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lana [24]
3 years ago
9

What is the conservation of mass pertains the chemical change and physical change?

Chemistry
2 answers:
muminat3 years ago
8 0

Answer:

The Law of Conservation of Matter states that matter cannot be created or destroyed. In a physical change, substances can change form, but the total mass remains the same. In a chemical change, the total mass of the reactants always equals the total mass of the products.

Explanation:

Leokris [45]3 years ago
6 0

Answer:

Hey mate......

Explanation:

This is ur answer......

<h3>The Law of Conservation of Mass</h3>

<em>Matter can change form through physical and chemical changes, but through any of these changes, matter is conserved. The same amount of matter exists before and after the change—none is created or destroyed. This concept is called the Law of Conservation of Mass.</em>

<em>The Law of Conservation of Matter also states that the matter cannot be created or destroyed. In a physical change, substances can change form, but the total mass remains the same. In a chemical change, the total mass of the reactants always equals the total mass of the products.</em>

Hope it helps!

Brainliest pls!

Follow me! :)

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N2+3H2 → 2NH3
s2008m [1.1K]

Explanation:

N2 (g) + H2 (g) gives out NH3 (g)

Now balance it. You have two reactants with compositions involving a single element, which makes it very easy to keep track of how much is on each side. I would balance the nitrogens, and then the hydrogens.

Now balance it. You have two reactants with compositions involving a single element, which makes it very easy to keep track of how much is on each side. I would balance the nitrogens, and then the hydrogens.(If you balance the hydrogen reactant with a whole number first, I can guarantee you that you will have to give NH3 a new stoichiometric coefficient.)

N2 (g) + 3H2 (g) gives out 2NH3 (g)

The stoichiometric coefficients tell you that if we can somehow treat every component in the reaction as the same (like on a per-mol basis, hinthint), then one "[molar] equivalent" of nitrogen yields two [molar] equivalents of ammonia.

Luckily, one mol of anything is equal in quantity to one mol of anything else because the comparison is made in the units of mols.

So what do we do? Convert to

mols (remember the hint?).

28g N2 × 1 mol N2/ 2 × 14.007) g N2

= 0.9995 mol N2

At this point you don't even need to calculate the number of mols of H2 . Why? Because H2 is about 2 g/mol, which means we have over 10 mols of H2. We have 1 mol N2, and we need three times as many mols of H2 as we have

N2.

After doing the actual calculation you should realize that we have about 4 times as much H2 as we need. Therefore the limiting reagent is clearly N2.

Thus, we should yield 2×0.9995=1.9990 mols of NH3 (refer back to the reaction). So this is the second and last calculation we need to do:

1.9990 mol NH3 × 17.0307 g NH3/ 1 mol NH3

= 34.0444 g NH3

Hope it helpz~

4 0
3 years ago
Why is Potassium not used in school laboratory
densk [106]
<h3>Because it is harmful for school environment.</h3>

Potassium Metal Is Explosive— Do Not Use It! The reaction of sodium with water is a spectacular and essential classroom demonstration. Many teachers want to show also the more violent reaction of potassium. We propose not to do so because explosions can happen even before the metal is in contact with water.

<em>-</em><em> </em><em>BRAINLIEST</em><em> answerer</em>

6 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
What is the correct description of the components of an ATP molecule?
frosja888 [35]
It's adenosine triphosphate !

it has Penrose sugar and phosphate as backbone !
and nitrogenous base ... adenine.... in the middle !
4 0
3 years ago
At 25.0°c, a solution has a concentration of 3.179 m and a density of 1.260 g/ml. the density of the solution at 50.0°c is 1.249
oksano4ka [1.4K]

Answer: -

3.151 M

Explanation: -

Let the volume of the solution be 1000 mL.

At 25.0 °C, Density = 1.260 g/ mL

Mass of the solution = Density x volume

= 1.260 g / mL x 1000 mL

= 1260 g

At 25.0 °C, the molarity = 3.179 M

Number of moles present per 1000 mL = 3.179 mol

Strength of the solution in g / mol

= 1260 g / 3.179 mol = 396.35 g / mol (at 25.0 °C)

Now at 50.0 °C

The density is 1.249 g/ mL

Mass of the solution = density x volume = 1.249 g / mL x 1000 mL

= 1249 g.

Number of moles present in 1249 g = Mass of the solution / Strength in g /mol

= \frac{1249 g}{396.35 g/mol}

= 3.151 moles.

So 3.151 moles is present in 1000 mL at 50.0 °C

Molarity at 50.0 °C = 3.151 M

7 0
3 years ago
Please help ASAP I will give Brainliest
MaRussiya [10]

Answer:

17.6 grams of nitrogen gas

4 0
4 years ago
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