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Harrizon [31]
2 years ago
5

6. (2 Points) Suppose 50.0 mL of 0.350 M lithium hydroxide is mixed with 30.0 mL of 0.250 M perchloric acid. What is the pH of t

he resulting solution, assume the reaction goes to completion.
Chemistry
1 answer:
raketka [301]2 years ago
3 0

Answer:  13.1

Explanation:

To calculate the number of moles for given molarity, we use the equation:

\text{Molarity of the solution}=\frac{\text{Moles of solute}\times 1000}{\text{Volume of solution (in ml)}}     .....(1)

Molarity of LiOH solution = 0.350 M

Volume of solution = 50.0 mL

Putting values in equation 1, we get:

0.350M=\frac{\text{Moles of LiOH}\times 1000}{50.0L}\\\\\text{Moles of LiOH}=\frac{0.350mol/L\times 50.0}{1000}=0.0175mol

Moles of OH^- ion = 0.0175 moles

0.250M=\frac{\text{Moles of}HCLO_4\times 1000}{30.0L}\\\\\text{Moles of} HClO_4=\frac{0.250mol/L\times 25.0}{1000}=0.00625mol

Moles of H^+ ion = 0.00625 moles

The chemical equation for the reaction of LiOH with HClO_4 follows:

HClO_4+LiOH\rightarrow LiClO_4+H_2O

For neutralization:

1 mole of H^+ ion will react with 1 mole of OH^- ion

As, 0.00625 moles of H^+ ion react with=\frac{1}{1}\times 0.00625=0.00625 moles of OH^- ion

Moles of OH^- left = (0.0175-0.00625) = 0.01125 moles

Concentration of OH^-=\frac{moles}{\text {total volume in L}}=\frac{0.01125}{0.0800L}=0.141M

pOH= -log[OH^-]

pOH= -log[0.141]=0.851

pH +pOH = 14

pH = 14- pOH = 14 -0.851 = 13.1

Thus pH of the resulting solution is 13.1

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Gekata [30.6K]

The SI unit of specific heat is J per gram per degree Celsius. Thus it follows that specific heat could be calculated in this way:

Specific Heat = Energy / (mass x change in temperature)

Thus,

Specific Heat = 3.912 cal / (9.84 oz x (191.2 ˚F – 73.2 ˚F))

Specific Heat = 3.369 x 10^-3 cal/oz-˚F

6 0
2 years ago
Recall that your hypothesis is that these values are the fraction of atoms that are still radioactive after n half-life cycles.
jolli1 [7]

Answer : A= 0.5, B = 0.25 , C = 0.125, D = 0.015625 and E = 0.00390625

Explanation :

Half life of a substance is defined as the amount of time taken by the substance to reduce to half of its original amount.

Here n represents the number of half lives.

The amount of substance that remains after n half lives can be calculated using the given formula, 0.5^{n}

So when we have n =1,

Fraction of substance that remains = 0.5¹ = 0.5.

That means after first half life over, the amount of substance that remains is 0.5 times that of original.

Therefore we have A = 0.5

When n = 2, we have 0.5² = 0.25

So when 2 half lives are over, the amount of substance that remains is 0.25 times that of original

Therefore B = 0.25

When n = 3, we have 0.5³ = 0.125

So when 3 half lives are over, the amount of substance that remains is 0.125 times that of original.

Therefore we have C = 0.125

When n = 6 , we have 0.5⁶ = 0.015625

So D = 0.015625

When n = 8, we have 0.5⁸ = 0.00390625

Therefore E = 0.00390625

The values for A, B, C, D and E are 0.5, 0.25, 0.125, 0.015625 and 0.00390625 respectively.

8 0
2 years ago
Read 2 more answers
A student pours exactly 26.9 mL of HCl acid of unknown molarity into a beaker. The student then adds 2 drops of the indicator an
Assoli18 [71]
a.
Acids react with bases and give salt and water and the products.

Hence, HCl reacts with NaOH and gives NaCl salt and H₂O as the products. The reaction is,
            HCl(aq) + NaOH(aq) → NaCl(aq) + H₂O(l)

To balance the reaction equation, both sides hould have same number of elements.

Left hand side,                                             Right hand side,
             
H atoms = 2                                               H atoms = 2
            Cl atoms = 1                                               Cl atoms = 1
            Na atoms = 1                                               Na atoms = 1 
           O atoms = 1                                                   O atoms = 1

Hence, the reaction equation is already balanced.

b. 
Molarity (M)= moles of solute (mol) / Volume of the solution (L)
 
          HCl(aq) + NaOH(aq) → NaCl(aq) + H₂O(l)

Molarity of NaOH = <span>0.13 M
</span>Volume of NaOH added = <span>43.7 mL
Hence, moles of NaOH added = 0.13 M x 43.7 x 10</span>⁻³ L
                                                 = 5.681 x 10⁻³ mol

Stoichiometric ratio between NaOH and HCl is 1 : 1

Hence, moles of HCl = moles of NaOH
                                    = 
5.681 x 10⁻³ mol

5.681 x 10⁻³ mol of HCl was in <span>26.9 mL.

Hence, molarity of HCl = </span>5.681 x 10⁻³ mol / 26.9 x 10⁻³ L
                                     = 0.21 M
6 0
2 years ago
Quinine, an antimalarial drug, is 8.63% nitrogen. There are two nitrogen atoms per molecule. What is the molecular weight of qui
Furkat [3]

Answer:

324.18 g/mol

Explanation:

Let the molecular mass of the antimalarial drug, Quinine is x g/mol

According to question,

Nitrogen present in the drug is 8.63% of x

So, mass of nitrogen = \frac {8.63}{100}\times x

Also, according to the question,

2 atoms are present in 1 molecule of the drug.

Mass of nitrogen = 14.01 amu = 14.01 g/mol (grams for 1 mole)

So, mass of nitrogen = 14.01×2 = 28.02

These 2 must be equal so,

\frac {8.63}{100}\times x=28.02

solving for x, we get:

<u>x = 324.18 g/mol</u>

6 0
2 years ago
How many liters of radon gas would be in 3.43 moles at room temperature and pressure (293 K and 100 kPa)?
OLga [1]

Using ideal gas equation,

P\times V=n\times R\times T

Here,

P denotes pressure

V denotes volume

n denotes number of moles of gas

R denotes gas constant

T denotes temperature

The values at STP will be:

P=100 kPa

T=293 K

R=8.314472 L kPa K⁻¹ mol⁻¹

Number of moles of gas=3.43 mole

Putting all the values in the above equation,

V=\frac{3.43\times 8.314\times 293}{100}

V=83.55 L

So the volume will be 83.55 L.

83.55 L of radon gas would be in 3.43 moles at room temperature and pressure (293 K and 100 kPa).

4 0
2 years ago
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