A chemical equation must respect the law of mass conservation.
Do you mean stoichiometry? The equations need to be balanced so they are stable. They just need to be balanced...
The heart of stoichiometry is the mole ratio given by the coefficients of the balanced equation
The coefficient in a balanced equation tells you the ratio of moles/molecules/etc of one reactant to the other reactants, and to the products. It gives you the stoichiometry of the reactions.
To determine the stoichiometry of a reaction, you must first write out a balanced equation describing the reaction and then use the coefficients of this statement to represent molar ratios.
Because chemical reactions take place in molar ratios. The number of moles of each kind of atom has to be the same on both sides of the equation.
Do you mean stoichiometry? The equations need to be balanced so they are stable. They just need to be balanced...
The heart of stoichiometry is the mole ratio given by the coefficients of the balanced equation
The coefficient in a balanced equation tells you the ratio of moles/molecules/etc of one reactant to the other reactants, and to the products. It gives you the stoichiometry of the reactions.
To determine the stoichiometry of a reaction, you must first write out a balanced equation describing the reaction and then use the coefficients of this statement to represent molar ratios.
In stoichiometry, the equation is balanced by using molar ratios. Because each item on either side of the equation has a specific molar mass, it can be demonstrated that all mass is conserved through the chemical reaction.
In stoichiometry, the equation is balanced by using molar ratios. Because each item on either side of the equation has a specific molar mass, it can be demonstrated that all mass is conserved through the chemical reaction.
A balanced chemical equation has correct placed coefficients and a representative chemical equation need these coefficients.
Because chemical reactions take place in molar ratios. The number of moles of each kind of atom has to be the same on both sides of the equation.
An unbalanced equation represents mass either appearing or disappearing. Since tht is impossible, the equation must be balanced.
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.
The correct answer is: A reaction that has the same number and type of atoms on each side of the equation.
It's just the way it's done. Sort of like math, but with molecular formulas. If you go far enough into a chemistry course, you'll realize the importance of stoichiometry.