Answer:
cation
Explanation:
<em>Metal
</em>
<em>
Nonmetal
</em>
<em>
Anion
</em>
<em>
Cation</em>
When naming a chemical compound, <u>the cation</u> is written first before anything else.
A typical ionic compound consists of two components - the cation and the anion. While the <u>cation is positively charged in ion</u>, <u>the anion is negatively charged. </u>The cation of a typical ionic compound is named first before the anion and the name often carries that of the element that composes it.
The name of the element that makes up the anion is modified by removing the last few characters ending the name and replacing it with the suffix 'ide'. For example, NaCl is named sodium chloride.
Answer:
ΔG = 18KJ/mol
Explanation:
Given data:
ΔS = 0.09 Kj/mol.K
ΔH = 27 KJ/mol
Temperature = 100 K
ΔG = ?
Solution:
Formula:
ΔG = ΔH - TΔS
ΔS = entropy
ΔH = enthalpy
by putting values,
ΔG = 27 KJ/mol - 100K(0.09 Kj/mol.K)
ΔG = 27 KJ/mol - 9 KJ/mol
ΔG = 18KJ/mol
Answer:
(i) 5-day BOD of the waste is 120 mg/l.
(ii) The ultimate carbonaceous BOD (Lo) is 20 mg/l.
Explanation:
The dilution factor D is 0.05.
The initial DO is 8.0 mg/L and the DO after 5 days is 2.0 mg/L.
The BOD of the waste for an unseeded mixture is
The ultimate carbonaceous BOD (Lo) can be calculated as
Answer: 600 mL
Explanation:
Given that;
M₁ = 5.85 m
M₂ = 1.95 m
V₁ = 200 mL
V₂ = ?
Now from the dilution law;
M₁V₁ = M₂V₂
so we substitute
5.85 × 200 = 1.95 × V₂
1170 = 1.95V₂
V₂ = 1170 / 1.95
V₂ = 600 mL
Therefore final volume is 600 mL