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WWU CHEM 121 - Lecture Notes

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Exam Tomorrow (R)Slide 2Slide 3Slide 4Slide 5Slide 6Slide 7Slide 8Slide 9Slide 10Slide 11Slide 12Slide 13Slide 14Figure 2.25: Representation of the reaction of methane with oxygen.Slide 16Slide 17Slide 18Slide 19Slide 20Slide 21Slide 22Slide 23Slide 24Slide 25Slide 26Slide 27Other ResourcesExam Tomorrow (R)10-11:30 amReview/Problem SessionToday, 11 am, SL 110•hypochlorous acid•HClO•Hypo-chlorite ion•ClO-•chlorous acid•HClO2•chlorite ion•ClO2-•chloric acid•HClO3•chlorate ion•ClO3-•perchloric acid•HClO4•Per-chlorate ion•ClO4-•Oxo-acid•Oxo-anion•What are the names of the following compounds?–OF2–S4N4–BCl3OF2 is oxygen difluorideS4N4 is tetrasulfur tetranitrideBCl3 is boron trichloride•What are the formulas for the following binary molecular compounds?–carbon disulfide–nitrogen tribromide–dinitrogen tetrafluorideThe formula for carbon disulfide is CS2.The formula for dinitrogen tetrafluoride is N2F4.The formula for nitrogen tribromide is NBr3.•Bromine has an oxoacid, HBrO2, bromous acid (compare to HClO2, chlorous acid). What are the name and formula of the corresponding anion?The anion corresponding to HBrO2 isbromite, BrO2-.•Organic Compounds•An important class of molecular substances; they contain carbon combined with other elements – notably hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen.•Hydrocarbons contain only carbon and hydrogen.•A functional group is a reactive portion of a molecule that undergoes predictable reactions.•Examples•Name of Group•Functional Group•Methyl alcohol•AlcoholOH•Dimethyl ether•EtherO•Acetic acid•Carboxylic acidCOOH•Hydrate•A compound that contains water molecules weakly bound in the crystals.•The formula of a hydrate is written with a dot before the water molecule(s) included.•For example:CuSO45H2O•Hydrates are named using the anhydrous (without water) compound name followed by the prefix for the number of water molecules included and the word “hydrate.”•For example:CuSO45H2O is namedcopper(II) sulfate pentahydrate.•A compound whose common name is green vitriol has the chemical formula FeSO47H2O. What is the chemical name of this compound?FeSO47H2O is iron(II) sulfate heptahydrate.•Calcium chloride hexahydrate is used to melt snow on roads. What is the chemical formula of the compound?The chemical formula for calcium chloride hexahydrate is CaCl26H2O.•A chemical equation is the symbolic representation of a chemical reaction in terms of chemical formulas.•For example:2Na + Cl2  2NaCl•Reactants are the starting materials; they are written on the left of the equation.•Products are the materials at the end of the reaction; they are written on the right of the equation.•Because a reaction must accurately describe the chemical reaction, it must be consistent with the law of conservation of mass.•When this is not the case, after correct formulas are written for each reactant and product, the coefficients are adjusted so that the same number of each atom is present in both the reactants and the products. •This is called balancing the equation.Figure 2.25: Representation of the reaction of methane with oxygen. Write a balanced chemical reaction for this combustion reaction. CH4(g) + 2 O2 (g) 2 H2 O(l) + CO2(g)•Balance the following equation:•CS2 + O2  CO2 + SO2Tally the number of each atom on each side:C 1 on reactant side; 1 on product sideS 2 on reactant side; 1 on product sideO 2 on reactant side; 4 on product sideBegin by inserting the coefficient “2” before SO2 on the product side. We leave O2 until later because it is an element.•CS2 + O2  CO2 + 2SO2•Tally the atoms again:•C 1 on reactant side; 1 on product side•S 2 on reactant side; 2 on product side•O 2 on reactant side; 6 on product side•Insert a “3” before O2:•CS2 + 3O2  CO2 + 2SO2•CS2 + 3O2  CO2 + 2SO2•Tally the atoms again:•C 1 on reactant side; 1 on product side•S 2 on reactant side; 2 on product side•O 6 on reactant side; 6 on product side•The reaction is now balanced!•Balance the following equation:•NH3 + O2  NO + H2OTally the number of each atom on each side:N 1 on reactant side; 1 on product sideH 3 on reactant side; 2 on product sideO 2 on reactant side; 2 on product sideBegin by inserting the coefficient “2” before NH3 on the reactant side and the coefficient “3” before H2O on the product side. We leave O2 until later because it is an element.•2NH3 + O2  NO + 3H2O•Tally the atoms again:•N 2 on reactant side; 1 on product side•H 6 on reactant side; 6 on product side•O 2 on reactant side; 4 on product side•To balance N, insert a “2” before NO:•2NH3 + O2  2NO + 3H2O•2NH3 + O2  2NO + 3H2O•Tally the atoms again:N 2 on reactant side; 2 on product sideH 6 on reactant side; 6 on product sideO 2 on reactant side; 5 on product side•Since this gives us an odd number oxygens, we double the coefficients on NH3, NO, and H2O and to balance O, insert a “5” before O2.Tally the atoms again to double check:4NH3 + 5O2  4NO + 6H2ON 4 on reactant side; 4 on product sideH 12 on reactant side; 12 on product sideO 10 on reactant side; 10 on product side•The reaction is now balanced!•Balance the following equation:•C2H5OH + O2  CO2 + H2OTally the number of each atom on each side:C 2 on reactant side; 1 on product sideH 6 on reactant side; 2 on product sideO 3 on reactant side; 3 on product sideBegin by balancing H. Insert the coefficient “3” before H2O on the product side. We leave O2 until later because it is an element.•C2H5OH + O2  CO2 + 3H2O•Tally the number of each atom on each side:•C 2 on reactant side; 1 on product side•H 6 on reactant side; 6 on product side•O 3 on reactant side; 5 on product side•To balance C, insert a “2” before CO2.•C2H5OH + O2  2CO2 + 3H2O•Tally the number of each atom on each side:•C 2 on reactant side; 2 on product side•H 6 on reactant side; 6 on product side•O 3 on reactant side; 7 on product side•To balance O, insert a “3” before O2.•C2H5OH + 3O2  2CO2 + 3H2O•Tally the number of each atom on each side:•C 2 on reactant side; 2 on product side•H 6 on reactant side; 6 on product side•O 7 on reactant side; 7 on product side•The reaction is now balanced!•Polymer•A very large molecule that is made up of a number of smaller molecules repeatedly linked together.•Monomers•The small molecules that


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