Thursday, March 12, 2020
Single-Displacement Reaction Definition and Examples
Singles          The four main types of chemical reactions are synthesis reactions, decomposition reactions, single-displacement reactions, and double-displacement reactions.          Single-Displacement Reactionà  Definition      A single-displacement reaction is a chemical reaction where one reactant is exchanged for one ion of a second reactant. It is also known as a single-replacement reaction. Single displacement reactions take the form:         A  BC ââ â B  AC          Singles      The reaction between zinc metal and hydrochloric acid to produce zinc chloride and hydrogen gas is an example of a single-displacement reaction:         Zn(s)  2 HCl(aq) ââ â ZnCl2(aq)  H2(g)         Another example is the displacement of iron from an iron(II) oxide solution using coke as a carbon source:         2 Fe2O3à  (s)  3 C (s)à  Ã¢â âà  Fe(s) à  CO2à  (g)          Recognizing a Single-Displacement Reaction      When you look at the chemical equation for a reaction, a single-displacement reaction is characterized by one cation or anion trading places with another to form a new product. Its easy to spot when one of the reactants is an element and the other is a compound. Usually, when two compounds react, both cations or both anions will change partners, producing a double-displacement reaction.         You can predict whether a single-displacement reaction will occur by comparing the reactivity of an element using an activity series table. In general, a metal can displace any metal lower in the activity series (cations). The same rule applies to halogens (anions).    
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