Topic 11

Chemical Reactions

Chemical reactions involve the breaking of bonds in reactants and formation of new bonds in products, conserving mass and atoms throughout.

A. Types of Chemical Reactions

Eight Reaction Types

TypeDescriptionExample
Combination (Synthesis)Two or more reactants combine to form ONE product: A + B → AB2H₂ + O₂ → 2H₂O · 2Na + Cl₂ → 2NaCl
DecompositionONE reactant breaks into two or more products: AB → A + B2H₂O → 2H₂ + O₂ · CaCO₃ → CaO + CO₂
Single DisplacementOne element replaces another in a compound: A + BC → AC + BZn + CuSO₄ → ZnSO₄ + Cu · Fe + 2HCl → FeCl₂ + H₂↑
Double DisplacementIons of two compounds swap partners: AB + CD → AD + CBNaCl + AgNO₃ → AgCl↓ + NaNO₃
CombustionSubstance burns in O₂, releasing heat and light. Hydrocarbon + O₂ → CO₂ + H₂OCH₄ + 2O₂ → CO₂ + 2H₂O · C + O₂ → CO₂
RedoxSimultaneous oxidation and reduction — electrons transferred between species2Na + Cl₂ → 2NaCl · Fe + CuSO₄ → FeSO₄ + Cu
NeutralisationAcid + Base → Salt + Water (a special double displacement)HCl + NaOH → NaCl + H₂O
PrecipitationReaction produces an insoluble solid (precipitate) that falls out of solution (shown by ↓)BaCl₂ + Na₂SO₄ → BaSO₄↓ + 2NaCl
⚡ Symbols to Know ↓ = precipitate (insoluble solid forms). ↑ = gas evolved. (aq) = aqueous solution. (s) = solid. (l) = liquid. (g) = gas. Combustion always produces CO₂ + H₂O (complete combustion).

B. Redox Reactions — OIL RIG

Oxidation & Reduction

OIL — Oxidation Is Loss
Loss of electrons
  • Loss of electrons (e⁻)
  • Gain of oxygen
  • Loss of hydrogen
  • Oxidation state increases
RIG — Reduction Is Gain
Gain of electrons
  • Gain of electrons (e⁻)
  • Loss of oxygen
  • Gain of hydrogen
  • Oxidation state decreases
AgentWhat it does TO othersWhat happens TO IT
Oxidising AgentCauses oxidation of others (takes electrons)Gets REDUCED itself (gains electrons)
Reducing AgentCauses reduction of others (gives electrons)Gets OXIDISED itself (loses electrons)
Classic Redox Example Zn + CuSO₄ → ZnSO₄ + Cu Zn loses 2e⁻ → oxidised (Zn is the reducing agent). Cu²⁺ gains 2e⁻ → reduced (Cu²⁺ is the oxidising agent).
⚡ MCQ Tip OIL RIG — Oxidation Is Loss, Reduction Is Gain (of electrons). The oxidising agent is itself reduced. The reducing agent is itself oxidised. Rusting = oxidation of iron. Electrolysis: cathode = reduction, anode = oxidation (AN OX — RED CAT).

C. Balancing Chemical Equations

Rules for Balancing

  • Law of Conservation of Mass: atoms are neither created nor destroyed — total atoms on left = total on right
  • Only coefficients (numbers in front of formulae) can be changed — NEVER subscripts inside formulae
  • Balance atoms one element at a time — leave H and O till last
  • Check all elements are balanced and coefficients are in the lowest whole-number ratio
SymbolMeaning
Precipitate — insoluble solid formed
Gas evolved / escapes
(aq)Aqueous — dissolved in water
(s)Solid
(l)Liquid
(g)Gas

Quick MCQ Revision

FactAnswer
OIL RIGOxidation Is Loss, Reduction Is Gain (of electrons)
Oxidising agentGains electrons, causes oxidation in others — itself REDUCED
Reducing agentLoses electrons, causes reduction in others — itself OXIDISED
Combustion productsAlways CO₂ + H₂O (complete combustion of hydrocarbons)
Precipitate symbol↓ (insoluble solid falls out of solution)
Gas evolved symbol
Combination reactionA + B → AB (two reactants make one product)
Decomposition reactionAB → A + B (one reactant makes two products)
Law of Conservation of MassAtoms are neither created nor destroyed — balance equations with coefficients
Key