Thermal energy from friction. ... All the work done by the friction force results in a transfer of energy into thermal energy of the box-floor system. This thermal energy flows as heat within the box and floor, ultimately raising the temperature of both of these objects. Figure 1: Man pushing a box opposed by friction.
The conversations need to solve this problem:
1 cal = 4.184 joules
1 Kcal= 1000 calories
1 kj= 1000 joules
or a more direct approach---->> 1 Kcal = 4.184 Kjoules
8.4 kcal (1000 calories/ 1 Kcal) x (4.184 joules/ 1 cal) x (1 Kj/ 1000 joules)= 35.1 Kj
or 8.4 kcal (4.184 Kj/ 1 kcal)= 35.1 Kj (same answer)
Lewis structure for each of the following N₂O₃ with no N¬N bond is attached below.
Even though pi symmetry occupies the antibonding orbitals of NO, this is unimportant after the dimer forms. A sigma connection exists. The enthalpy of the newly formed sigma bond in the dimer is low because the loss of a particularly distinctive set of single-electron resonance forms that were available for no monomer offset the net gain in bond. When the whole free energy is taken into account, there is no gain because the entropic effects are on the order of 1030kJ/mol, and dimerization is entropically disfavored at G=17kJ/mol. Therefore, any little increase in enthalpy is cancelled out by the loss of entropy.
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Answer:
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Explanation:
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