charlie tahan
When a starting substance undergoes a chemical reaction, its bonds are broken and reformed. The existing bonds in the reactants break due to the input of energy, allowing atoms to rearrange and form new bonds in the products. This process results in the transformation of the original substance into different chemical compounds. Ultimately, the nature and strength of the bonds determine the stability and reactivity of the resulting products.
The chemical bonds in the original substances are broken down, and new chemical bonds are formed with the other substance.
Nothing, it just bonds with another atom, radical.
During a chemical reaction, the atoms of the starting substance rearrange to form new substances. The atoms themselves are not created or destroyed, but they may bond in new combinations resulting in different molecules.
The atoms involved in a chemical reaction have their bonds broken, new bonds formed, or existing bonds rearranged depending on the reaction type.
The chemical bonds in the substance are strong ones.
Covalent bonds are the easiest to break, since they are the easiest to make. But no substance is made when bonds break.
These atoms form new substances where atoms are associated by chemical bonds.
Organic--Definition: In Chemistry, a substance or molecule containing carbon-carbon bonds...
Well, First the starting bonds must break molecules are always moving if the molecules bump into each other with enough energy, the chemical bonds in the molecules must break.
First chemicals bonds in the starting substances must break. Molecules are always moving. If the molecules bump into each other with enough energy,the chemical bonds in the molecules break. ;)
The atoms rearrange and the new bonds form to make the new substances.