Answer:
c.- How much of the reactants are needed and how much product will made.
Explanation:
The moles is the matter unit used in chemistry to simplify some calculations, instead of using grams. Also the moles are very useful because the chemical reaction can be balanced.
When a Chemical reaction is balanced, then it can be easily to calculate how many moles are necessary to add in a process to obtain a quantity of grams of a product.
<span>At 100 feet, the diver is under about 4 atmospheres pressure. If she is free diving, her lungs will be compressed to about 1/4 their size on the surface (with some movement of the major abdominal organs). If she is scuba diving, the air which she is breathing is also at 4 atmospheres and there is no problem. (The non-gas spaces in the body are not-compressible and are unaffected.) The only problems she has to concern herself with are the beginnings to nitrogen narcosis and the nitrogen which is dissolving (Henry's law) into her body tissues. On the way up, she also has to remember that the air in her lungs will expand by a factor of 4 and she better exhale! Hope this helps you</span>
Answer:
The bladder wall is made of many layers, including: Urothelium or transitional epithelium. This is the layer of cells that lines the inside of the kidneys, ureters, bladder, and urethra. Cells in this layer are called urothelial cells or transitional cells
Explanation:
Exothermic reaction is where there is release of energy during a reaction
The enthalpy of exothermic reaction is negative
The relation between energy of products, reactants and enthalpy of reaction is
Enthalpy of reaction = sum of enthalpy of formation of products - sum of enthalpy of formation of reactants
.
As enthalpy of reaction is negative, it means the enthalpy of products is less than the enthalpy of reactants so answer is
:
In an exothermic reaction the energy of the product is less than the energy of the reactants.
Answer:
The answer to your question is 8.28 g of glucose
Explanation:
Data
Glucose (C₆H₁₂O₆) = ?
Ethanol (CH₃CH₂OH)
Carbon dioxide (CO₂) = 2.25 l
Pressure = 1 atm
T = 295°K
Reaction
C₆H₁₂O₆ ⇒ 2C₂H₅OH(l) +2CO₂(g)
- Calculate the number of moles
PV = nRT
Solve for n

Substitution

Simplification
n = 0.092
- Calculate the mass of glucose
1 mol of glucose --------------- 2 moles of carbon dioxide
x --------------- 0.092 moles
x = (0.092 x 1) / 2
x = 0.046 moles of glucose
Molecular weight of glucose = 180 g
180 g of glucose --------------- 1 mol
x g ---------------0.046 moles
x = (0.046 x 180) / 1
x = 8.28 g of glucose