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In a chemical equation, in which direction does the "yields" arrow point, and what factor does it indicate?

A) It points to the left, toward the reactants.


B) It points to the right, toward the products.

C) It points to the left, toward the products.

D) It points to the right, toward the reactants

User Sylverb
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1 Answer

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27 votes

Answer:

A chemical equation consists of the chemical formulas of the reactants (on the left) and the products (on the right). The two are separated by an arrow symbol (“→” usually read aloud as “yields”). Each individual substance's chemical formula is separated from others by a plus sign.

Step-by-step explanation:

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User Tmwanik
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