00:01
Okay, so for this reaction, you have carbon dioxide and hydrogen chloride, and you want to react these two together to form your two products.
00:11
So this is an example of a double displacement reaction, where you're going to essentially exchange your cations and anions.
00:23
So for your reactants, you have carbon, which is bonded to oxygen, and you have hydrogen, which is bonded to quixion.
00:30
Chlorine.
00:32
So your carbon and your hydrogen, you could in this case, consider your catayons.
00:38
So you're going to be switching what they're going to be bonded to.
00:41
So where you have a carbon, which is bonded to an oxygen, is going to end up bonding to your chlorine.
00:49
And where you have oxygen is now going to start or is going to displace and instead bond to your hydrogen.
01:00
So if we were to draw out your products, you have carbon, and carbon can have four bonds.
01:10
So this will be carbon tetrachloride, which is a liquid.
01:16
And now we have h bonded to an o.
01:21
So this is just going to be water.
01:22
So we have h2o, which is also a liquid.
01:26
So now we just have to go through and balance out our equation...