Chromium is in Group 6, so elemental chromium has 6 valence electrons. Therefore, chromium 3+ has three 3d-
Answer
pH=8.5414
Procedure
The Henderson–Hasselbalch equation relates the pH of a chemical solution of a weak acid to the numerical value of the acid dissociation constant, Kₐ. In this equation, [HA] and [A⁻] refer to the equilibrium concentrations of the conjugate acid-base pair used to create the buffer solution.
pH = pKa + log₁₀ ([A⁻] / [HA])
Where
pH = acidity of a buffer solution
pKa = negative logarithm of Ka
Ka =acid disassociation constant
[HA]= concentration of an acid
[A⁻]= concentration of conjugate base
First, calculate the pKa
pKa=-log₁₀(Ka)= 8.6383
Then use the equation to get the pH (in this case the acid is HBrO)
Answer:
No one is correct. The correct expression is:
Keq = [H₂]² . [O₂]² / [H₂O]²
Explanation:
To build the Keq expression in a chemical equilibrium you must consider the molar concentrations of reactants / products, and they must be elevated to the stoichiometric coefficient.
The balance reaction is:
<u>2</u> H₂O (g) ⇄ <u>2</u> H₂ (g) + O₂ (g)
Keq = [H₂]² . [O₂] / [H₂O]²
In opposite side: <u>2</u> H₂ (g) + O₂ (g) ⇄ <u>2</u> H₂O (g)
Keq = [H₂O]² / [H₂]² . [O₂]
Answer:
30.83 M
Explanation:
17.03052 re in one mole. So, if you multiply it by 30.83, you will get 535 g of ammonia.
In fact, the detailed answer is 30.827009392549122.