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Marina86 [1]
3 years ago
14

If H2O is removed from this reaction, what will happen?

Chemistry
1 answer:
Alona [7]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

C. The reactants will react to produce more H2O.

Explanation:

According to Principle of Equilibrium, the reaction would move in such a way to annul any change imposed on a system at equilibrium.

In this question, the change is removing H2O from the reaction system. To counter this change, more H2O has to be produced.

The correct option is;

C. The reactants will react to produce more H2O.

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opposite poles of different magnet will attract each other and light poles or repel each other this is an example of which of th
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Its an example of the law of domains
4 0
4 years ago
Forces start and change the motion of on object.<br> A: True<br> B: False
klio [65]
True, forces do change the motion of an object
4 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
A pocket of gas is discovered in a deep drilling operation.The
Nataly_w [17]

Answer : The volume of gas required to provide 18.01L of gas  at the surface is, 3.6 L

Explanation :

Combined gas law is the combination of Boyle's law, Charles's law and Gay-Lussac's law.

The combined gas equation is,

\frac{P_1V_1}{T_1}=\frac{P_2V_2}{T_2}

where,

P_1 = initial pressure of gas = 12.8 atm

P_2 = final pressure of gas = 1.0 atm

V_1 = initial volume of gas = ?

V_2 = final volume of gas = 18.01 L

T_1 = initial temperature of gas = 480^oC=273+480=753K

T_2 = final temperature of gas = 22^oC=273+22=295K

Now put all the given values in the above equation, we get:

\frac{12.8atm\times V_1}{753K}=\frac{1.0atm\times 18.01L}{295K}

V_1=3.59L\approx 3.6L

Therefore, the volume of gas required to provide 18.01L of gas  at the surface is, 3.6 L

7 0
3 years ago
what is the indication that tells us what charge a transitional metal has since they dont have a set trend
Arlecino [84]

Answer:

Roman numbering in IUPAC naming system

Explanation:

This is quite an open question. Let's firstly separate the periodic table into two standard groups: group A elements and group B elements (transition metals).

The charge (or the oxidation state) of an element in group A can be identified by the group number. For example, group 1A elements would always have a charge of +1, as they have only one valence electron to lose.

Similar trend applies to group 2A: each element in that group would have a charge of +2, as each atom has 2 valence electrons to lose to become a cation.

You will notice that this is true fro group 3A and group 4A as well. Now, since an octet is the desired state for any species, starting with group 5A, it's easier to gain 3 electrons for species than lose 5 electrons to obtain an octer, meaning we'd expect -3 oxidation state for group 5A elements, -2 oxidation state for group 6A elements and -1 oxidation state for group 7A elements.

Notice that in the majority of cases, this is the standard trend and we'd generally only have one predominant oxidation state.

Considering group B, the transition metals, most of them have several oxidation states. That's why we usually memorize the ones which only have one oxidation state (such as zinc, silver) and in any other case when a transition metal has several oxidation states, they're identified in the name by using Roman numbering system.

Let's look at an example. Assume the problem states we have a salt which is iron chloride. This would be an improper name, as iron has two oxidation states: +2 and +3. That's why we have the rules of IUPAC naming to avoid ambiguity. If we had iron with an oxidation state of +2, we'd call the salt iron(II) chloride. An oxidation state of +3 would indicate iron(III) chloride.

To summarize, the main key of knowing the charge of a transition metal in a compound is to follow the IUPAC naming rules.

7 0
3 years ago
Something that does not have the ability to react is considered
nasty-shy [4]
Something that does not have the ability to react is considered inert. <span> In chemistry, the term </span>inert<span> is used to describe a substance that is not </span>chemically<span> reactive. Hope this answers the question. Have a nice day.</span>
4 0
4 years ago
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