no...the atoms will not behave the same
as when temperature is increased, the atoms vibration and kinetic energy will also be increased....they come in excited state...
where as when temperature is reduced ,atoms kinetic energy slows down....
Glycerol attractive forces are great than water. The harder to break, the more energy is needed.
The empirical formula : MnO₂.
<h3>Further explanation</h3>
Given
632mg of manganese(Mn) = 0.632 g
368mg of oxygen(O) = 0.368 g
M Mn = 55
M O = 16
Required
The empirical formula
Solution
You didn't include the pictures, but the steps for finding the empirical formula are generally the same
- Find mol(mass : atomic mass)
Mn : 0.632 : 55 = 0.0115
O : 0.368 : 16 =0.023
- Divide by the smallest mol(Mn=0.0115)
Mn : O =

The empirical formula : MnO₂
Answer:
im not sure but I hope this helps
Explanation:
I believe the equivalents is just the moles reactant/moles limiting reactant
water has a denisty of 1 g/mL. 1 L is 1000 ml so there are 1000g/L.
the molar mass of water is 18g/mol if you use the Liters in the equation above you can find the number of grams present. divide this number you found by 18 to find the moles.
now take the amount of the other reactant given and divide it by its own molar mass. this will give you the number of moles of that reactant.
divide the moles of water by the moles of the reactant and that is the equivalent.
to find the normality you take this number and divide it by the number of liters.
Explanation :
As we know that the Gibbs free energy is not only function of temperature and pressure but also amount of each substance in the system.

where,
is the amount of component 1 and 2 in the system.
Partial molar Gibbs free energy : The partial derivative of Gibbs free energy with respect to amount of component (i) of a mixture when other variable
are kept constant are known as partial molar Gibbs free energy of
component.
For a substance in a mixture, the chemical potential
is defined as the partial molar Gibbs free energy.
The expression will be:

where,
T = temperature
P = pressure
is the amount of component 'i' and 'j' in the system.