Any chemical reaction creates a new substance.
Well, I think what you mean is the products.
A chemical reaction goes as follows :
ReactantX + ReactantY ---> Product A
These substances are called reactants.
Because the process of producing the flame is a chemical reaction. The reaction can only exist if there are unused chemicals to fuel the change. Once all the chemicals are used up - the reaction stops.
The majority of chemicals can react.
no
In any chemical equation you start with reactants and end up with products.
Reactants
A chemical reaction begins with reactants and ends with products.
The products. Reactants -----> product
Enzyme or catalyst
The chemicals at the start of a reaction are always called the reactants.The chemicals at the end of a reaction are always called the products.
Because the process of producing the flame is a chemical reaction. The reaction can only exist if there are unused chemicals to fuel the change. Once all the chemicals are used up - the reaction stops.
No, that is a catalyst. An enzyme is a type of catalyst, though.
These chemicals are called reactants.
The majority of chemicals can react.
The act of mixing chemicals is a physical process, not a chemical reaction. Mixing chemicals together may, or may not, allow a chemical reaction to proceed, depending on the nature of the chemicals being mixed.
no
A catalyst must change the rate of a chemical reaction. It must be unchanged at the end of the reaction.
In any chemical equation you start with reactants and end up with products.