1) sodium bicarb is often used to neutralize acids (spills) in the process CO2 is generated....this is a decomposition reaction:
Reaction of sodium bicarbonate and an acid:
NaHCO
3 + HCl → NaCl + H
2CO
3 This then decomposes into carbon dioxide and water:
H
2CO
3 → H
2O+ CO
2 (gas)
NaHCO
3 + CH
3COOH → CH
3COONa + H
2O + CO
2 (gas)
2) The decomposition of hydrogen peroxide into water and oxygen gas. Reactions like these that are both oxidations and reductions are known as disproportionation reactions. The KI acts as a catalyst in the decomposition of the H2O2....the KI does not participate. A catalyst is a substance that increases the rate of a chemical reaction without being consumed in the reaction. Here the iodide ion is conserved.
The charges change because this is a redox reactionn...but this is disproportionation.
Basically: K is a spectator ion
I
- is oxidized... as peroxide is reduced
peroxide is reduced to water
2I
- is oxidized to I
2H
2O
2(aq) + I
-(aq) -> OI
-(aq) + H
2O(l)
H
2O
2(aq) + OI
-(aq) -> H
2O(l) + O
2(g) + I
-(aq)
In 1) the sodium bicarbonate actually participates in the reaction. The sodium bicarbonate is not a spectator species or a catalyst. It is consumed in the decomposition reaction.
3) Read This:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CO2 and
http://www.dhfs.state.wi.us/eh/ChemFS/fs/CarbonDioxide.htm4) Carbon dioxide (CO2) extinguishers contain a mixture of liquid and gaseous carbon dioxide (a nonflammable gas). CO2 is normally a gas at room temperature and pressure. It has to be stored under high pressure to make it a liquid. When you release the pressure, the gas expands enormously and cools to make a huge white jet. CO2 attacks the fire triangle in two ways: it smothers the oxygen and, because it's so cold, it also removes heat.
You will ahve to relate this to what you observed.5) From Wikipedia:
gaseous and liquid oxygen will act as a fuel; and therefore the design and manufacture of oxygen systems requires special training to ensure that ignition sources are minimized. The fire that killed the Apollo 1 crew on a test launch pad spread so rapidly because the capsule was pressurized with pure oxygen but at slightly more than atmospheric pressure, instead of the ⅓ normal pressure that would be used in a mission.
Liquid oxygen spills, if allowed to soaked into organic matter, such as wood, petrochemicals, and asphalt can cause these materials to detonate unpredictably on subsequent mechanical impact. On contact with the human body, it can also cause cryogenic burns to the skin and the eyes.see:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxygen and relate this to what you observed.
6)
I was not ther and you did not describe this so...at a loss on this one.