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ivanzaharov [21]
2 years ago
5

A student prepares a aqueous solution of trimethylacetic acid . Calculate the fraction of trimethylacetic acid that is in the di

ssociated form in his solution. Express your answer as a percentage. You will probably find some useful data in the ALEKS Data resource. Round your answer to significant digits.
Chemistry
1 answer:
irinina [24]2 years ago
8 0

The question is incomplete, here is the complete question:

A student prepares a 0.21 mM aqueous solution of trimethylacetic acid. Calculate the fraction of trimethylacetic acid that is in the dissociated form in his solution. Express your answer as a percentage. You will probably find some useful data in the ALEKS Data resource. Round your answer to 3 significant digits.

<u>Answer:</u> The percent of dissociation of trimethylacetic acid is 19.5 %

<u>Explanation:</u>

We are given:

Concentration of trimethylacetic acid = 0.21 mM  = 0.00021 M    (Conversion factor:  1 mole = 1000 millimoles )

The chemical equation for the dissociation of trimethylacetic acid follows:

                     C_4H_9COOH\rightleftharpoons C_4H_9COO^-+H^+

<u>Initial:</u>                   0.00021

<u>At eqllm:</u>             0.00021-x              x            x

The expression of K_a for above equation follows:

K_a=\frac{[C_4H_9COO^-][H^+]}{[C_4H_9COOH]}

We know that:

K_a\text{ for }C_4H_9COOH=1\times 10^{-5}

Putting values in above expression, we get:

1\times 10^{-5}=\frac{x\times x}{(0.00021-x))}\\\\x=0.000041,-0.000051

Neglecting the negative value of 'x' because concentration cannot be negative.

To calculate the fraction of dissociation, we use the equation:

\text{Percent of dissociation}=\frac{[H^+]}{[C_4H_9COOH]}\times 100

Putting values in above equation, we get:

\text{Percent of dissociation}=\frac{0.000041}{0.00021}\times 100\\\\\text{Percent of dissociation of trimethylacetic acid}=19.5%

Hence, the percent of dissociation of trimethylacetic acid is 19.5 %

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A student has 100. mL of 0.400 M CuSO4 (aq) and is asked to make 100. mL of 0.150 M CuSO4 (aq) for a spectrophotometry experimen
GenaCL600 [577]

Answer:

We have to take 37.5 mL of a 0.400 M solution

Explanation:

Step 1: Data given

Stock volume = 100 mL  = 0.100L

Stock concentration 0.400 M

Volume of solution he wants to make = 100 mL = 0.100L

Concentration of solution he wants to make = 0.150 M

Step 2: Calculate the volume of 0.400 M CuSO4 needed

C1*V1 = C2*V2

⇒with C1 = the stock concentration = 0.400M

⇒with V1 = the volume of the stock = TO BE DETERMINED

⇒with C2 = the concentration of the solution he wants to make = 0.150 M

⇒with V2 = the volume of the solution made = 0.100 L

0.400 M * V1 = 0.150M * 0.100L

V1 = (0.150M*0.100L) / 0.400 M

V1 = 0.0375 L = 37.5 mL

We have to take 37.5 mL of a 0.400 M solution

5 0
2 years ago
Read 2 more answers
A compound that is composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen contains 70.6% C, 5.9% H, and 23.5% O by mass. The molecular weight
zhannawk [14.2K]

Answer: The molecular formula will be C_8H_8O_2

Explanation:

If percentage are given then we are taking total mass is 100 grams.

So, the mass of each element is equal to the percentage given.

Mass of C= 70.6 g

Mass of H = 5.9 g

Mass of O = 23.5 g

Step 1 : convert given masses into moles.

Moles of C =\frac{\text{ given mass of C}}{\text{ molar mass of C}}= \frac{70.6g}{12g/mole}=5.9moles

Moles of H =\frac{\text{ given mass of H}}{\text{ molar mass of H}}= \frac{5.9g}{1g/mole}=5.9moles

Moles of O =\frac{\text{ given mass of O}}{\text{ molar mass of O}}= \frac{23.5g}{16g/mole}=1.5moles

Step 2 : For the mole ratio, divide each value of moles by the smallest number of moles calculated.

For C = \frac{5.9}{1.5}=4

For H = \frac{5.9}{1.5}=4

For O =\frac{1.5}{1.5}=1

The ratio of C : H: O= 4: 4:1

Hence the empirical formula is C_4H_4O

The empirical weight of C_4H_4O = 4(12)+4(1)+1(16)= 68g.

The molecular weight = 136 g/mole

Now we have to calculate the molecular formula.

n=\frac{\text{Molecular weight }}{\text{Equivalent weight}}=\frac{136}{68}=2

The molecular formula will be=2\times C_4H_4O=C_8H_8O_2

4 0
2 years ago
A 17.0-g sample of hf is dissolved in water to give 2.0 x 10 2 ml of solution. the concentration of the solution is:
fredd [130]
 The  concentration  of the solution  is   4.25 M

 Explanation

molarity=moles/volume in liters

moles  = mass/molar mass
molar mass  of HF = 19 + 1 =  20 g/mol
moles is therefore = 17.0 g/ 20 g/mol  = 0.85  moles

volume in  liters = 2  x10^2ml/1000 = 0.2  liters

therefore  molarity =  0.85/0.2 = 4.25  M
8 0
2 years ago
Read 2 more answers
One mole of an ideal gas in a closed system, initially at 25°C and 10 bar, is first expanded adiabatically, then heated isochori
Igoryamba

Answer:

P_2=0.398bar=39800Pa

T_2=118.7K\\

Q=-3729.9J

W=-61753.24J

ΔU_T=0J

ΔH_T=0J

Explanation:

Hello,

At the first state, the molar volume is:

v_1=\frac{RT}{P_1} =\frac{8.314\frac{Pa*m^3}{molK}*298.15}{1x10^6Pa}=2.48x10^{-3}m^3

The volume in both the second and third state:

v_2=v_3=\frac{RT}{P_1} =\frac{8.314\frac{Pa*m^3}{molK}*298.15}{1x10^5Pa}=2.48x10^{-2}m^3

Now, as it is about an adiabatic process, one remembers the following relationships:

PV^\alpha =K\\TV^{\alpha-1}\\\alpha=\frac{Cp}{Cv}=\frac{7/2R}{5/2R}=1.4

- Next, for the aforesaid volumes and the first pressure, one computes the second pressure as:

P_2=\frac{P_1V_1^\alpha }{V_2^\alpha} =\frac{10bar*(2.48x10^{-3}m^3)^{1.4}}{(2.48x10^{-2}m^3)^{1.4}} =0.398bar=39800Pa

- And the temperature:

T_2=\frac{T_1V_1^{\alpha-1}}{V_2^{\alpha-1}} =\frac{298.15K*(2.48x10^{-3}m^3)^{1.4-1}}{(2.48x10^{-2}m^3)^{1.4-1}} =118.7K\\

- Q:

It is clear that the heat for the first process is 0 as it is adiabatic, but for the second one, it is computed as:

Q_2=nCv(T_2-T_1)=1mol*\frac{5}{2}(8.314\frac{J}{mol*K})*(118.7K-298.15K)=-3729.9J

Then the total heat:

Q=Q_1+Q_2=0-3729.9J=-3729.9J

- The work for the first process is:

W_1=\frac{P_2V_2-P_1V_1}{1-\alpha }=\frac{39800Pa*2.48x10^{-3}m^3-1x10^6Pa*2.48x10^{-2}m^3}{0.4} \\W_1=-61753.24J

It is clear that the second process is isochoric, so the work here is zero, thus, the total work is:

W=W_1+W_2=-61753.24J+0J=-61753.24J

- For the two processes, ΔU becomes the same value since the system returns to the initial temperature, so ΔU total is 0, thus, for each process, one's got:

U_1=nCv(T_2-T_1)=1mol*\frac{5}{2}(8.314\frac{J}{mol*K})*(118.7K-298.15K)=-3729.9J\\U_2=nCv(T_3-T_2)=1mol*\frac{5}{2}(8.314\frac{J}{mol*K})*(298.15K-118.7K)=3729.9J\\

- Finally, the total enthapy is also 0 due to same aforesaid reason, thus, each enthalpy is:

H_1=nCp(T_2-T_1)=1mol*\frac{7}{2}(8.314\frac{J}{mol*K})*(118.7K-298.15K)=-5221.86J\\H_2=nCv(T_3-T_2)=1mol*\frac{7}{2}(8.314\frac{J}{mol*K})*(298.15K-118.7K)=5221.86J\\

Best regards.

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2 years ago
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