What supports the idea that mass is conserved in a reaction that produces a gas as a product?
Answers
Answered by
4
This law of conservation of energy presents that, in spite of chemical reaction, or physical transformations, mass is conserved and cannot be created or destroyed.
Considering an isolated system. In other words, in a chemical reaction, the mass of the products will always be balanced to the mass of the reactants.
Matter neither can be created nor destroyed in chemical reactions.
Conservation of mass is applicable here and is applicable to any other chemical reaction.
Similar questions