I did a project on it but i don't remember it but i think it wwas mixing vinegar and baking soda together and seeing what it forms into or how it reacts
In an ordinary chemical reaction, the mass of the products is equal to the mass of the reactants. Matter is conserved.
Of course !
No. Mass must be conserved in a chemical changes according to the law of conservation of mass, which holds that the mass of the reactants and the mass of the products of a chemical reaction must be equal. However, there is no similar law about conserving volume and volume can change dramatically if a gas is produced.
It is often stated that mass is transformed to energy. This is wrong, since both mass and energy are conserved in a chemical reaction - or in a nuclear reaction. The Wikipedia article on "binding energy" clarifies this.
law of conservation of mass.... as " Mass is neither created nor destroyed during a chemical reaction" so ans is....? "Like dissolved like"
mass
In an ordinary chemical reaction, the mass of the products is equal to the mass of the reactants. Matter is conserved.
Of course !
The mass remains conserved... while it is in case of a nuclear reaction where the total mass changes... in chemical reaction there is no change in mass...
While overall ENERGY has to be conserved, MASS does not. In a nuclear reaction mass can be converted into energy so the mass of the products may be less than the mass of the reactants. The difference in mass is converted into energy as Einstein's equation describes (E=MC squared). In a chemical reaction MASS has to be conserved.
In any chemical reaction the quantities that are conserved are mass and number of atoms. After the correct formula for a reactant in an equation has been written, the formula should not be changed.
Mass is conserved in a chemical reaction, but the coefficient attached to the reactants may be different than the products.
Mass (Matter) and Energy is conserved during a Chemical equation
Its conserved during the combustion of anything - the mass of the products is always equal to the mass of the materials that react.
In a balanced chemical reaction the total mass of the products always equals the total mass of reactants; this is the law of mass conservation.
During a chemical change,chemical energy may be changed to other forms of energy.other forms of energy may also be changed to a chemical energy.
No. A chemical reaction has taken place but mass is conserved.