Writing chemical equations w/ catalysts

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The discussion focuses on writing chemical equations involving catalysts, specifically the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) catalyzed by potassium iodide (KI). The proposed equation, 2(H2O2) [yield w/ KI above the sign] 2(H2O) + O2, is confirmed to be correct, with a suggestion to use the term "decomposition" for clarity. Participants recommend using educational websites for further information, emphasizing searches limited to .edu domains for reliable resources. The user expresses gratitude for the guidance and successfully finds a helpful website. Understanding the decomposition aspect of the reaction is highlighted as beneficial for completing the lab report.
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hi. for a science lab in school we were discussing/exploring chemical equations...
we had hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) which was catalyzed by potassium iodide (KI)
for our lab report we need links to a website which describes how to properly write equations w/ catalysts. so firstly is this right:

2(H2O2) [yield w/ KI above the sign] 2(H2O) + O2

as a note, if i put 2 then parentheses it means that 2 is the coefficient.
secondly, could anybody provide me with helpful links or an explination to why the above equations is right (or wrong if it is) and why? i'd like an explination and a few links so i could finish my project and do well on it.

i'd appreciate an answer ASAP. thanks <3
 
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another thing, what would that problem look like in words?

something like this id imagine (but not positive):

hydrogen peroxide (L) catalyzed by a potassium iodide crystal
 
You are more or less OK, you may want to use word "decomposition". As for finding links - google seems to be the best idea. You may want to limit your searches to .edu sites, try something like "hydrogen peroxide decomposition site:edu"
 
okay, thank you very, very much.
this really helped, i found a perfect website! :]

(and the fact that it was a decomp equation really helped me too.)
thanks again.
 
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