Question
Which best describes the law of conservation of mass?
The coefficients in front of the chemicals in the reactants should be based on the physical state of the products.
Products in the form of gases are not considered a part of the total mass change from reactants to products.
When reactants contain both a solid and a liquid, the solid counts toward the overall mass and the liquid does not.
The mass of the reactants and products is equal and is not dependent on the physical state of the substances.
The coefficients in front of the chemicals in the reactants should be based on the physical state of the products.
Products in the form of gases are not considered a part of the total mass change from reactants to products.
When reactants contain both a solid and a liquid, the solid counts toward the overall mass and the liquid does not.
The mass of the reactants and products is equal and is not dependent on the physical state of the substances.
Answers
GPT-4o mini
The best description of the law of conservation of mass is:
**The mass of the reactants and products is equal and is not dependent on the physical state of the substances.**
This law states that mass cannot be created or destroyed in a chemical reaction, meaning the total mass of reactants before the reaction is equal to the total mass of the products after the reaction, regardless of whether the substances are solids, liquids, or gases.
**The mass of the reactants and products is equal and is not dependent on the physical state of the substances.**
This law states that mass cannot be created or destroyed in a chemical reaction, meaning the total mass of reactants before the reaction is equal to the total mass of the products after the reaction, regardless of whether the substances are solids, liquids, or gases.