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In a chemical equation the reactants appears to be on the left side. On the left you have the reactants and to the right you have the products.
Reactants are to the left in a chemical equation.
When balancing a chemical equation the reactants need to be balanced with the non-reactants. If you don't the formula will be produce negative results and you'll get the wrong answer.
In a correctly written chemical equation, reactants are the substances to the left of the arrow, and products are the substances to the right of the arrow. The reactants are what you have before the reaction starts, and the products are what you have when the reaction is over.
Reactants are added into the equation to form the chemical reaction. Reactants are substances that are changed into products. Without these reactants, there would be no formula, resulting in no product.
No. The reactants are written on the left of the arrow.
In a chemical equation the reactants appears to be on the left side. On the left you have the reactants and to the right you have the products.
Reactants are to the left in a chemical equation.
The reactants must be balanced correctly with reactants.
The reactants or what is being changed in the chemical equation.
When balancing a chemical equation the reactants need to be balanced with the non-reactants. If you don't the formula will be produce negative results and you'll get the wrong answer.
A chemical reaction is always written with the reactants (the things you mix together to do the reaction) on the left and the products (the stuff you get) on the right. In between is an arrow pointing right to indicate that the reactants react and become the products. Catalysts are sometimes listed above the arrow. And don't forget to balance the equation.
When the mass of reactants is equal to the mass of reactants an equation is balanced.
The reactants.
Reactants -> Products
Reactants and products
Reactants.