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EXAMPLES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS IN EVERDAY LIFE


               In chemical reactions, one or more substances can be transformed into one substance or some new substance. Substances called reactants or reagents, while the newly produced substances are called products or reaction products.

The characteristics of chemical reactions
A chemical change or chemical reaction can be known through the accompanying symptoms. The symptoms or characteristics of a chemical reaction are as follows.
1 .Color changes occur.
This can be observed for example in the reaction between the starch and iridium solution. The reaction results in the form of a blue solution.
2. Happened gas
Have you ever been close to a carbide welding workshop? The stinging smell you feel near the carbide welding workshop is ethan gas. The gas comes from the reaction between carbide and water when used for welding.
3. Sludge occurs
Deposition of the reaction results can be found in cooking tools. It can also be found in the water purification process using alum.
4. Temperature changes occur
The temperature changes you can observe when limestone is mixed with water. In addition you can also find the temperature changes in the reaction of the carbide with water.
Chemical reactions are always accompanied by energy, either in the form of heat, light, or electricity. In the next lesson you will learn about energy.
When you mix chemicals in a lab, it's easy to see the reaction, but lots of chemical reactions occur in the world around you every day.Chemistry happens in the world around you, not just in a lab. Matter interacts to form new products through a process called a chemical reaction or chemical change. Every time you cook or clean, it's chemistry in action. Your body lives and grows thanks to chemical reactions. There are reactions when you take medications, light a match, and take a breath. Here's a look at 10 chemical reactions in everyday life. It's only a small sampling since you see and experience hundreds of thousands of reactions each day.
1. Photosynthesis Is a Reaction To Make Food


Plants apply a chemical reaction called photosynthesis to convert carbon dioxide and water into food (glucose) and oxygen. It's one of the most common everyday chemical reactions and also one of the most important since this is how plants produce food for themselves and animals and convert carbon dioxide into oxygen.
6 CO2 + 6 H2O + light → C6H12O6 + 6 O2

2.  Aerobic Cellular Respiration Is a Reaction With Oxygen


Aerobic cellular respiration is the opposite process of photosynthesis in that energy molecules are combined with ​the oxygen we breathe to release energy needed by our cells plus carbon dioxide and water. Energy used by cells is chemical energy in the form of ATP.
Here is the overall equation for aerobic cellular respiration:
C6H12O6 + 6O2 → 6CO2 + 6H2O + energy (36 ATPs)

3. Anaerobic Respiration - Everyday Chemical Reactions


In contrast to aerobic respiration, anaerobic respiration describes a set of chemical reactions that allow cells to gain energy from complex molecules without oxygen. Your muscles cells perform anaerobic respiration whenever you exhaust the oxygen being delivered to them, such as during intense or prolonged exercise. Anaerobic respiration by yeast and bacteria is harnessed for fermentation, to produce ethanol, carbon dioxide, and other chemicals that make cheese, wine, beer, yogurt, bread, and many other common products.
The overall chemical equation for one form of anaerobic respiration is:
C6H12O6 → 2C2H5OH + 2CO2 + energy

4. Combustion Is a Type of Chemical Reaction

                    
Every time you strike a match, burn a candle, build a fire, or light a grill, you see the combustion reaction. Combustion combines energetic molecules with oxygen to produce carbon dioxide and water.
For example, the combustion reaction of propane, found in gas grills and some fireplaces, is:
C3H8 + 5O2 → 4H2O + 3CO2 + energy 

5. Rust Is a Common Chemical Reaction


Over time, iron develops a red, flaky coating called rust. This is an example of an oxidation reaction. Other everyday examples include formation of verdigris on copper and tarnishing of silver.
Here is the chemical equation for the rusting of iron:
Fe + O2 + H2O → Fe2O3. XH2O

6. Mixing Chemicals Causes Chemical Reactions


 Baking Powder and baking soda perform similar functions during baking, but they react differently with the other ingredients so you can't always substitute one for the other. Nicki Dugan Pogue / Flickr / CC BY-SA 2.0
If you combine vinegar and baking soda for a chemical volcano or milk with baking powder in a recipe you experience a double displacement or metathesis reaction (plus some others). The ingredients recombine to produce carbon dioxide gas and water. The carbon dioxide forms bubbles in the volcano and helps baked goods rise.
These reactions seem simple in practice but often consist of multiple steps. Here is the overall chemical equation for the reaction between baking soda and vinegar:
HC2H3O2(aq) + NaHCO3(aq)  → NaC2H3O2(aq) + H2O() + CO2(g)

7. Batteries Are Examples of Electrochemistry


Batteries use electrochemical or redox reactions to convert chemical energy into electrical energy. Spontaneous redox reactions occur in galvanic cells, while nonspontaneous chemical reactions take place in electrolytic cells.

8. Digestion- Everyday Chemical Reactions


Thousands of chemical reactions take place during digestion. As soon as you put food in your mouth, an enzyme in your saliva called amylase starts to break down sugars and other carbohydrates into simpler forms your body can absorb. Hydrochloric acid in your stomach reacts with food to break it down, while enzymes cleave proteins and fats so they can be absorbed into your bloodstream through the walls of the intestines.

9. Acid-Base Reactions- Everyday Chemical Reaction



Whenever you combine an acid (e.g., vinegar, lemon juice, sulfuric acidmuriatic acid) with a base (e.g., baking soda, soap, ammonia, acetone), you are performing an acid-base reaction. These reactions neutralize the acid and base to yield salt and water.Sodium chloride is not the only salt that may be formed. For example, here is the chemical equation for an acid-base reaction that produces potassium chloride, a common table salt substitute:
HCl + KOH → KCl + H2O

10. Soaps and Detergents - Everyday Chemical Reactions


Soaps and detergents clean by way of chemical reactions. Soap emulsifies grime, which means oily stains bind to the soap so they can be lifted away with water. Detergents act as surfactants, lowering the surface tension of water so it can interact with oils, isolate them, and rinse them away.


Komentar

  1. What distinguishes chemical change and physics change?

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. Physical and chemical changes in everyday life. For example when we discuss paper and when we make ice cubes. Burning paper makes paper to ash. It's a chemical change. While when we make ice cubes, the air will change form from liquid to solid. That is a change of physics. Besides we can see the difference from the following three things:
      1. What Changed?
      In physics change, what is being changed is form, size, color, and shape .. Its form can be solid, liquid, and gas. In addition, replace physics can also become smaller or become larger. As the stone changes into sand grains.
      While in chemical change, what changed is the substance. The substance changes because there is a chemical reaction. The reaction may be oxidation, prop, mixing of substances, etc. Chemical reactions will form a new type of substance.
      2. The cause?
      In physics changes, the cause is caused by changes in temperature or because of force. As the cooled (liquid) water will become ice (solid) or styled stone it will crumble to form some smaller stones.
      While on chemical changes, the cause is a chemical reaction. Chemical reactions are substances are being formed new substances. The reaction may be oxidation, members, etc. Examples are food or paper decay.
      3. Can I Return?
      The original form of the object before it undergoes a physical change can be easily done. For example the frozen (liquid) air can be converted back into liquid without altering its properties, mass, and volume. An example is a spring that can be extended or shortened then as before.
      The original form of the object before it undergoes a physical change can not be easily. As an example: we can not replace the wood that has been burnt burnt as before.

      Hapus
  2. What reaction is contained in making ammonia?

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. The basic theory of ammonia making from nitrogen and hydrogen by Fritz Haber (1908), a chemist from Germany. The process of making ammonia for large-scale production by Carl Bosch, a chemical engineer also from Germany. The thermochemical equations of ammonia synthesis reactions are: N2 (g) + 3H2 (g) ⇄ 2NH3 (g) ΔH = -92,4Kj At 25oC: Kp = 6.2x105 Based on the principle of equilibrium favorable conditions for the completeness of the reaction to the right (processNH3) is the low temperature and high pressure. Will this reaction be very slow at low temperatures, even at a temperature of 500oC. On the other hand, because of exothermic right reaction, the addition of temperature will reduce the yield. The Haber-Bosch process was initially carried out at a temperature of about 500 ° C and a pressure of about 150-350 atm with a catalyst, ie iron powder mixed with Al2O3, MgO, CaO, and K2O.

      Hapus
  3. The oxygen produced in the photosynthesis process comes from the breakdown.

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. came from:
      The Light Reaction is, Taking place inside the thylakoid membrane in the grana. Inside the grana there is chlorophyll, the pigment that plays a role in photosynthesis. The light reaction is also called photolysis because the process of absorption of light energy and the decomposition of water molecules into oxygen and hydrogen.

      Hapus
  4. How the reaction of limestone mixed with water.

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. CaCO₃ (s) + H₂O (l) → Ca (OH) ₂ (aq) + CO₂ (g)

      If lime (Calcium carbonate) is water-directed then it produces Ca (OH) ₂ and carbon dioxide gas. The reaction is an exothermic reaction.

      Hapus
  5. what the different between Soaps and Detergents in chemical reactions?

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. Differences in Soaps and Detergents in chemical reactions
       1). The soap is an alkali carboxylic salt while the detergent is alkali alkyl sulphate or sulphonate.
      2). Although the molecular structure is the same but the molecules on the soap are much more easily degraded by the bacteria while detergent molecules are more difficult.
      3). Safe soap is used on human skin while no detergent, if used usually appear reaction in the form of heat in the skin. Detrjen is more ideal for clothes.
      4). The soap can not be used to wash with water while the detergent can be used in the water

      Hapus
  6. Give me the usefulness of photosynthesis?

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. Photosynthesis is absolutely necessary for plants, the benefits of photosynthesis for plants are as follows:
      A. Helps the growth and development of plants
      B. Helps plant breeding
      C. Helps breathing plant cells
      D. Helps the movement of plants
      E. Produce food reserves for plants

      Hapus

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