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Question
study the chemical equation below. then answer questions 1 - 4. (s = sulfur and o = oxygen) s₂ + o₄ → so₂ 1. does the chemical equation above follow the law of conservation of mass? why or why not?
The Law of Conservation of Mass states that the total mass of the reactants must equal the total mass of the products in a chemical reaction. In the given equation $S_2 + O_4
ightarrow SO_2$, on the reactant - side, there are 2 sulfur atoms and 4 oxygen atoms. On the product - side, there is 1 sulfur atom and 2 oxygen atoms. The number of atoms of each element is not the same on both sides of the equation, so the mass is not conserved.
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No, because the number of sulfur and oxygen atoms is not the same on both sides of the chemical equation.