2. Classifying Reactions
• There are millions of substances and
many different possible reactions
• There are only a few general reaction
types
• Just like there are ways to identify
the names of compounds, there are
ways to identify types of chemical
reactions and predict the products
3. Synthesis Reactions
• Combine substances
• Reaction of at least 2 reactants
combine to form a product
• A + B -- AB
• Always join substances so the
product is more complex than the
reactant
4. Decomposition Reactions
• Break substances apart
• Reaction in which one compound
breaks into at least 2 products
• AB -- A + B
• 2H2O -- 2H2 + O2
5. Single Displacement
Reactions
• Elements trade places
• XA + B -- BA + X
• Usually, a more reactive element
takes the place of a less reactive
element
6. Double-Displacement
Reaction
• Reaction in which a gas, solid
precipitate, or a molecular compound
is formed
• Ions appear to be exchanged between
compounds
• AX + BY -- AY + BX
8. Summary
• Synthesis reactions make larger
molecules
• Decomposition breaks compounds
apart
• In combustion reactions, substances
react with oxygen
• Elements appear to trade places in
single-displacement reactions
9. Summary cont...
• In double-displacement reactions,
ions appear to move between
compounds, resulting in a solid that
settles out in solution, a gas that
bubbles out of a solution, and/or a
molecular substance
10. Question 1
• Classify each of the following
reactions by type
– A) S8 + 8O2 -- 8SO2 + heat
– B) 6CO2 + 6H2O -- C6H12O6 + 6O2
– C) 2NaHCO3 -- Na2CO3 + H2O + CO2
– D) Zn + 2HCl -- ZnCl2 + H2
11. Question 2
• Compare and contrast single-
displacement and double-displacement
reactions based on the number of
reactants.
• Use the terms compound, atom,
element, and ion.