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Chemical Reactions

The Six Types of Chemical Reaction

Gratuitous atom graphic

This page is a recreation of a handout given to my students in class. If you're one of my students, you should have this already, so go dig it out of your backpack. If you're not, then download this and give it to your teacher and tell them that they really ought to get with the digital age
 
All chemical reactions can be placed into one of six categories.  Here they are, in no particular order:

1) Combustion: A combustion reaction is when oxygen combines with another compound to form water and carbon dioxide. These reactions are exothermic, meaning they produce heat. An example of this kind of reaction is the burning of napthalene:

C10H8 + 12 O2 ---> 10 CO2 + 4 H2O


2) Synthesis: A synthesis reaction is when two or more simple compounds combine to form a more complicated one. These reactions come in the general form of:

A + B ---> AB
One example of a synthesis reaction is the combination of iron and sulfur to form iron (II) sulfide:
8 Fe + S8 ---> 8 FeS


3) Decomposition: A decomposition reaction is the opposite of a synthesis reaction - a complex molecule breaks down to make simpler ones. These reactions come in the general form:

AB ---> A + B
One example of a decomposition reaction is the electrolysis of water to make oxygen and hydrogen gas:
2 H2O ---> 2 H2 + O2


4) Single displacement: This is when one element trades places with another element in a compound. These reactions come in the general form of:

A + BC ---> AC + B
One example of a single displacement reaction is when magnesium replaces hydrogen in water to make magnesium hydroxide and hydrogen gas:
Mg + 2 H2O ---> Mg(OH)2 + H2


5) Double displacement: This is when the anions and cations of two different molecules switch places, forming two entirely different compounds. These reactions are in the general form:

AB + CD ---> AD + CB
One example of a double displacement reaction is the reaction of lead (II) nitrate with potassium iodide to form lead (II) iodide and potassium nitrate:
Pb(NO3)2 + 2 KI ---> PbI2 + 2 KNO3


 

Mr. Guch's Handy Checklist for figuring out what type of reaction is taking place:

Follow this series of questions. When you can answer "yes" to a question, then stop!

1)  Does your reaction have oxygen as one of it's reactants and carbon dioxide and water as products? If yes, then it's a combustion reaction

2)  Does your reaction have two (or more) chemicals combining to form one chemical? If yes, then it's a synthesis reaction

3)  Does your reaction have one large molecule falling apart to make several small ones? If yes, then it's a decomposition reaction

4)  Does your reaction have any molecules that contain only one element? If yes, then it's a single displacement reaction

5)  If you haven't answered "yes" to any of the questions above, then you've got a double displacement reaction

Sample Problems (the solutions are in the next section)

List what type the following reactions are:

1)  NaOH + KNO3 --> NaNO3 + KOH

2)  CH4 + 2 O2 --> CO2 + 2 H2O

3)  2 Fe + 6 NaBr --> 2 FeBr3 + 6 Na

4)  CaSO4 + Mg(OH)2 --> Ca(OH)2 + MgSO4

5)  Pb + O2 --> PbO2

6)  Na2CO3 --> Na2O + CO2

Solutions to the Sample Problems
1)  double displacement
2)  combustion
3)  single displacement
4)  double displacement
5)  synthesis
6)  decomposition


Questions?  Comments?  Something to get off your chest?  Email me at misterguch@chemfiesta.com

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