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lbvjy [14]
3 years ago
10

- PLEASE HELP ME! - the stuff is in the photo!!

Chemistry
2 answers:
labwork [276]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

Explanation:

the first and last one

<h2>good luck!</h2>
mojhsa [17]3 years ago
4 0

Answer: 1 and 4

A clean renewable source is sustainable

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A student heats the same amount of two different liquids over Bunsen burners. Each liquid is at room temperature when the studen
ZanzabumX [31]

If Liquid 1 has a higher specific heat than Liquid 2, then Liquid 1 will take longer to increase in temperature because the higher specific heat of a liquid needs more thermal energy for heating a liquid.

<h3>What is specific heat?</h3>

Specific heat of a substance refers to the quantity of heat that is required to raise the temperature of one gram of a substance by one Celsius degree so we can conclude that  Liquid 1 will take longer to increase in temperature

Learn more about heat here: brainly.com/question/24390373

7 0
3 years ago
How much heat (in Joules) is needed to raise the temperature of 257g of ethanol (cethanol=2.4 J/g°C) by 49.1°C?
Sonbull [250]

Answer:

Q = 30284.88 j

Explanation:

Given data:

Mass of ethanol = 257 g

Cp = 2.4 j/g.°C

Chnage in temperature = ΔT = 49.1°C

Heat required = ?

Solution:

Specific heat capacity:

It is the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of one gram of substance by one degree.

Formula:

Q = m.c. ΔT

Q = amount of heat absorbed or released

m = mass of given substance

c = specific heat capacity of substance

ΔT = change in temperature

Now we will put the values in formula.

Q = 257 g× 2.4 j/g.°C × 49.1 °C

Q = 30284.88 j

8 0
3 years ago
Is the freezing point of water a physical change or a physical property​
olya-2409 [2.1K]

Answer:

It is a physical change because this change is reversible and no chemical reaction occurs.

Explanation:

3 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Need help with this.
Jobisdone [24]

Answer:

18.2 g.

Explanation:

You need to first figure out how many moles of nitrogen gas and hydrogen (gas) you have. To do this, use the molar masses of nitrogen gas and hydrogen (gas) on the periodic table. You get the following:

0.535 g. N2 and 1.984 g. H2

Then find out which reactant is the limiting one. In this case, it's N2. The amount of ammonia, then, that would be produced is 2 times the amount of moles of N2. This gives you 1.07 mol, approximately. Then multiply this by the molar mass of ammonia to find your answer of 18.2 g.

5 0
3 years ago
To make a 2.0-molar solution, how many moles of solute must be dissolved in 0.50 liters of solution?
attashe74 [19]
Moles = Molarity x Volume

Moles = 2.0 x 0.50

= 1.0 mole

hope this helps!

4 0
3 years ago
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