They are considered malleable. They can be made into sheets
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Answer:
2.4 ×10^24 molecules of the herbicide.
Explanation:
We must first obtain the molar mass of the compound as follows;
C3H8NO5P= [3(12) + 8(1) + 14 +5(16) +31] = [36 + 8 + 14 + 80 + 31]= 169 gmol-1
We know that one mole of a compound contains the Avogadro's number of molecules.
Hence;
169 g of the herbicide contains 6.02×10^23 molecules
Therefore 669.1 g of the herbicide contains 669.1 × 6.02×10^23/ 169 = 2.4 ×10^24 molecules of the herbicide.
Answer:
The pH of the buffer is 7.0 and this pH is not useful to pH 7.0
Explanation:
The pH of a buffer is obtained by using H-H equation:
pH = pKa + log [A⁻] / [HA]
<em>Where pH is the pH of the buffer</em>
<em>The pKa of acetic acid is 4.74.</em>
<em>[A⁻] could be taken as moles of sodium acetate (14.59g * (1mol / 82g) = 0.1779 moles</em>
<em>[HA] are the moles of acetic acid (0.060g * (1mol / 60g) = 0.001moles</em>
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Replacing:
pH = 4.74 + log [0.1779mol] / [0.001mol]
<em>pH = 6.99 ≈ 7.0</em>
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The pH of the buffer is 7.0
But the buffer is not useful to pH = 7.0 because a buffer works between pKa±1 (For acetic acid: 3.74 - 5.74). As pH 7.0 is out of this interval,
this pH is not useful to pH 7.0
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Answer:
B)
Explanation:
they are not the same animal
Ionic bond is formed due to the transfer of electrons from one atom to another so that all atoms involved in the bond would become stable (with 8 electrons in the outermost level)
Now, for bromine, it has 35 electrons. This means that bromine has 7 valence electrons in the outermost level. Therefore, bromine needs to gain one electron in order to become stable.
Bromine can react with elements from:
group 1: each element in group 1 needs to lose one electron to become stable. Therefore, one bromine atom can form an ionic bond when combined with an atom of an element from group 1 (element in group 1 loses its electron for bromine atom).
group 2: each element in group 2 needs to lose two electrons to become stable. Therefore, two bromine atoms can form ionic bonds when combined with an atom of an element from group 2 (element in group 2 loses two electrons, one for each bromine atom).
group 3: each element in group 3 needs to lose three electrons to become stable. Therefore, three bromine atoms can form ionic bonds when combined with an atom of an element from group 1 (element in group 3 loses three electrons, one for each bromine atom).
Since no choices are given , I cannot tell the exact choice. But the correct one would be the element from either group 1 , 2 or 3.