Chemical Reactions
Group: 4 #group-4
Relations
- Exothermic: Exothermic reactions release energy to the surroundings.
- Molecules: Molecules undergo chemical reactions, forming new molecules.
- Single Displacement Reactions: Single displacement reactions involve the transfer of an element from one compound to another.
- Equilibrium: Chemical equilibrium is the state where the rates of forward and reverse reactions are equal.
- Endothermic: Endothermic reactions absorb energy from the surroundings.
- Catalysts: Catalysts are substances that increase the rate of a chemical reaction without being consumed.
- Precipitation Reactions: Precipitation reactions form an insoluble solid product from soluble reactants.
- Compounds: Compounds can be formed or broken down through chemical reactions.
- Reactants: Reactants are the starting substances in a chemical reaction.
- Decomposition Reactions: Decomposition reactions break down a single reactant into two or more products.
- Combustion Reactions: Combustion reactions involve the burning of a fuel with an oxidizing agent, typically oxygen.
- Double Displacement Reactions: Double displacement reactions involve the exchange of atoms or ions between two compounds.
- Oxidation-Reduction: Oxidation-reduction reactions involve the transfer of electrons between reactants.
- Products: Products are the substances formed as a result of a chemical reaction.
- Activation Energy: Activation energy is the minimum energy required to initiate a chemical reaction.
- Collision Theory: Collision theory explains the requirements for effective collisions between reactant particles.
- Transition State: The transition state is the highest energy configuration in the reaction pathway.
- Synthesis Reactions: Synthesis reactions combine two or more reactants to form a single product.
- Reaction Mechanisms: Reaction mechanisms describe the step-by-step sequence of events in a chemical reaction.
- Acid-Base Reactions: Acid-base reactions involve the transfer of protons between reactants.
- Molecular: Molecular processes often involve chemical reactions, where bonds are broken and formed.
- Rate of Reaction: The rate of reaction is the speed at which a chemical reaction occurs.
- Molecular Weight: Molecular weights are important in understanding and predicting chemical reactions.