Balancing Chemical Equations
A chemical equation is a representation of a chemical reaction that uses symbols to show the relationship between the reactants and the products. Reactants are on the left side of the equation and Products are on the right side of the equation. The Law of conservation of mass states that mass is niether created or destroy meaning, the mass of the product(s) in a chemical reaction always has to equal the mass of the reactant(s).
image source:
Boundless.com
A chemical equation is a representation of a chemical reaction that uses symbols to show the relationship between the reactants and the products. Reactants are on the left side of the equation and Products are on the right side of the equation. The Law of conservation of mass states that mass is niether created or destroy meaning, the mass of the product(s) in a chemical reaction always has to equal the mass of the reactant(s).
image source:
Boundless.com
Visit this website How to Balance Chemical Equations. Copy down the 7 steps onto your Task #1 Worksheet. With each step make the nessecary changes to the chemical equation they use as an example, onto the worksheet. HINT!!!! to navigate this website scroll up and down not left to right.
Watch How to Balance Chemical Equations above, As the instructor says watch for as long as you need, try and pause the video and attempt to work out the examples before he completes them and check yourself.
Task #1:
Play the Chembalancer game and complete the worksheet with the game. If you have difficulty revisit the Youtube video above Or you can click on some of the examples below.
Other Examples:
Watch the following turorial videos on How to Balance Chemical Equations, you should copy as least 3 examples they walk you through into your science notebook.
Simple Balancing of a NaCL Equation
More Visual Balancing Example
Balancing with Polyatomic Ions
Task #1:
Play the Chembalancer game and complete the worksheet with the game. If you have difficulty revisit the Youtube video above Or you can click on some of the examples below.
Other Examples:
Watch the following turorial videos on How to Balance Chemical Equations, you should copy as least 3 examples they walk you through into your science notebook.
Simple Balancing of a NaCL Equation
More Visual Balancing Example
Balancing with Polyatomic Ions