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.
That is the law of conservation of matter. By changing forms, it is meant that atoms are rearranged. In ordinary chemical reactions, the atoms of an element will always be atoms of that same element.
The Law of Conservation of Mass. This is also the basic principle of the First Law of Thermodynamics.
the law of conservation of matter
the law of conservation of matter
The law of mass conservation
The Law of Conservation of Matter states that matter can't be created or destroyed. When a chemical reaction happens, you aren't destroying the material you are simply changing it.
In a chemical reaction or physical reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed.
True :D
The fundamental law is that 'matter can neither be created or destroyed in a chemical reaction'. This means that there has to be the same amount of matter on either side of the chemical equation, arranged differently, but the same number of atoms of each element involved in the reaction.
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.
No. Atoms, which are matter, are neither created nor destroyed in a chemical reaction, but they are rearranged.
matter is not created or destroyed
During a chemical reaction matter is neither created nor destroyed
Matter can not be created nor destroyed during any process, so no matter can not be destroyed during a chemical change.
The Law of Conservation of Matter dictates that the mass of the reactants is equal to the mass of the products, i.e., mass will not be created, nor destroyed during the chemical reaction.
As far as I know this is not true- volume can be increased or decreased. What is conserved in a chemical reaction is mass. Matter is not created or destroyed.
Atoms are never created or destroyed in a chemical reaction. There are the same number of each type of atom both before and after a chemical reaction. Atoms are never created of destroyed; the molecules are just re-arranged in their bonding with each other.
false
The Law of Conservation of Matter states that matter can't be created or destroyed. When a chemical reaction happens, you aren't destroying the material you are simply changing it.
The law of conservation of matter states that in a chemical reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed.
In a chemical reaction or physical reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed.
In order to satisfy the law of conservation of matter/mass, which states that in a chemical reaction matter can neither be created nor destroyed.