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Chapter Seventeen: Chemical Change

Chapter Seventeen: Chemical Change. 17.1 Chemical Reactions 17.2 Balancing Equations 17.3 Classifying Reactions. Exothermic vs. Endothermic. Exothermic A chemical reaction in which energy is released to the environment Ex. Hand warmers, combustion. Endothermic

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Chapter Seventeen: Chemical Change

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  1. Chapter Seventeen: Chemical Change • 17.1 Chemical Reactions • 17.2 Balancing Equations • 17.3 Classifying Reactions

  2. Exothermic vs. Endothermic • Exothermic • A chemical reaction in which energy is released to the environment • Ex. Hand warmers, combustion • Endothermic • A chemical reaction in which energy is absorbed from the environment • Ex. Instant cold packs

  3. 17.3 Addition reactions • In an addition reaction, two or more substances combine to form a new compound.

  4. 17.3 Decomposition reactions • A chemical reaction in which a single compound is broken down to produce two or more smaller compounds is called a decomposition reaction.

  5. 17.3 Single Displacement • In a single-displacement reaction, one element replaces a similar element in a compound.

  6. 17.3 Double Displacement • In a double-displacement reaction, ions from two compounds in solution exchange places to produce two new compounds. • One of the compounds formed is usually a precipitate that settles out of the solution, a gas that bubbles out of the solution, or a molecular compound such as water.

  7. 17.3 Precipitation reactions • A precipitate is a new solid product that comes out of solution in a chemical reaction. • The formation of a cloudy precipitate is evidence that a double-displacement reaction has occurred.

  8. 17.3 Precipitation • The limewater test for carbon dioxide is a precipitation reaction.

  9. 17.3 Combustion reactions • A combustion reaction, also called burning, occurs when a substance such as wood, natural gas, or propane combines with oxygen and releases a large amount of energy in the form of light and heat.

  10. 17.3 Combustion reactions • What do reactants like wood, natural gas, and propane have in common?

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