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Alexeev081 [22]
2 years ago
7

A major advancement of from the Bohr model of the atom was the understanding of

Chemistry
1 answer:
nataly862011 [7]2 years ago
8 0

We have that the statement of  Bohr's  model understanding of electron energy levels is True

Option A

<h3>Electron energy levels</h3>

Generally, Bohr's model in his famous publication saw to explaining where <em>electrons</em> could be found. The model also explains the properties of different elements.

Therefore, The statement "A major advancement of from the Bohr model of the atom was the understanding of electron energy levels." is

True

For more information on Atom visit

brainly.com/question/13981855

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6. Would you describe each of these temperatures as warm, hot, or cold?
mash [69]

Answer:

b: Hot

a: Cold

c: Cold

d: Warm

e: Warm

f: Cold

g: Hot

Explanation:

:)

8 0
3 years ago
A 1.8 g sample of octane C8H18 was burned in a bomb calorimeter and the temperature of 100 g of water increased from 21.36 C to
melomori [17]

Answer:

HEAT OF COMBUSTION PER GRAM OF OCTANE IS 1723.08 J OR 1.72 KJ/G OF HEAT

HEAT OFF COMBUSTION PER MOLE OF OCTANE IS 196.4 KJ/ MOL OF HEAT

Explanation:

Mass of water = 100 g

Change in temperature = 28.78 °C - 21.36°C = 7.42 °C

Heat capcacity of water = 4.18 J/g°C

Mass of octane = 1.8 g

Molar mass of octane = C8H18 = (12 * 8 + 1 * 18) g/mol= 96 + 18 = 114 g/mol

First is to calculate the heat evolved when 100 g of water is used:

Heat = mass * specific heat capacity * change in temperature

Heat = 100 * 4.18 * 7.42

Heat = 3101.56 J

In other words, 3101.56 J of heat was evolved from the reaction of 1.8 g octane with water.

Heat of combustion of octane per gram:

1.8 g of octane produces 3101.56 J of heat

1 g of octane will produce ( 3101.56 * 1 / 1.8)

= 1723.08 J of heat

So, heat of combustion of octane per gram is 1723.08 J

Heat of combustion per mole:

1.8 g of octane produces 3101.56 J of heat

1 mole of octane will produce X J of heat

1 mole of octane = 114 g/ mol of octane

So we have:

1.8 g of octane = 3101.56 J

114 g of octane = (3101.56 * 114 / 1.8) J of heat

= 196 432.13 J

= 196. 4 kJ of heat

The heat of combustion of octane per mole is 196.4 kJ /mol.

Mass of water = 100 g

Change in temperature = 28.78 °C - 21.36°C = 7.42 °C

Heat capcacity of water = 4.18 J/g°C

Mass of octane = 1.8 g

Molar mass of octane = C8H18 = (12 * 8 + 1 * 18) g/mol= 96 + 18 = 114 g/mol

First is to calculate the heat evolved when 100 g of water is used:

Heat = mass * specific heat capacity * change in temperature

Heat = 100 * 4.18 * 7.42

Heat = 3101.56 J

8 0
2 years ago
Which of the following statements is false? Check all that apply. Gases are far more compressible than liquids The volume occupi
Sergio039 [100]

Answer:

The false statement is: 3. Because liquid water and liquid carbon tetrachloride do not mix, neither do their vapors

Explanation:

Gas is a state of matter, that has <u>less density than liquids and solids</u>. The gaseous particles have low intermolecular forces and thus they can move freely.

It is a very <u>compressible fluid</u> that has no fixed shape. Gas occupies the whole container in which it is stored, thus taking the shape of the container. Therefore, <u>the volume of the gas is equal to the volume of the container.</u>

<u>Polar liquid like water (H₂O) and nonpolar liquid like carbon tetrachloride, are immiscible. However, in the gaseous state, their vapors form a  homogeneous mixture.</u>

5 0
3 years ago
a fixed amount of gas at 25.0 degrees Celsius occupies a volume of 10.0 L when the pressure is 629 torr. Use Charles law to calc
kirill [66]

Explanation:

Since pressure remained constant, we can eliminate P from the equation

\frac{pv }{t}  =  \frac{pv}{t}

Doing some algebra and converting temperature to Kevin by adding 273, you should obtain the same result.

8 0
3 years ago
The table describes how some substances were formed.
gogolik [260]

Answer:

Formed by adding 5 g of sugar to 1 L of water

Explanation:

The substance formed by adding 5 g of suagr to 1 L of water is a mixture.

<em>A mixture is defined as two or more substances that are physically mixed but do not react together. It thus means that the component substances of a mixture can be retrieved through appropriate means of separations.</em>

<u>A mixture of sugar and water can be separated by evaporation. The mixture is heated and the vapor from the boiling water can be condensed to retrieve the water while the residue will give the sugar that was initially dissolved in it. </u>

The products formed from other descriptions in the illustration cannot be separated ordinarily and thus, are not considered to be mixture. The components have been chemically combined together.

6 0
3 years ago
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