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aniked [119]
3 years ago
5

A 2.50 cm cube of copper metal has a mass

Chemistry
1 answer:
rosijanka [135]3 years ago
3 0

Explanation:

140.125g

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Consider the equation for the formation of water.
Juli2301 [7.4K]

The theoretical yield is 160 g H₂O.

<em>Moles of H₂</em> = 18 g H₂ × (1 mol H₂/2.016 g H₂) = 8.93 mol H₂

<em>Moles of H₂O</em> = 8.93 mol H₂O × (2 mol H₂O/2 mol H₂) = 8.93 mol H₂O

<em>Theoretical yield</em> of H₂O = 8.93 mol H₂O × (18.02 g H₂O/1 mol H₂) = 160 g H₂O

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4 years ago
What is the difference between amines and amides​?
ira [324]
A lot of things like stuff
7 0
2 years ago
What are the 3 components of a rocket?
sleet_krkn [62]
Rocket Parts

The study of rockets is an excellent way for students to learn the basics of forces and the response of an object to external forces. In flight, a rocket is subjected to the forces of weight, thrust, and aerodynamics. On this slide, we have removed the outer "skin" so that we can see the parts that make a rocket. There are many parts that make up a rocket. For design and analysis, engineers group parts which have the same function into systems. There are four major systems in a full scale rocket; thestructural system, the payload system, the guidance system, and the propulsion system.

The structural system, or frame, is similar to the fuselage of an airplane. The frame is made from very strong but light weight materials, like titanium or aluminum, and usually employs long "stringers" which run from the top to the bottom which are connected to "hoops" which run around around the circumference. The "skin" is then attached to the stringers and hoops to form the basic shape of the rocket. The skin may be coated with a thermal protection system to keep out the heat of air friction during flight and to keep in the cold temperatures needed for certain fuels and oxidizers. Fins are attached to some rockets at the bottom of the frame to provide stability during the flight.

The payload system of a rocket depends on the rocket's mission. The earliest payloads on rockets were fireworks for celebrating holidays. The payload of the German V2, shown in the figure, was several thousand pounds of explosives. Following World War II, many countries developed guided ballistic missiles armed with nuclear warheads for payloads. The same rockets were modified to launch satellites with a wide range of missions; communications, weather monitoring, spying, planetary exploration, and observatories, like the Hubble Space Telescope. Special rockets were developed to launch people into earth orbit and onto the surface of the Moon.

The guidance system of a rocket may include very sophisticated sensors, on-board computers, radars, and communication equipment to maneuver the rocket in flight. Many different methods have been developed to control rockets in flight. The V2 guidance system included small vanes in the exhaust of the nozzle to deflect the thrust from the engine. Modern rockets typically rotate the nozzle to maneuver the rocket. The guidance system must also provide some level of stability so that the rocket does not tumble in flight.

As you can see on the figure, most of a full scale rocket is propulsion system. There are two main classes of propulsion systems, liquid rocket enginesand solid rocket engines. The V2 used a liquid rocket engine consisting of fuel and oxidizer (propellant) tanks, pumps, a combustion chamber with nozzle, and the associated plumbing. The Space Shuttle, Delta II, and Titan III all use solid rocket strap-ons.

The various rocket parts described above have been grouped by function into structure, payload, guidance, and propulsion systems. There are other possible groupings. For the purpose of weight determination and flight performance, engineers often group the payload, structure, propulsion structure (nozzle, pumps, tanks, etc.), and guidance into a single empty weight paramter. The remaining propellant weight then becomes the only factor that changes with time when determining rocket performance.

6 0
3 years ago
SLO Demonstrate use of dimensional analysis converting from one unit to another through the mole Directions: Answer the followin
AfilCa [17]

Answer:

1. 351.62L

2. 15.05 * 10^23 molecules

3. 54.6g

4. 8.29 * 10^21 molecules

Explanation:

1. First we will need to calculate the number of moles present in such number of molecules. We know that one mole contains 6.02 * 10^23 molecules. Hence to calculate the number of moles in 9.45 * 10^24 carbon iv oxide Miley, we simply divide. And that is (9.45 * 10^24) / ( 6.02 * 10^23) = 15.7 moles

At s.t.p, a mole of a gas will occupy a volume of 22.L. Hence 15.7 moles will occupy a volume of 15.7 * 22.4 = 351.62L

2. We first need to calculate the number of moles of calcium metal present in 100g. To do this we simply divide the mass by the atomic mass of calcium. The atomic mass of calcium is 40 amu. The number of moles is thus 100/40 = 2.5 moles

One mole contains 6.02 * 10^23 number of molecules. Hence 2.5 moles will contain 2.5 * 6.02 * 10^23 = 15.05 * 10^23 molecules

3. Firstly we need to calculate the number of moles contained in those number of molecules. What we simply need do is to divide by 6.02 * 10^23

Since the power of 10 is same, we simply divide 5.06 by 6.02 = 0.84 moles

To get the mass, we simply multiply by the atomic mass of zinc. The atomic mass of zinc is 65a.m.u

The mass is thus 0.84 * 65 = 54.6g

4. Firstly we will need to calculate the number of moles here. To do this we divide the mass by the molar mass. The molar mass of lead nitrate is 331g/mol

The number of moles is thus 4.56/331 = 0.014 moles

1 mole contains 6.02 * 10^23 molecules, then 0.014 moles will contain 0.014 * 6.02 * 10^23 molecules = 8.29 * 10^21 molecules

8 0
3 years ago
Where does the actual gas exchange happen?
katen-ka-za [31]

Answer:

Option a. is correct.

Explanation:

Gas exchange refers to the the elimination of carbon dioxide from the bloodstream to the lungs and delivery of oxygen from the lungs to the bloodstream. The actual gas exchange happens in the lungs between the alveoli and capillaries (a network of tiny blood vessels). Capillaries are located in the walls of the alveoli.

4 0
4 years ago
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