Answer:
Adding Neutrons
General Formulas and Concepts:
Chemistry - Atomic Structure
Atoms CompositionNucleus - Protons, NeutronsElectronsExplanation:
We know that adding Protons to any atom will change its chemical properties and make it a different element.
We also know that adding Electrons to any atom will simply only change its overall charge.
Isotopes are formed by adding neutrons to the nucleus. It will be the same element but it would have a different mass and amount of neutrons.
IMESSAGE GAMES ANYONE?
Answer:
oop whats dis
Explanation:
If 8.2 mL of 0.055 M NaOH is required to titrate a 5.5 mL sample of potassium bitartrate, what is the [K +]?
Answer:
.082 M
Explanation:
You just do C1V1=C2V2
The concentration of the potassium bitartrate acid is determined as 0.082 M.
Concentration of the acidThe concentration of the potassium bitartrate acid is calculated as follows;
C1V1 = C2V2
where;
C1 is the concentration of the base = 0.055V1 is the volume of the base = 8.2 mlC2 is the concentration of the acidV2 is the volume of the acid = 5.5 mlC2 = (C1V1)/(V2)
C2 = (0.055 x 8.2)/(5.5)
C2 = 0.082
Learn more about concentration here: https://brainly.com/question/17206790
#SPJ2
Question 2
The higher the energy, the higher or lower the wavelength? This is an example of a/an direct or inverse relationship?
Answer:
the higher the energy tje lower the wavelength
Explanation:
inverse relationship
Answer:
It's an example of an inverse relationship :)
What is the Molarity of 25 g of C6H12O6 in 25 mL of H2O?
Answer:
5.6 M
Explanation:
Given data:
Mass of C₆H₁₂O₆ = 25 g
Volume of solution = 25 mL (25 mL×1 L/1000 mL=0.025 L)
Molarity of solution = ?
Solution:
Molarity is used to describe the concentration of solution. It tells how many moles are dissolve in per litter of solution.
Formula:
Molarity = number of moles of solute / L of solution
Number of moles of C₆H₁₂O₆:
Number of moles = mass/molar mass
Number of moles = 25 g/ 180.16 g/mol
Number of moles = 0.14 mol
Molarity:
M = number of moles / volume in L
M = 0.14 mol/ 0.025 L
M = 5.6 M
One mole of an ideal gas expands reversibly and isothermally from 10. bar to 1.0 bar at 298.15K.
Required:
a. Calculate the values of w, q, âU and âH?
b. Calculate w if the gas were to have expanded to the same final state against a constant pressure of 1 bar.
Answer:
a. W = 5,708 J, Q = 5,708 J, ΔU = 0 and ΔH = 0.
b. 2,231 J.
Explanation:
Hello!
a. In this case, since this is an isothermal process (constant temperature) it is possible to infer that the work is computed as shown below:
[tex]W=nRTln(\frac{p_1}{p_2} )=1mol*8.314\frac{J}{mol*K}*298.15Kln(\frac{10.bar}{1.0bar} )\\\\W=5708J[/tex]
Now, since this is an isothermal process we know by definition ΔU = 0 and ΔH = 0, therefore the involved heat is:
[tex]Q-W=0\\\\Q=W=5708J[/tex]
b. In this case, since the process is isobaric but goes to the same final volume in part a, we can compute the initial and final volume based on the part a's conditions by using the ideal gas equation:
[tex]V_1=\frac{nRT}{p_1} =\frac{1mol*0.083145\frac{*L}{mol*K}*298.15K}{10.bar} =2.48L\\\\V_2=\frac{nRT}{p_2} =\frac{1mol*0.083145\frac{*L}{mol*K}*298.15K}{1.bar} =24.8L[/tex]
Thus, the work done here is:
[tex]W=p(V_2-V_1)=1bar(24.8L-2.48L)=22.3bar*L*\frac{1x10^5Pa}{1bar} *\frac{1m^3}{1000L} \\\\W=2231J[/tex]
Best regards!
.What is the effective number of bonds between the sulfur atom and each oxygen atom in the sulfate ion
Answer:
The effective number of bonds in sulfate ion is 1.5
Explanation:
The number of chemical bonds between two atoms is known as the bond order.
In covalent bonds between two atoms, a single bond has a bond order of one, a double bond has a bond order of two, a triple bond has a bond order of three.
If there are more than two atoms in a molecule, the effective number of bonds can be determined by applying the following steps:
1. Draw the Lewis structure.
2. Count the total number of bonds.
3. Count the number of bond groups between individual atoms.
4. Divide the number of bonds between atoms by the total number of bond groups in the molecule.
For the sulfate ion, the resonance structure is shown in the attachment below. From the structure;
Total number of bonds = (2 × 2) + (2 × 1) = 6
Total number of bond groups = 4
Effective number of bonds = 6/4 = 1.5
Therefore, the effective number of bonds in sulfate ion is 1.5
13. As heat is added to a lúguid that is boiling at constant
pressure, the temperature of the liquid
A) decreases B) increases
C) remains the same
A
B
What is the reason for the trend in Atomic Radii? Select all that apply.
A. number of valence electrons.
B. number of neutrons in the nucleus
C. number of protons in the nucleus
D. larger atomic mass number
E. number of energy levels around the nucleus
What is percent error calculation used to determine
1. At room temperature, air is usually a (solid, liquid, gas).
Which of the following is an example of a physical change?
А.
sugar and oxygen reacting to produce water and carbon dioxide
B
honey dissolving in tea
С
a raw egg being cooked
D
metal rusting after being left out in the rain
Answer:
B. honey dissolving in tea
Explanation:
Acetylene gas (C2H2) is used in welding torches. When it reacts with oxygen, it produces
carbon dioxide (CO2) and steam (H20). The reaction can be described by the equation 2C2H2+
502 —> 4CO2 + 2H20. How much mass of C2H2 is needed to produce 75.0 grams of CO2?
Mass C₂H₂ needed : 22.165 g
Further explanationReaction
2C₂H₂+ 5O₂ ⇒ 4CO₂ + 2H₂O
75.0 grams of CO₂ , mol CO₂ (MW=44 g/mol) :
[tex]\tt \dfrac{75}{44}=1.705[/tex]
mol C₂H₂ :
[tex]\tt \dfrac{2}{4}\times 1.705=0.8525[/tex]
mass C₂H₂ (MW=26 g/mol) :
[tex]\tt 0.8525\times 26=22.165~g[/tex]
How many grams of KOH are required to prepare 500. mL of 0.450 KOH solution?
Answer:
KOH molar mass = 39 + 16 + 1 = 56g
To make 1 L of 1M soln needs 56g KOH
To make 500mL 1M needs 56/2 = 28g
To make 500mL 0.2M needs 28 x 0.2gn:
Ava threw a hamster at her sister the other day she used 12N of force to accelerate the hamster at 8m/s2.what was the mass of the poor hamster?SHOW ALL WORK
We are given:
The force applied on the poor hamster (F) = 12 N
Acceleration of the poor Hamster (a) = 8 m/s²
Solving for the mass of the Poor Hamster:
From newton's second equation of motion, we know that:
F = ma
replacing the given values
12 = 8 * m
m = 12/8 kg
m = 3/2 kg
The poor Hamster weighs 3/2 kg
Answering the following questions will help you focus on the outcomes of the experiments. Experiment 1: What happens to the water in the small tube as the water in the test tube absorbs heat? Why do you think a small tube was used to observe the expansion of water? Experiment 2: Compare the circumference of the balloon before and after freezing. What is the percent increase in this measurement? Combined Results Write a summary paragraph discussing this experiment and the results. Use the following questions and topics to help guide the content of your paragraph. Summarize the conclusions that you can draw from this experiment. Use the questions above to guide your ideas. Summarize any difficulties or problems you had in performing the experiment that might have affected the results. Describe how you might change the procedure to avoid these problems. Describe at least two real-world issues or examples that illustrate the findings of this experiment.
Answer:
Use a glass testtube
Insert a 1-hole stopper in which you insert a glass tube (use a bit of glycerine around the bottom end which makes it slip easier into the stopper)
Fill the testtube with colored water
Place rubber stopper
Make sure there are no air bubbles and that the column in the glass tube is low, as indicated
Place testtube assembly into water which you will heat (hot plate)
Observations
You will observe that the water column in the glass tube moves up as the temperature of the water in the testtube increases. With a 20 mL testtube, and a temperature change from 20 degrees C to 80 degrees C, you should get something like 15-20 cm of change in height.
What do YOU observe?
How do YOU explain your observation?
What is happening there?
Explanation
The water in the testtube expands as it is heated. There is only one direction to expand in, the glass tube. This glass tube is narrow so that a small change in volume will result in a considerable change in height; your signal is amplified.
This is the same phenomenon as in thermometers with a glass bulb on the lower end. Thermometers use a variety of liquids including alcohol (expands more than water) and mercury (is dangerous when spilled).
Explanation:
hope this helps
Answer:
Experiment 1:
What happens to the water in the small tube as the water in the test tube absorbs heat?
Answer: As the water in the test tube absorbs heat the water in the small tube continues to rise
Why do you think a small tube was used to observe the expansion of water?
Answer: The small tube was used to observe the expansion of water to show a visible change that could also be measure with a ruler
Experiment 2:
Compare the circumference of the balloon before and after freezing. What is the percent increase in this measurement?
Answer: The circumference of the balloon increased after it was put in the freezer. The measurement increased by about 5%, it started at 39.5cm then increased to 41.5cm
According to the data, an increase in temperature caused the water molecules to expand because it gained energy which caused it to move more rapidly ultimately resulting in an increase of volume of water. In addition, when being froze water expands making it less dense than the water from which it freezes, causing the volume to also increase. The difficulty I faced in this experiment is pinpointing the exact change in the waters expansion. Two real world issues are when icebergs float as a result of water freezing resulting in expansion, another one is the warming of Earth due to the heat-trapping from greenhouse gases. This heat is absorbed by oceans and seas causing the temperature to rise and the water to expand.
Explanation:
If 17.8 g grams of lithium (Li) are combined with 50.0 grams of water (H20) there is
24.7 grams of hydrogen gas (H2) produced. How much lithium hydroxide (LiOH) was
also produced?
Answer:
Explanation:
Li+H2O..................LiOH+H2
mass of Li=17.8 g
No of moles of Li=17.8/7=2.5
mass of H2O=50.0 g
No of moles of H2O=50.0/18=2.8
limiting reagent is Li so 1 mole of Li produce 1 mole of LiOH therefore 2.5 mole of Li produce 2.5 moles of LiOH now we have to convert it into grams
moles=given mass/molar mass
given mass=moles*molar mass
molar mass of LiOH=24
mass=2.5*24=60 gram
How many atoms of hydrogen would need to bond with a single atom of selenium to form a molecular compound?
Answer:
Hydrogen sulfide reacts with aqueous selenous acid to produce selenium disulfide:
H2SeO3 + 2 H2S → SeS2 + 3 H2O
Selenium disulfide consists of 8-membered rings. It has an approximate composition of SeS2, with individual rings varying in composition, such as Se4S4 and Se2S6. Selenium disulfide has been used in shampoo as an antidandruff agent, an inhibitor in polymer chemistry, a glass dye, and a reducing agent in fireworks.[15]
Selenium trioxide may be synthesized by dehydrating selenic acid, H2SeO4, which is itself produced by the oxidation of selenium dioxide with hydrogen peroxide:[17]
SeO2 + H2O2 → H2SeO4
Hot, concentrated selenic acid can react with gold to form gold(III) selenate.[18]
Help please! please answer with a good answer
Answer:
what the heck what is that?
Explanation:
What is the balanced NET ionic equation for the reaction when aqueous Cs₃PO₄ and aqueous AgNO₃ are mixed in solution to form solid Ag₃PO₄ and aqueous CsNO₃
Answer:
[tex]PO_4^{3-}(aq)+3Ag^+(aq)\rightarrow Ag_3PO_4(s)[/tex]
Explanation:
Hello!
In this case, since the net ionic equation of a chemical reaction shows up the ionic species that result from the simplification of the spectator ions, which are those at both reactants and products sides, we take into account that aqueous species ionize into ions whereas liquid, solid and gas species remain unionized. In such a way, for the reaction of cesium phosphate and silver nitrate we can write the complete molecular equation:
[tex]Cs_3PO_4(aq)+3AgNO_3(aq)\rightarrow Ag_3PO_4(s)+3CsNO_3(aq)[/tex]
Whereas the three aqueous salts are ionized in order to write the following complete ionic equation:
[tex]3Cs^+(aq)+PO_4^{3-}(aq)+3Ag^+(aq)+3NO_3^-(aq)\rightarrow Ag_3PO_4(s)+3Cs^+(aq)+3NO_3^-(aq)[/tex]
In such a way, since the cesium and nitrate ions are the spectator ions because of the aforementioned, the net ionic equation turns out:
[tex]PO_4^{3-}(aq)+3Ag^+(aq)\rightarrow Ag_3PO_4(s)[/tex]
Best regards!
If a liquid is said to have high viscosity it is...
Answer:
Viscosity is the measure of resistance of a fluid to flow. A fluid that is highly viscous has a high resistance (like having more friction) and flows slower than a low-viscosity fluid. To think of viscosity in everyday terms, the easier a fluid moves, the lower the viscosity
Explanation:
Metal X is soft and can be cut with a knife. It reacts vigorously with air and water. Identify metal X-
iron
copper
Sodium
gold
Answer:
The metal is most likely Sodium.
Explanation:
Iron is not soft enough to be cut with a knife and will not react violently with water. When Iron reacts with water it just slowly rusts.
Copper is somewhat malleable, however, does not really react with water and only forms an oxide layer in the air.
Sodium is soft enough to be cut with a knife (I know this because I have worked with it and seen people work with it). It is also an alkali metal which are known to explode when in water.
Gold is malleable but does not really react with anything and is considered inert.
How much energy, in kilojoules, must you add to 3.00 quarts of olive oil to warm it from 23.0 °C to 100.0 °C? The specific heat of olive oil is 0.1.79 J/g·°C and its density is 0.916 g/mL
Answer:
3.58*10^-4kJ
Explanation:
Given
T1=23.0 °C
T2=100.0 °C
c=1.79 J/g·°C
Volume of olive =3 quarts
Converting to liter
1 quart =0.946353 L
3 quarts=x
Cross multiplying
x=0.946353*3
x=2.83L
To mL= 0.0028mL
We are given the density as 0.916 g/mL
Mass= density *volume
Mass= 0.916*0.0028
Mass=0.0026g
We know that the quantity of heat is expressed as
Q=mcΔT
Q=0.0026*1.79(23-100)
Q=0.004654*(77)
Q=0.358J
In kJ we divide 0.36 by 1000
=0.000358358
=3.58*10^-4kJ
A covalent bond is formed by:
loss of electrons between atoms
sharing of electrons between atoms
gain of electrons between atoms
valence electron shells overlaping, forming a "sea of electrons"
Answer:
sharing of electrons between atoms
Convert from 1.56×1030 particles of sodium chloride (NaCl) to grams of sodium chloride.
Answer:
15.14×10⁷ g
Explanation:
Given data:
Number of particles of NaCl = 1.56×10³⁰ particles
Mass of sodium chloride = ?
Solution:
The given problem will solve by using Avogadro number.
It is the number of atoms , ions and molecules in one gram atom of element, one gram molecules of compound and one gram ions of a substance. The number 6.022 × 10²³ is called Avogadro number.
1 mole = 6.022 × 10²³ particles
1.56×10³⁰ particles × 1 mol / 6.022 × 10²³ particles
0.259 ×10⁷ mol
Mass in gram:
Mass = number of moles × molar mass
Mass = 0.259 ×10⁷ mol × 58.44 g/mol
Mass = 15.14×10⁷ g
Question 1 Give the correct number of significant figures for 4500, 4500., 0.0032, 0.04050
Question 2 Give the answer to the correct number of significant figures:
4503 + 34.90 + 550 = ?
the correct number of significant figures.
uction 2 Give
Answer:
Question 2
5087.9 or 5088
The reference point in motion is:
A. The point in space and time at which the motion ended
B. The point in space and time at which the motion began
C. The focal point
D. The origin
Answer: the focal point
A 0.4505 g sample of a pure soluble bromide compound is dissolved in water, and all of the bromide ion is precipitated as AgBr by the addition of an excess of silver nitrate. The mass of the resulting AgBr is found to be 0.7514 g. What is the mass percentage of bromine in the original compound
Answer:
70.98% is the mass percentage of bromine in the original compound
Explanation:
First, we need to convert mass of AgBr to moles with its molar mass (AgBr: 187.77g/mol). Moles of AgBr = Moles of Br. With molar mass of Br-: 79.904g/mol we can find mass of bromide and mass percentage as follows:
0.7514g AgBr * (1mol / 187.77g) = 0.00400 moles AgBr = Moles of Br-
0.00400 moles Br- * (79.904g / mol) = 0.320g Br- in the sample
Mass percentage is:
0.320g Br- / 0.4505g sample * 100
70.98% is the mass percentage of bromine in the original compoundPleaseeee help I’m stuck on this problem
What is the mole fraction of KCI in a
mixture of 0.564 g NaCl, 1.52 g KCI,
and 0.857 g LICI?
Answer:
0.4
Explanation:
Given parameters:
Mass of NaCl = 0.564g
Mass of KCl = 1.52g
Mass of LiCl = 0.857g
Unknown:
Mole fraction of KCl = ?
Solution:
First, find the number of moles of the given species;
Number of moles = [tex]\frac{mass}{molar mass}[/tex]
Molar mass of KCl = 39 + 35.5 = 74.5g/mol
Molar mass of NaCl = 23 + 35.5 = 58.5g/mol
Molar mass of LiCl = 7 + 35.5 = 42.5g/mol
Number of moles of KCl = [tex]\frac{1.52}{74.5}[/tex] = 0.02mol
Number of moles of NaCl = [tex]\frac{0.564}{58.5}[/tex] = 0.0096mol
Number of moles of LiCl = [tex]\frac{0.857}{42.5}[/tex] = 0.02mol
Sum of moles = 0.02mol + 0.0096mol + 0.02mol = 0.0496mol
Mole fraction of KCl = [tex]\frac{0.02}{0.0496}[/tex] = 0.4
Answer:
.4
Explanation:
Why do you think some things float and some things sink?
Answer:
because some things have a higher density than other things
Explanation:
Answer:
some things float bc they have air inside of them which makes them rise bc air rises and gravity pulls so theyre working against each other. some things sink bc theyre heavy and gravity is already pulling them down so them being heavy just makes them sink faster. hope this helps!!!
Explanation:
Lexi is balancing equations. She is finding one equation to be very difficult to balance. Which explains how to balance the equation ZnSO4 + Li2CO3 → ZnCO3 + Li2SO4?
Answer:
deez
Explanation:
thx
Answer:
Atoms in the equation are already in balance
Explanation:
It's D