No one has yet documented a case where a chemical reaction does not obey the laws of thermodynamics - so - yes - all the chemical reactions will obey the laws of thermodynamics.
On a philosophic note: since no exceptions to the theories that constitute thermodynamics have been observed, we consider them "laws". Should we ever find an exception, we will have to modify the theories to craft new rules that will then be considered "laws". That's how science works.
All chemical reactions obey the law of conservation of matter.
chemical reactions are going on in our bodies all of the time
Not ALL reactions are chemicals. When chemicals reacte with other chemicals it is called as chemical reactions.
Yes, most chemical reactions involved in metabolism do require water.
The sum total of all the chemical reactions occurring in the body are called the metabolism.
No. Non-organic chemical reactions do no have proteins.
The universe and the life are largely dominated by chemical reactions; all around us is chemistry.
All chemical reactions in living things take place in what kind of solution
All around as, natural or artificial, are chemical products; and chemical products are the result of chemical reactions. The life is an extremely complex set of chemical reactions.
Cleaning, baking, cooking, beer fabrication, all involve chemical reactions.
The sum of all chemical reactions in an organism is called its metabolism. Metabolism is the set of chemical reactions which occur to sustain life.
Life is a continuous chain of chemical reactions. Practically all the materials which we use today are the result of chemical reactions. Cooking involve chemical reactions. And also heating and vehicles propulsion.