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anyanavicka [17]
3 years ago
6

Low density: low pressure: high density

Chemistry
1 answer:
suter [353]3 years ago
4 0
Evaporation-low density
water vapor-high
condense-low pressue???
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Chlorine melts at 172 K. What is chlorine’s melting point in °C?
Alexxx [7]
<span> -101.5 celcius and exactly that

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7 0
4 years ago
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The bond dissociation energy to break 4 bond(s) in 1 mole of CH₄ molecules is:_____ **Any help would be greatly appreciated!**
frozen [14]

Answer:

The bond dissociation energy to break 4 bonds in 1 mol of CH is 1644 kJ

Explanation:

Since there are 4 C-H bonds in CH₄, the bond dissociation energy of 1 mol of CH₄ is 4 × bond dissociation energy of one C-H bond.

From the table one mole is C-H bond requires 411 kJ, that is 411 kJ/mol. Therefore, 4 C-H bonds would require 4 × 411 kJ = 1644 kJ

So, the bond dissociation energy to break 4 bonds in 1 mol of CH₄ is 1644 kJ

5 0
3 years ago
21. A piece of metal with a a mass of 15.2 g is heated from 17°C to 42°C. In the process it absorbs 1362 J of
Sholpan [36]

Answer:

3.58J/g°C is the specific heat of the metal

Explanation:

The specific heat of a material is defined as the energy that 1g of the material absorbs and produce the increasing in temperature in 1°C. The equation is:

Q = S*ΔT*m

<em>Where Q is energy = 1362J</em>

<em>S is specific heat of the material</em>

<em>ΔT is change in temperature = 42°C - 17°C = 25°C</em>

<em>And m is the mass of the material = 15.2g</em>

Replacing:

S = Q / ΔT*m

S = 1362J / 25°C*15.2g

<h3>3.58J/g°C is the specific heat of the metal</h3>
4 0
3 years ago
Nickel metal will react with CO gas to form a compound called nickel tetracarbonyl (Ni(CO)4), which is a gas at temperatures abo
Bad White [126]

Answer:

The final total pressure in the bulb will be 0.567 atm.

Explanation:

The equation of the reaction is:

Ni + 4CO → Ni(CO)₄

The pressure in the bulb will be the sum of the pressures of each gas (remaining CO and Ni(CO)₄ produced).

The pressure of each gas can be calculated using this equation:

For the gas Ni(CO)₄:

P(Ni(CO)₄) = n * R * T / V

where:

P(Ni(CO)₄) = pressure of Ni(CO)₄

n = number of moles of Ni(CO)₄.

R = gas constant = 0.082 l amt / K mol

T = temperature

V = volume

So we have to find how many moles of Ni(CO)₄ were produced and how many moles of CO remained unreacted.

We can calculate the initial number of moles of CO with the data provided in the problem:

P(CO) = n * R * T / V

solving for n:

P(CO) * V / R * T = n

Replacing with the data:

1.20 atm * 1.50 l / 0.082 (l atm / K mol) * 346K = n

n = 0.06mol.

Now we know how many moles of CO were initially present.

To know how many moles of Ni(CO)₄ were produced, we have to find how many Ni reacted with CO.

Initially, we have 0.5869 g of Ni, which is (0.5869 g * 1 mol/58.69 g) 0.01 mol Ni.

From the chemical equation, we know that 1 mol Ni reacts with 4 mol CO, therefore, 0.01 mol Ni will react with 0.04 mol CO producing 0.01 mol Ni(CO)₄ (see the chemical equation above).

At the end of the reaction, we will have 0.01 mol Ni(CO)₄ and (0.06 mol - 0.04 mol) 0.02 mol CO.

Now we can calculate the pressure of each gas after the reaction:

PNi(CO)₄ = n * R * T / V

PNi(CO)₄ = 0.01 mol * 0.082 (l amt / K mol) * 346K / 1.50 l = 0.189 atm

In the same way for CO:

P(CO) = 0.02 mol * 0.082 (l amt / K mol) * 346K / 1.50 l = 0.189 atm = 0.378 atm

The total pressure (Pt) in the bulb, according to Dalton´s law of partial pressures, is the sum of the pressures of each gas in the mixture:

Pt = PNi(CO)₄ + P(CO) = 0.189 atm + 0.378 atm = <u>0.567 atm.</u>

6 0
4 years ago
Plz help! The best answer will be marked as brainliest!
Anika [276]

Answer:

This is hilarious, every time I ignite, they feed me water, little do they know this heat will defeat, and hydrogen only makes me stronger!

Explanation:

When Hg is burning, it uses the oxygen from H2O and turns it into hydrogen gas, and that contributes to the burning.

8 0
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