Final answer:
The correct statements about single replacement reactions are that one element in the reactant is replaced by another in the product, and an element is always a reactant in such a reaction.
Step-by-step explanation:
Among the choices given regarding which statements about single replacement reactions are correct, the accurate ones are:
- (B) In a single replacement reaction, one element in the reactant is replaced by another in the product.
- (D) An element is always a reactant in a single replacement reaction.
Statement (A) is incorrect because in a single replacement reaction, we don't get two or more products from one reactant, but rather one element from the reactant is replaced, resulting in a new element and a new compound as products.
Statement (C) is incorrect because it describes a double replacement reaction, not a single replacement reaction. The correct general form for a single replacement reaction is A + BC → AC + B (or Y + XZ → XY + Z for nonmetals).
Therefore, the correct statements that apply to single replacement reactions are options (B) and (D).