Wednesday
May 22, 2013

Posts by raj


Total # Posts: 208

Chemistry
Thanks, for the help, although the last one doesn't look right, I understand it now. Thank You.

Chemistry
Can someone explain for organic chemistry naming, when something would be given something like "iso" in it or when we would say "s-butyl" or "t-propyl" etc., with "s" meaning secondary and "t" meaning tertiary.

Chemistry
How can I tell whether something is a weak, strong, or non-electrolyte? I know non-electrolytes do not ionize, strong almost completely ionize and weak only partially. But how would I be able to tell? Like, something like KOH is a strong electrolyte because it can ionize into ...

Chemistry
In a thermochemistry experiment the reaction of 0.0857 g of an unknown metal and an excess of 4.0 M HCl resulted in a 0.210 mL decrease in the volume of an ice/water mixture. Calculate the enthalpy of this reaction per 1 g of metal reacted. Needed data: density of water at 273...

Chemistry
The reaction between 0.055 g of calcium with an excess of water was carried out in an ice calorimeter. The volume of water in the calorimeter decreased by 0.20 mL during the reaction. Calculate the enthalpy of the reaction (in kJ/mol).

Chemistry
Oh, alrite so then heres what I get. 2 Cl(g) --> Cl2(g) exo-on H2O(l) --> H2O(g) endo-by 2 H2(g) + O2(g) --> 2 H2O(l) exo-on 2 Li(s) + H2O(l) --> 2 LiOH(aq) + H2(g) endo-by 3 NaN3(s) --> Na3N(s) + 4 N2(g)endo-by

Chemistry
When given a chemical reaction, how would I know whether a reaction is endo or exothermic and whether work is done on the system or by the system. Without using any calculations. So I have a couple reactions which I have to use chemical reasoning to to determine. 2 Cl(g) -->...

Chemistry
You have to determine the molar mass of CaCO3, by getting the molar mass of Ca and the molar mass of C, and the molar mass of O multiplied by 3 (since there are 3 oxygen atoms). You would get 100.087 g/mol. You would then do the mass/molar mass. 30.6/100.87 = your answer

Chemistry
How did you get 1 cal/g*c....is that a calculated constant or is manual conversion required? The answer I get using your method is 96.4kg, which is correct.

Chemistry
Wait, I did it wrong. q = mH(Tf - Ti) m = q/H(Tf-Ti) m = 675/[4.18x7] m = 23.06 But its still the wrong answer.

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