Any. I'm not a chemist but you can model the entire periodic table and the interactions between elements Oxygen and Hydrogen can make Water, Uranium emit a ratiation sand that can cause other "sands" to... whatever you want. So anyway, long story short, you can model reality or just make up your own reality. Note that all of this kind of stuff takes time to script. Nothing is automatic.
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.
No all chemical reactions do not make new things because if you do a chemical reactions using two of the same things e.g carbon dioxide + carbon dioxide you are not making anything else so no not all chemical reacions make new things
Combining at least two chemical entities to make a single, new chemical entity.
ATP
Substances are used to make chemical reactions.
Yes, chemical reactions on subtrates.
Yes, chemical reactions involve the breaking and formation of chemical bonds, resulting in the formation of new substances with different properties than the original reactants.
The Falling Sand game is an online game that uses Java. In it players try and balance falling sand to make the tallest pile they can without it toppling over.
Most chemical reactions occur in water, which is an inorganic compound. Water's unique properties, such as its ability to dissolve many substances, make it an ideal medium for chemical reactions to take place.
Chemical engineering entails the construction, design and the operation of plants and machines that perform the chemical reactions to make useful products.
All of chemical reactions in cells breakdown molecules and make molecules.
Enzymes lower the activation energy needed for chemical reactions to occur, which helps them proceed at a faster rate and at a lower temperature. This allows reactions to happen efficiently within the body's normal temperature range, maintaining a safe environment for biochemical processes to take place.