Cl (chlorine). This composition doesn’t depend on where the salt came from and how much salt one should have.
Here is your answer ⤵⤵⤵⤵⤵
John Dalton based his theory on two laws. They are explained below:
Law of Conservation of Mass⤵⤵⤵
According to the law of conservation of mass, the matter is neither created nor destroyed. This means, in a chemical reaction, amount of elements remains same in starting when only reactants there and at the completion of the reaction when product formed. We always use the “Law of conservation of mass” when we balance chemical equations.
Law of Constant Composition⤵⤵⤵
According to the law of constant composition, a pure compound will always have the same proportion of the same elements. For example, table salt with the molecular formula of NaCl holds the same proportions of the elements Na (sodium) and Cl (chlorine). This composition doesn’t depend on where the salt came from and how much salt one should have.
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