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OLga [1]
3 years ago
10

How many valence electrons are available for bonding in bromine (Br)?

Chemistry
2 answers:
k0ka [10]3 years ago
3 0
<span>The question is asking for the number of valence electron that are available fo bonding in bromine. Bromine belongs the group 7 of the periodic table, thus it has seven electrons in its outermost shell. At times, all these seven valence electrons can be involved in a chemical bonding in order to form an octet structure. Also, bromine can form a single covalent bond with other elements during chemical reactions. </span>
zlopas [31]3 years ago
3 0

The answer to this question will be:

7

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It’s the first one ATP, NADH
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2 years ago
A theory is a ___.
Dimas [21]

The answer is either A or C. Sorry I'm not much help :)

7 0
4 years ago
Watch the animation and observe the titration process of a standard 0.100 M sodium hydroxide solution with 50.0 \rm ml of a 0.10
yuradex [85]

Answer:

Answers are in the explanation

Explanation:

a. The statments are:

The titration process is based on a chemical reaction.  <em>TRUE. </em>A titration is the chemical reaction between an acid and a base.

The pH of the solution at the equivalence point is 7.  <em>TRUE. </em>In a titration of strong acid with strong base the equivalence point is 7

At the endpoint, the pH of solution is 10 and the color of solution is pink.  <em>FALSE</em>. The endpoint in a strong acid - strong base titrationmust be near to equivalence point at pH = 7.

At the beginning of the titration process, the pH of the solution increases rapidly.  <em>FALSE. </em>At beginning of a titration, the pH of the solution increases slowly.

The chemical reaction involved in an acid-base titration is a neutralization reaction.  <em>TRUE. </em>In the reaction, you are neutralizing an acid (HCl) with a base (NaOH)

Before any base is added to the solution, the pH of the solution is high. <em>FALSE. </em>The addition of a base increases pH that is, in the beginning, low.

In a titration process, the endpoint is reached before the equivalence point.  <em>FALSE. </em>In a titration process, the endpoint is reached in the equivalence point

The pH of the solution changes very slowly at the equivalence point. <em>FALSE. </em>At the equivalence point, the pH changes rapidly.

b. For the reaction

NaOH + HCl → H₂O + NaCl

As the reaction is 1:1 and molarity of both solutions are the same, additions < 100mL of NaOH will stay before the equivalence point, equivalence point will be in 100mL and additions > 100mL of NaOH will stay after the equivalence point.

The conditions are:

10.0mL of 1.00 M NaOH before the equivalence point

150 mL of 1.00 M NaOH after the equivalence point

5.00 mL of 1.00 M NaOH before the equivalence point

50.0 mL of 1.00 M NaOH  before the equivalence point

200 mL of 1.00 M NaOH after the equivalence point

I hope it helps!

7 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Match each type of titration to its ph at the equivalence point for solutions at 25 ∘c. drag each item to the appropriate bin. v
sdas [7]
The complete question;
Match each type of titration to its pH at the equivalence point.
Weak acid, strong base
Strong acid, strong base
Weak base, strong acid

pH less than 7
pH equal to 7
<span>pH greater than 7
</span>Answer:
weak acid, strong base - pH greater than 7
Strong acid, strong base - pH equal to 7
Weak base, strong acid - pH less than 7
Strong acids dissociate completely to give out H⁺ ions. 
Strong bases dissociate completely to give out OH⁻ ions.
When strong acids and strong bases are mixed the dissociated H⁺ and OH⁻ ions  react and neutralise each other, making the solution neutral.
Weak acids cannot completely dissociate, only a fraction of H⁺ ions are dissociated. Same applies for weak bases.
When weak acid and strong base is mixed, whilst the strong acid completely dissociates, weak base only partially dissociates. Therefore the amount of H⁺ ions is greater than OH⁻ ions, overall pH is more acidic, hence less than 7.
When strong base and weak acid are mixed, strong base completely dissociates giving OH⁻ ions and weak acid only partially dissociates, therefore amount of OH⁻ ions is greater than H⁺ ions, more basic hence pH is greater than 7.

5 0
3 years ago
WHICH ONE IS TRUE WHICH ONE IS FALSE?
sukhopar [10]

Answer:

The number of valence electrons increases from top to bottom within each group.

Explanation:

The valence electrons are the outermost shell electrons.

Therefore, the number of valence electrons does not increase from top to bottom within each of the group.

Down a group, the number of valence electrons remains the same.

For group I elements, the number of electrons is 1.

 The group is the vertical arrangement of elements.

From left to right across a period, the number of valence electrons increases because you move from group to group.

7 0
3 years ago
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