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Tju [1.3M]
3 years ago
6

Would a cell voltage change significantly if the right-hand half-cells contained twice their volume of a solution of the same co

ncentration? Why? What if each electrode were made from cylindrical wires instead of flat sheets?
Chemistry
1 answer:
elena-s [515]3 years ago
5 0
No. A voltage reading is a result of a difference in cell potential of the cells. Even if you added the volume, it would still not affect because what matters is the concentration of the ions which give the potential gradient. All you did was add the quantity in terms of volume but the substance in it is still the same.
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What are some of the different substances that make up a pizza?
Nadya [2.5K]
Pizza dough cheese tomato paste this is your typical cheese pizza
5 0
4 years ago
2. In the water cycle, lake water will do which​
aalyn [17]
Water is always on the move. Rain falling today may have been water in a distant ocean days before. And the water you see in a river or stream may have been snow on a high mountaintop. Water is in the atmosphere, on the land, in the ocean, and underground. It moves from place to place through the water cycle.

Where's the water?

There are about 1.4 billion km3 of water (336 million mi3 of water) on Earth. That includes liquid water in the ocean, lakes, and rivers. It includes frozen water in snow, ice, and glaciers, and water that’s underground in soils and rocks. It includes the water that’s in the atmosphere as clouds and vapor.

If you could put all that water together – like a gigantic water drop – it would be 1,500 kilometers (930 miles) across.

6 0
3 years ago
Seawater is typically 3.5% salt and has a density of 1.03 g/mL. How many grams of salt would be needed to prepare enough seawate
Bas_tet [7]

Answer:

Amount of salt needed is around 2.3*10³ g

Explanation:

The salt content in sea water = 3.5 %

This implies that there is 3.5 g salt in 100 g sea water

Density of seawater = 1.03 g/ml

Volume of seawater = volume of tank = 62.5 L = 62500 ml

Therefore, the amount of seawater required is:

=Density*Volume = 1.03g/ml*62500ml = 6.44*10^{4} g

The amount of salt needed for the calculated amount of seawater is:

=\frac{6.44*10^{4}g\ water*3.5g\ salt }{100g\ water} =2254 g =2.3*10^{3} g

8 0
3 years ago
Sodium azide, NaN3, the explosive compound found in automobile air bags, decomposes according to the following equation: 2NaN3(s
shutvik [7]

Answer:

1.9 × 10² g NaN₃

1.5 g/L

Explanation:

Step 1: Write the balanced decomposition equation

2 NaN₃(s) ⇒ 2 Na(s) + 3 N₂(g)

Step 2: Calculate the moles of N₂ formed

N₂ occupies a 80.0 L bag at 1.3 atm and 27 °C (300 K). We will calculate the moles of N₂ using the ideal gas equation.

P × V = n × R × T

n = P × V / R × T

n = 1.3 atm × 80.0 L / (0.0821 atm.L/mol.K) × 300 K = 4.2 mol

We can also calculate the mass of nitrogen using the molar mass (M) 28.01 g/mol.

4.2 mol × 28.01 g/mol = 1.2 × 10² g

Step 3: Calculate the mass of NaN₃ needed to form 1.2 × 10² g of N₂

The mass ratio of NaN₃ to N₂ is 130.02:84.03.

1.2 × 10² g N₂ × 130.02 g NaN₃/84.03 g N₂ = 1.9 × 10² g NaN₃

Step 4: Calculate the density of N₂

We will use the following expression.

ρ = P × M / R × T

ρ = 1.3 atm × 28.01 g/mol / (0.0821 atm.L/mol.K) × 300 K = 1.5 g/L

5 0
3 years ago
when a chemical change occurs, what do you know about the amount of matter in the new substances? what is this known as?( is it
Pavel [41]

Explanation:

The law of conservation of mass states that the total mass of the products is equal to the total of the reactants.

A chemical change occurs because of a chemical reaction.

In a chemical reaction, the reactants are the starting substances and the products is the finishing substances. The amount of each type of atoms to start with and end with are also equal.

No matter disappears after a chemical reaction.

Answer:

The amount of matter in the new substances is the same as the original.

This is known as the law of conservation of mass.

6 0
3 years ago
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