Answer:
D. Partial pressure
Explanation:
Partial pressure is the individual pressure exerted by each gas present in a gaseous mixture. As he is measuring the pressure of each gas in the atmosphere separately, so PARTIAL PRESSURE is the exact term for his measurement.
Answer:
450g of coke (C)
Explanation:
Step 1:
The balanced equation for the reaction is given below:
3C(s) + 2SO2(g) —> CS2(s) + 2CO2(g)
Step 2:
Determination of the mass of C that reacted and the mass of CS2 produced from the balanced equation.
This is illustrated below:
Molar Mass of C = 12g/mol
Mass of C from the balanced equation = 3 x 12 = 36g
Molar Mass of CS2 = 12 + (32x2) = 12 + 64 = 76g/mol.
From the balanced equation above, 36g of C reacted to produce 76g of CS2.
Step 3:
Determination of the mass of C required to produce 950g of CS2. This is illustrated below:
From the balanced equation above, 36g of C reacted to produce 76g of CS2.
Therefore, Xg of C will react to produce 950g of CS2 i.e
Xg of C = (36 x 950)/76
Xg of C = 450g
From the calculations made above, 450g of coke (C) is needed to produce 950g of CS2.
If you were to take water (like many other materials) and break it up into almost the smallest things you could, you’d get molecules. If the molecules are stuck together really tightly in a regular pattern, then they’re called a solid. The solid form of water is ice. This actually makes a lot of sense, because it certainly does seem like all the little parts of a solid (like ice) are stuck together very tightly.
When you heat something up, it makes the molecules move faster. If you heat up a typical solid, it melts and becomes a liquid. In a liquid (like water), the molecules are still stuck together, but they can move around some. What actually happens is that the molecules are still sort of sticking together, but they’re constantly breaking apart and sticking to different molecules. This also makes sense when you think about water. Water sort of sticks together, but it breaks apart /really/ easily.
If you heat a liquid like water up even more (like if you put it in a pot on the stove), then the molecules will move around so fast that they can’t even hold on to each other at all. When this happens, all of the molecules go flying apart and become a gas (like when you boil water to make steam). The process of gas molecules leaving the liquid to go into the gas is called "evaporation." The opposite process is called "condensation."
<span>Hope this answers your question!</span>
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