How to balance complicated chemical equations?

1 Answer
Jul 29, 2017

Every chemical equation balances MASS and CHARGE.......

Explanation:

You gots a metal carbonate, say ZnCO_3(s):

ZnCO_3(s) + 2HCl(aq) rarr ZnCl_2(aq) + CO_2(g)uarr+H_2O(l)

Are mass and charge balanced here? If they are not then you cannot accept the equation as a representation of chemical reality. And if you start with 10*g of reactant from all sources, you inevitably finish with 10*g product.......

The lesson that I try to reinforce is that "mass and charge are CONSERVED".

Carbonates (and these are often insoluble salts) react with acids according to the following net ionic equation......

CO_3^(2-) + 2H^(+) rarr CO_2(g) +H_2O(l)

You simply have to know these reactions, and how to balance them stoichiometrically.

And likewise for bicarbonates......

HCO_3^(-) + H^(+) rarr CO_2(g)uarr + H_2O(l)

Bicarbonate salts TEND to be soluble. Carbonate salts tend to be insoluble. But this is the province of experiment.