I have been able to help with your previous questions but for this one I'm not sure what you are asking and how it relates to the title of your question. Please can you clarify the question. Are you asking how to balance an equation, for example?
I was given some formulas but I had to figure out the product of them. I know how to balance a formula, but forgot how to write out the product with only the reactants given. For example, Ca+CuSO(4) -->, what would be the product of this formula?
Thank you. But if you don't mind explaining how you go the product. How do you know what element is to be separated? And how do you know the form? This is what I'm having trouble with.
It's not my striongest subject and it's not easy to explain all the detail here but you need to think about the components and their valencies and what ionic forms they are in as well as levels of reactivity to see what might displace what.
What course are you doing- this is GCSE Chemistry type stuff?
Yes Tilly. If I say formulae now I get blank looks so have to remember to change it to formulas.
And when talking about graphs if I write the word AXES pupils try to 'correct' my spelling.
And data can be singular now.
agenda's been singular for a while, so data isn't /aren't a problem. My old maths teacher seemed to work on the basis that formulae was singular, formulas plural.
Thank you. Is there a way to determine how one element is more reactive than the other? Sorry about the questions, I just want be able to understand it better so I can do it automatically. My class is just called Chemistry.
// Is there a way to determine how one element is more reactive than the other?//
yup there surely is.....
by starting at page 1 of your setbook and reading thro to the final page ( and perhaps then even doing it AGAIN)
can any one AB say kal-mazoo and get you to understand reactivity of elements and how they relate to the periodic table ?
Nope we all learnt it from the book ....