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Sedbober [7]
2 years ago
8

A solution is 0.10 M in Pb(NO3)2 and 0.10 M in AgNO3. Solid NaI is added until the second solid compound is on the verge of prec

ipitating.
Which compound precipitates first and what is the I- concentration when the second compound begins to precipitate?Ksp for AgI is 1.5 x 10-16 Ksp for PbI2 is 8.7 x 10-9PbI_2,\:5.9\times10^{-4}\:M
PbI_2,\:4.4\times10^{-3}\:M
AgI,\:2.9\times10^{-4}\:M
AgI,\:9.3\times10^{-5}\:M
AgI,\:8.7\times10^{-8}\:M
Chemistry
1 answer:
nekit [7.7K]2 years ago
4 0

Answer:

The compound which will precipitate first will be AgI with 2.9X10^{-4}

Explanation:

In order to precipitate a salt solution the ionic product of salt must exceed the solubility product.

Given:

Ksp of AgI = 1.5X10^{-16}

Ksp of PbI2= 1.5X10^{-9}

As Ksp of AgI is very low it will precipitate faster than lead iodide.

Now, higher the concentration of AgI solution taken faster its precipitation.

In the given choice the highest concentration solution of AgI is 2.9X10^{-4}

You might be interested in
The reaction between hydrogen gas and chlorine gas produces hydrogen chloride according to the following equation: H2(g) + Cl2(g
Andreyy89

Answer:

The enthalpy of reaction is -185 kJ

Explanation:

To get the reaction:

 H₂(g) + Cl₂(g) → 2 HCl(g)

you must follow the following steps:

<em>1)  Reactive molecules must break their bonds to obtain their atoms.</em>

H₂(g) → 2 H(g)

Cl₂(g) → 2 Cl(g)

Bond energy (or enthalpy) is the energy required to break one mole of bonds of a gaseous substance. In the case of diatomic molecules with a single bond, it corresponds to the energy necessary to dissociate 1 mole of said substance in the atoms that form it.

Whenever you want to break links you must supply energy, so the link enthalpy will have positive values; while when a mole of bonds is formed energy is released and the bond enthalpy of this process will be negative.

In this case you will then have:

H₂(g) → 2 H(g)           ΔH=436 kJ/mol

Cl₂(g) → 2 Cl(g)         ΔH=243 kJ/mol

So the total energy needed to break all the bonds is:

ΔH=1 mol*436 kJ/mol +1 mol* 243 kJ/mol= 679 kJ

2) The atoms that were obtained in the break of the bonds must be combined to obtain the product.

2 H (g) + 2 Cl (g) → 2 HCl (g)

Being the single bond energy for one mole of 431 kJ H-Cl bonds and considering that two moles of H-Cl bonds are formed, the ΔH is:

ΔH = -2 moles* (432 kJ/mol) = -864 kJ

As mentioned, when a mole of bonds is formed energy is released, the bond enthalpy of this process will be negative.  So the formation of HCl is negative.

Hess's law states that the energy change in an overall chemical reaction is equal to the sum of the energy changes in the individual reactions comprising it. So:

ΔHtotal= -864 kJ + 679 kJ

ΔHtotal= -185 kJ

<u><em>The enthalpy of reaction is -185 kJ</em></u>

3 0
2 years ago
For the reaction 2N2O5(g) &lt;---&gt; 4NO2(g) + O2(g), the following data were colected:
KonstantinChe [14]

Answer:

a) The reaction is first order, that is, order 1. Option C is correct.

b) The half life of the reaction is 23 minutes. Option B is correct

c) The initial rate of production of NO2 for this reaction is approximately = (3.7 × 10⁻⁴) M/min. Option has been cut off.

Explanation:

First of, we try to obtain the order of the reaction from the data provided.

t (minutes) [N2O5] (mol/L)

0 1.24x10-2

10 0.92x10-2

20 0.68x10-2

30 0.50x10-2

40 0.37x10-2

50 0.28x10-2

70 0.15x10-2

Using a trial and error mode, we try to obtain the order of the reaction. But let's define some terms.

C₀ = Initial concentration of the reactant

C = concentration of the reactant at any time.

k = rate constant

t = time since the reaction started

T(1/2) = half life

We Start from the first guess of zero order.

For a zero order reaction, the general equation is

C₀ - C = kt

k = (C₀ - C)/t

If the reaction is indeed a zero order reaction, the value of k we will obtain will be the same all through the set of data provided.

C₀ = 0.0124 M

At t = 10 minutes, C = 0.0092 M

k = (0.0124 - 0.0092)/10 = 0.00032 M/min

At t = 20 minutes, C = 0.0068 M

k = (0.0124 - 0.0068)/20 = 0.00028 M/min

At t = 30 minutes, C = 0.0050 M

k = (0.0124 - 0.005)/30 = 0.00024 M/min

It's evident the value of k isn't the same for the first 3 trials, hence, the reaction isn't a zero order reaction.

We try first order next, for first order reaction

In (C₀/C) = kt

k = [In (C₀/C)]/t

C₀ = 0.0124 M

At t = 10 minutes, C = 0.0092 M

k = [In (0.0124/0.0092)]/10 = 0.0298 /min

At t = 20 minutes, C = 0.0068 M

k = 0.030 /min

At t = 30 minutes, C = 0.0050 M

k = 0.0303

At t = 40 minutes

k = 0.0302 /min

At t = 50 minutes,

k = 0.0298 /min

At t = 60 minutes,

k = 0.031 /min

This shows that the reaction is indeed first order because all the answers obtained hover around the same value.

The rate constant to be taken will be the average of them all.

Average k = 0.0302 /min.

b) The half life of a first order reaction is related to the rate constant through this relation

T(1/2) = (In 2)/k

T(1/2) = (In 2)/0.0302

T(1/2) = 22.95 minutes = 23 minutes.

c) The initial rate of production of the product at the start of the reaction

Rate = kC (first order)

At the start of the reaction C = C₀ = 0.0124M and k = 0.0302 /min

Rate = 0.0302 × 0.0124 = 0.000374 M/min = (3.74 × 10⁻⁴) M/min

3 0
2 years ago
Watch the video to determine which of the following relationships are correct according to Boyle’s law.
scoray [572]

Answer:

Part A

Boyle's Law is given mathematically as

P ∝(1/V) or V ∝(1/P)

Options 4 and 5, if they are properly written.

Part B

At constant temperature, and according to the Boyle's law for an ideal gas,

A. What can cause a Volume increase is a corresponding decrease in pressure.

B. What can cause a Volume decrease is a corresponding increase in pressure.

C. The Volume is unchanged if the pressure of the gas is unchanged too.

Part C

The pressure when the gas occupies a volume of 5.0 L = 40 atm

Part D

The pressure when the gas occupies a volume of 4.5 L = 36 atm

Explanation:

Part A

Boyle's Law states that at constant temperature, the pressure of an ideal gas is inversely proportional to the volume occupied by the gas.

So, mathematically, Boyle's Law is given as

P ∝(1/V) or V ∝(1/P)

Part B

Inverse relationship between two quantities means that the higher the value of one of the quantities go, the lower the value of the other quantity goes and vice versa.

So, at constant temperature, and according to the Boyle's law for an ideal gas.

A. What can cause a Volume increase is a corresponding decrease in pressure.

B. What can cause a Volume decrease is a corresponding increase in pressure.

C. The Volume is unchanged if the pressure of the gas is unchanged too.

Part C

A certain gas occupies a volume of 20 L when the applied pressure is 10 atm, find the pressure when the gas occupies a volume of 5.0 L.

According to Boyle's Law for an ideal gas,

P ∝(1/V)

P = (k/V)

where k is the constant of proportionality

PV = k

Therefore,

P₁V₁ = P₂V₂ = k

P₁ = 10 atm

V₁ = 20 L

P₂ = ?

V₂ = 5.0 L

10 × 20 = P₂ × 5

P₂ = 40 atm

Part D

If a certain gas occupies a volume of 18 L when the applied pressure is 9.0 atm , find the pressure when the gas occupies a volume of 4.5 L

P₁V₁ = P₂V₂ = k

P₁ = 9.0 atm

V₁ = 18 L

P₂ = ?

V₂ = 4.5 L

9 × 18 = P₂ × 4.5

P₂ = 36 atm

Hope this Helps!!!

3 0
2 years ago
The volume of distilled water that should be added to 10.0 mL of 6.00 M HCl(aq) in order to prepare a 0.500 M HCl(aq) solution i
bija089 [108]

Answer:

110ml

Explanation:

<em>Using the dilution equation, C1V1 = C2V2</em>

<em>Where C1 is the initial concentration of solution</em>

<em>C2 is final concentration of solution</em>

<em>V1 is intital volume of solution</em>

<em>V2 is final volume of solution.</em>

From the question , C1=6M, C2=0.5M, V1=10ml, V2=?

V2 =\frac{C1V1}{C2}

V2 =\frac{10*6}{0.5}

V2 =120ml

volume of water added = final volume -initial volume

                                    = 120-10

                                   =110ml

3 0
2 years ago
Imagine that a chemist is trying to establish whether a piece of rock is from a meteorite that fell from outer space. the rock c
rusak2 [61]
The sample is likely to be from a meteorite.

The reason for this is the fact that the isotope Copper-63 is more abundant on planet Earth than the isotope Copper-65 is. Therefore, if a sample of rock has Cu-65 in a greater quantity, it is likely to be from outer space. Many other elements entered the Earth's crust as a result of meteorite impacts, such as Iron (Fe).
8 0
2 years ago
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