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Any chemical equations violates the law of conservation of energy.
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The Law of Conservtion of Mass is essential in all chemical reactions. "related to chemical reactions" is a foolish statement, because the words are "essential", "required", and "fundamental".
The law of conservation of matter states that matter cannot be created or destroyed in an ordinary chemical reaction.
Chemical reactions respect the law of mass conservation.
You think probable to the law of mass conservation.
Any chemical equations violates the law of conservation of energy.
Scientists call this law the law of conservation of matter
The law of conservation of mass applies to all chemical reactions with the exception of nuclear reactions. In nuclear reactions, mass is converted to energy to vice versa. Thus, the law of conservation of mass does not apply in these cases.
The law of Conservation of Mass states that in ordinary chemical reactions, mass can not be created or destroyed.
All chemical reactions obey the law of conservation of matter.
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Atoms cannot be added or lost in a chemical reaction.
The law of conservation of energy itself is not strictly correct since nuclear reactions change a small amount of matter into energy, if this is what you mean.
You are confusing the law of conservation of matter/mass with the law of conservation of energy. The law of conservation of matter/mass states that in a closed system matter is neither created nor destroyed. During a chemical reaction matter is rearranged, it doesn't change forms (energy can change forms). The atoms in the products are the same atoms that were in the reactants.