Balancing equations
I can balance chemical equations, and explain why it is important to ensure symbol equations are balanced.
Balancing equations
I can balance chemical equations, and explain why it is important to ensure symbol equations are balanced.
These resources will be removed by end of Summer Term 2025.
Lesson details
Key learning points
- All the atoms in the reactants of a chemical reaction are reorganised to form all the products of the reaction.
- There must be an equal number of each type of atom on both the reactant and product side of the equation.
- Chemical formulae cannot be altered to balance a reaction equation; only coefficients can change.
- Atoms cannot be created or destroyed. During a chemical reaction, atoms are simply rearranged into products.
Keywords
Word equation - A word equation represents a chemical reaction using the chemical names of the reactants and products.
Chemical formula - A chemical formula represents a substance using element symbols and the number / ratio of atoms of each element in the substance.
Symbol equation - A symbol equation represents a chemical reaction using the chemical formulas of the reactants and products.
Balanced symbol equation - A balanced symbol equation uses coefficients to ensure that the number of atoms of each element is equal on both sides of the equation.
Coefficient - A coefficient is the number placed in front of a chemical formula to balance an equation; it multiplies all the atoms in the formula and shows the ratio of substances in a reaction.
Common misconception
Pupils sometimes think that chemical formulae can be changed to balance atoms.
Put boxes around each formula in the equation / pretend there is a bucket of pre-made molecules which they can use to balance the number of atoms on each side. Stress that it takes perseverance and practice before equations are balanced.
Equipment
Licence
This content is © Oak National Academy Limited (2024), licensed on Open Government Licence version 3.0 except where otherwise stated. See Oak's terms & conditions (Collection 2).
Lesson video
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Starter quiz
6 Questions
MgO
AlI₃
CuCO₃
NaOH
K₂SO₄
SrCl₂
H₂O (l)
H₂O (s)
H₂O (g)
NaCl (aq)
Hg (l)
He (g)
Exit quiz
6 Questions
describes a chemical reaction using chemical names
represents a substance using element symbols and numbers
describes chemical reactions using chemical formulae and state symbols