Answer : The volume for 6.0m HCl solution required = 62.5 ml
Solution : Given,
Initial concentration of HCl solution = 6.0m
Final concentration of HCl solution = 1.5m
Final volume of HCl solution = 250 ml
Initial volume of HCl solution = ?
Formula used for dilution is,

where,
= initial concentration
= final concentration
= initial volume
= final volume
Now put all the given values in above formula, we get the initial volume of HCl solution.

= 62.5 ml
Therefore, the volume for 6.0m HCl solution required = 62.5 ml
Answer:
organic chemistry
Explanation:
There are many branches of chemistry. Some of them are physical chemistry, analytical chemistry, inorganic chemistry and organic chemistry.
A chemist is testing the quality of a wine produced by a vineyard. It means he will test the structure, properties, and preparation of wine. All these tests comes under organic chemistry.
Hence, the correct option is (d) "organic chemistry"
First find the mass of <span>solute:
Molar mass KNO</span>₃ = <span>101.1032 g/mol
mass = Molarity * molar mass * volume
mass = 0.800 * 101.1032 * 2.5
mass = 202.2064 g of KNO</span>₃
<span>To prepare 2.5 L (0800 M) of KNO3 solution, must weigh 202.2064 g of salt, dissolve in a Beker, transfer with the help of a funnel of transfer to a volumetric flask, complete with water up to the mark, capping the balloon and finally shake the solution to mix.</span>
hope this helps!
Answer:
for number of neutrons it is mass number take away the atomic number
number of electron is the same as number of proton unless there is a charge like +2 it will have 2 less electron than the proton (atomic number ) number.
number of proton is the atomic number
Explanation:
hope it make sense:)
Answer:
solution concentration
Explanation:
Among the options given in the above question, solution concentration will affect the rate of a chemical reaction. This is because an increase in reagent concentration speeds up the reaction because there will be a greater number of reagent particles per unit volume, increasing the likelihood of effective collisions between them.
In addition to concentration, the factors that can influence the rate of a chemical reaction are temperature, catalyst, pressure and contact surface.