In chemical reactions, the number of atoms stays the same, yet they may recombine into different types of molecules. That is why some chemical reactions use two compounds to create a different coumpound.
oxygenn isnt' the answer, as previously stated
Molecular bonds are rearranged during a reaction.
The atoms of the reactants are rearranged to form new products with different formulas and properties.
Molecular bonds
In any chemical reaction atoms are neither created nor destroyed.
As the law of conservation of matter and mass dictates, matter can't be created or destroyed, only changed. The mass and the number of atoms always stay the same through a chemical reaction, just rearranged.
starting substances and substances called products
When a chemical reaction occurs atoms get ionized. Atoms are never created nor destroyed in a chemical reaction.
The law of the conservation of mass.
No. Atoms, which are matter, are neither created nor destroyed in a chemical reaction, but they are rearranged.
Matter is simply rearranged, atoms are exchanged to create new molecules.
Matter can not be created nor destroyed during any process, so no matter can not be destroyed during a chemical change.
In any chemical reaction atoms are neither created nor destroyed.
Subatomic particles, that is neutrons , protons, and electrons are indeed never destroyed or created in chemical reactions.
As the law of conservation of matter and mass dictates, matter can't be created or destroyed, only changed. The mass and the number of atoms always stay the same through a chemical reaction, just rearranged.
During a chemical reaction matter is neither created nor destroyed
They are never destroyed because the molecules are rearranged. Think of then as Lego, once you build something and have no more Lego and want to build something new you break what you build not the Lego.
Yes, compounds can be created by chemical reaction. They can also be destroyed by chemical reaction.
matter is not created or destroyed
The amount of reactants and products do not change in reversible reactions because, in a chemical reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed -- it is only rearranged. This is the law of conservation of matter.
The law of Conservation of mass states that 'mass is neither created nor destroyed in a chemical reaction'.