A chemical equation is a symbolic representation of what happens
during a chemical reaction.
To describe the reaction you did between baking soda and hydrochloric acid
in words you would write: Sodium Bicarbonate reacts with Hydrochloric Acid
to produce Carbon Dioxide, Water, and Sodium Chloride.
In symbolic form we would write: NaHCO3
+ HCl --> CO2
+ H2O
+ NaCl
Everything to the left of the arrow is called the reactants, everything
to the right, the products.
One can even add the state of each substance in the reaction.
(s) = solid (l) = liquid
(g) = gas (aq) = aqueous (dissolved in water)
Using the above, the reaction becomes:NaHCO3(s)
+ HCl(aq)
--> CO2(g)
+ H2O(l)
+ NaCl(aq)
Reactions with only ionic compounds as reactants.
Typically ionic compounds won't react with each other unless
they are dissolved in water. Therefore, most of our reactions with ionic
compounds will be in the aqueous phase.
A reaction only occurs if one of the products formed would be insoluble
in water. When an insoluble compound is formed from a reaction between
two aqueous solutions, we call this compound a precipitate. See the
Precipitation Rules Sheet to learn if an insoluble compound would
form.
When combining two aqueous ionic compounds you basically have four different
ions floating around in solution. The positive and negative ions from
each compound have the opportunity to come in contact and react. If the
new compound formed is insoluble then a precipitate forms.
We can write the reaction between Sodium Chloride and Lead(II)Nitrate
in several ways.
In words it would be: Sodium Chloride + Lead(II)
Nitrate --> Sodium Nitrate
+ Lead(II) Chloride
In formulas it would be NaCl(aq)
+ Pb(NO3)2(aq)
--> NaNO3(aq)
+ PbCl2(s)
(see an illustration of this below)
Notice that the NaNO3
is still dissolved. Basically, the sodium and nitrate ions did not
really do anything. They were floating around dissolved in solution
before and after the reaction.
Reactions can occur with all different kinds of substances. The one described
above is typical of how ionic substances react with each other. However, elements
and compounds (ionic, molecular, and acid) also react together, although in
more or less predictable ways. For example: