Chemistry, 11.04.2021 07:20 23ricorvan
In which direction does the wind blow from during a sea breeze
Answers: 3
Chemistry, 22.06.2019 18:00
Answer asap need it by wednesday morning carry out the following calculations on ph and ka of from data. i. calculate the ph of 0.02m hcl ii. calculate the ph of 0.036m naoh iii. calculate the ph of 0.36m ca(oh)2 iv. calculate the ph of 0.16m ch3cooh which has ka = 1.74 x 10-5 mol dm-3 v. calculate ka for weak acid ha which has a ph of 3.65 at 0.30m concentration vi. calculate the ka of a solution made by mixing 15.0 cm3 0.2m ha and 60.0 cm3 0.31m a-. [ph= 3.80] vii. calculate the ph of a solution made by mixing 15.0 cm3 0.1m naoh and 35.0 cm3 0.2m hcooh. [ka = 1.82 x 10-4 m]
Answers: 1
Chemistry, 22.06.2019 19:00
How many moles of cu are needed to react with 5.8 moles of agno3? cu + 2 agno3 โ cu(no3)2 + 2 ag
Answers: 3
Chemistry, 23.06.2019 00:30
In a ball-and-stick molecular model, what do the sticks represent?
Answers: 1
Chemistry, 23.06.2019 16:00
Challenge question: this question is worth 6 points. as you saw in problem 9 we can have species bound to a central metal ion. these species are called ligands. in the past we have assumed all the d orbitals in some species are degenerate; however, they often are not. sometimes the ligands bound to a central metal cation can split the d orbitals. that is, some of the d orbitals will be at a lower energy state than others. ligands that have the ability to cause this splitting are called strong field ligands, cnรขโ is an example of these. if this splitting in the d orbitals is great enough electrons will fill low lying orbitals, pairing with other electrons in a given orbital, before filling higher energy orbitals. in question 7 we had fe2+, furthermore we found that there were a certain number (non-zero) of unpaired electrons. consider now fe(cn)6 4รขโ: here we also have fe2+, but in this case all the electrons are paired, yielding a diamagnetic species. how can you explain this?
Answers: 2
In which direction does the wind blow from during a sea breeze...
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