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ivanzaharov [21]
2 years ago
8

You need to make 25 microliters of a 3M NaOh solution for a test reagent. Your laboratory routinely stocks 500 milliliters of a

10M NaOh solution. How would you prepare your solution? 

Chemistry
1 answer:
MrRissso [65]2 years ago
8 0

Answer:

0.0075 milliliters (7.5 microliters) will be taken from the stock solution and then diluted with 0.0249925 milliliters (24.9925 microliters) of water to make 0.025 milliliters (25 microliters) of NaOH solution.

Explanation:

This is a problem of dilution using the equation:

<em>initial concentration x initial volume = final concentration x final volume.</em>

The final volume to be prepared is 25 microliters.

The final concentration to be prepared is 3 M.

The initial volume to be taken is not known yet.

The initial concentration is 10 M.

Now, let's substitute these parameters into the the equation above.

10 x initial volume = 3 x 25

Initial volume = 3 x 25/10

     = 7.5 microliters

Note that: 1 microliter = 0.001 milliliters

Hence,

7.5 microliters = 0.0075 milliliters

<u>This means that an initial volume of 0.0075 milliliters (7.5 microliters) will be taken from the stock solution. This amount will then be diluted with 0.0249925 milliliters (24.9925 microliters) of water to make 0.025 milliliters (25 microliters) of NaOH solution.</u>

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Explain the effects of nh3 and hcl on the cuso4 solution in terms of le chatelier's principle
Fittoniya [83]

The Principle of Le Chatelier states that if a system in equilibrium is subjected to a disturbance, the system will react in such a way that it will diminish the effect of that disturbance. Thus, when the concentration of one of the substances in an equilibrium system is changed, the equilibrium varies in such a way that it can compensate for this change.

For example, if the concentration of one of the reactants is increased, the equilibrium shifts to the right or to the side of the products. Also, if you add more reagents, the reaction will move even more to the right until the balance is re-established again, increasing the quantity of products.

In this way, adding HCl to a solution of CuSO4 will produce the following reaction:

CuSO4 (aq) + 2HCl (aq) ⇔ CuCl2 (aq) + H2SO4 (aq)

Initially the solution of CuSO4 in water will be blue, but when adding HCl the solution will change color to green, since the aqueous solutions of CuCl2 are green. By adding more HCl this color will intensify as the balance shifts to the right, producing more CuCl2 and H2SO4.

On the other hand, adding NH3 to a solution of CuSO4 will produce the following reaction

CuSO4 (aq) + 4NH3 (aq) ⇔ [Cu(NH3)4] SO4 (s)

Thus, by adding NH3 to the CuSO4 solution we will observe the formation of a precipitate corresponding to [Cu(NH3) 4] SO4. <u>When adding more NH3, the formation of more precipitate will be observed as the equilibrium moves to the right, producing a greater quantity of [Cu (NH3) 4] SO4.</u>

6 0
2 years ago
Which of the following is a valid conversion factor?
VMariaS [17]

Answer:

100 cg/1g

Step-by-step explanation:

    1 cg = 0.01 g     Multiply by 100

100 cg = 1 g

(a) is <em>wrong</em>. The correct conversion factor is 1000 cm³/1 L.

(b) is <em>wrong</em>. The correct conversion factor is 1000 mL/1 L.

(c) is <em>wrong</em>. The correct conversion factor is 1 m/10 dm.

7 0
2 years ago
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A student dissolved a sample in hexane, spotted it on to a TLC plate and eluted using ethyl acetate. After visualizing the TLC p
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1) Consider the following silica gel TLC plate of compounds A, B, and C developed in hexanes:

<span><span>Determine the Rf values of compounds A, B, and C run on a silica gel TLC plate using hexanes as the solvent.</span>Which compound, A, B, or C, is the most polar?<span>What would you expect to happen to the Rf values if you used acetone instead of hexanes as the eluting solvent?</span><span>How would the Rf values change if eluted with hexanes using an alumina TLC plate?</span></span>

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2) You are trying to determine a TLC solvent system which will separate the compounds X, Y, and Z. You ran the compounds on a TLC plate using hexanes/ethyl acetate 95:5 as the eluting solvent and obtained the chromatogram below. How could you change the solvent system to give better separation of these three compounds?

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3) After a rather lengthy organic chemistry synthesis procedure, a student ran the product of the reaction on a TLC plate and obtained the result below. What might he/she have done wrong, if anything?

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4) A student spots an unknown sample on a TLC plate. After developing in hexanes/ethyl acetate 50:50, he/she saw a single spot with an Rf of 0.55. Does this indicate that the unknown material is a pure compound? What can be done to verify the purity of the sample?

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5) Consider a sample that is a mixture composed of biphenyl, benzoic acid, and benzyl alcohol. The sample is spotted on a TLC plate and developed in a hexanes/ethyl acetate solvent mixture. Predict the relative Rf values for the three compounds in the sample.

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Back to TLC

Original content © University of Colorado at Boulder, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry.
The information on these pages is available for academic use without restriction.
3 0
2 years ago
calculate the specific heat capacity for gold n 105 joules are required to heat 30.0 grams of gold from 27.7c to 54.9c
Pepsi [2]

<u>Answer:</u>

<em>The specific heat capacity for gold in 105 joules which are required to heat 30.0 grams of gold is 0.129 J/(g℃)</em>

<u>Explanation:</u>

We make use of the formula

Q=m \times c \times \Delta T

where

∆T = final T - initial T

= 54.9℃ - 27.7℃ = 27.2℃

Q is the heat energy in Joules = 105J

c is the specific heat capacity = ?

m is the mass of Gold = 30.0g

Q=m \times c \times \Delta T

Rearranging the formula

c= \frac {Q}{(m\times \Delta T)}

= \frac {105J}{(30.0g \times 27.2 ^\circ{C})}\\\\= \frac {105J}{(816g^\circ{C})}

So,

c = 0.129 J/(g℃)

(Answer)

7 0
2 years ago
What is the change in enthalpy in kilojoules when 3.24 g of CH3OH is completely reacted according to the following reaction 2 CH
vodka [1.7K]

Answer:

12.78 kJ

Explanation:

The correct balanced reaction would be

2CH_3OH\rightarrow 2CH_4+O_2\Delta H=252.8\ \text{kJ}

Mass of methanol = 3.24\ \text{g}

Moles of methanol can be obtained by dividing the mass of methanol with its molar mass (32.04\ \text{g/mol})

\dfrac{3.24}{32.04}=0.10112\ \text{moles}

Enthalpy change for the number of moles is given by

\dfrac{\text{Number of moles of methanol in the reaction}}{\text{Enthalpy change in the reaction}}=\dfrac{\text{Number of moles in 3.24 g of methanol}}{\text{Enthaply in change in the mass of methanol}}

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The change in enthalpy is 12.78 kJ.

5 0
2 years ago
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