Answer:
Liquid–solid mixing is typically done to suspend coarse free-flowing solids, or to break up lumps of fine agglomerated solids. An example of the former is the mixing granulated sugar into water; an example of the latter is the mixing of flour or powdered milk into water.
Answer:
The resulting molarity is 6M.
Explanation:
A dilution consists of the decrease of concentration of a substance in a solution (the higher the volume of the solvent, the lower the concentration).
We use the formula for dilutions:
C1 x V1 = C2 x V2
12 M x 0,5L = C2 x 1,0 L
C2= (12 M x 0,5 L)/1,0 L
<em>C2= 6 M</em>
The anode in a voltaic cell is the source of electrons so it is considered to be negative. The counterpart is the cathode, which is considered to be positive. If you look at the diagram the electron flow goes from A to B. This means that part A is the anode. Part B is the cathode. Part C and D is the electrolyte.
The answer therefore is the first option.
The answer is ligand: a molecule or ion that can bond to a (central) metal ion (to form a complex);
NH3: Lewis base and Cu2+: Lewis acid (need both for mark);
<span>each NH3/ligand donates an electron pair (to Cu2+); forming coordinate covalent/dative covalent bond; i hope this help you.</span>
Answer:
<h2> 162g/mol</h2>
Explanation:
The question is incomplete. The complete question includes the information to find the empirical formula of nicotine:
<em>Nicotine has the formula </em>
<em> . To determine its composition, a sample is burned in excess oxygen, producing the following results:</em>
<em>Assume that all the atoms in nicotine are present as products </em>
<h2>Solution</h2>
To find the empirical formula you need to find the moles of C, H, and N in each of the compound.
- 1.0 mol of CO₂ has 1.0 mol of C
- 0.70 mol of H₂O has 1.4 mol of H
- 0.20 mol of NO₂ has 0.20 mol of N
Thus, the ratio of moles is:
Divide all by the smallest number: 0.20
Hence, the empirical formula is C₅H₇N
Find the mass of 1 mole of units of the empirical formula:
Total mass = 60g + 7g + 14g = 81g
Two moles of units of the empirical formula weighs 2 × 81g = 162g and three units weighs 3 × 81g = 243 g.
Thus, since the molar mass is between 150 and 180 g/mol, the correct molar mass is 162g/mol and the molecular formula is twice the empirical formula: C₁₀H₁₄N₂.