How do I balance NH3 + H2O -----> NH4OH?

AI Thread Summary
Balancing the equation NH3 + H2O → NH4OH requires understanding the individual elements involved. The correct balance shows one nitrogen (N) on the left side and one nitrogen on the right, confirming the equation is already balanced. The confusion arose from miscounting the nitrogen atoms when viewed as NH groups. It's important to analyze each element separately rather than grouping them together. This clarification helps in accurately balancing chemical equations.
caprija
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I"m having trouble with balancing these equations, they aren't working out or I'm just not doing them right :confused:

NH3 + H2O -----> NH4OH

This is what I tried

8NH3 + H2O -----> 2NH4OH

i can't seen to balance out NH
 
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its already balanced!
 
how though? there are 3 NH on one side and 4 NH on the other.
 
Is this the equation:

NH_{3} + H_{2}O \rightarrow NH_{4}OH
 
courtrigrad said:
Is this the equation:

NH_{3} + H_{2}O \rightarrow NH_{4}OH
yes...
 
So there's only 1 N on the left hand side, not 2. Balance the elements. Why are you looking at NH together? Thus, its balanced.
 
courtrigrad said:
So there's only 1 N on the left hand side, not 2. Balance the elements. Why are you looking at NH together? Thus, its balanced.

I thought it was together :blushing:

So if it was let's say carbonate (CO3)

there would be 1 carbon and 3 oxygens right?
 
yes that is correct. it wouldn't be 3 carbons and 3 oxygens.
 
courtrigrad said:
yes that is correct. it wouldn't be 3 carbons and 3 oxygens.
Thanks so much!
 
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