Number of equivalents of SO 4 2 − present in the solution containing 5 .0 mEq SO 4 2 − ions has to be determined. Concept-Introduction: Body fluids have small amounts of different type electrolytes and its concentration is measured in equivalents or milliequivalents per liter. An Equivalent ( E q ) of an ion is the molar amount of a certain ion required for supplying one mole of negative or positive charge. Few examples for the relationship between number of equivalent and charge of an ion is given below, 1 mole = 1 equivalent ( For ions with charge 1+ or 1 − ) 1 mole = 2 equivalent ( For ions with charge 2+ or 2 − ) 1 mole = 3 equivalent ( For ions with charge 3+ or 3 − ) Unit Conversion: 1 Eq = 10 3 mEq
Number of equivalents of SO 4 2 − present in the solution containing 5 .0 mEq SO 4 2 − ions has to be determined. Concept-Introduction: Body fluids have small amounts of different type electrolytes and its concentration is measured in equivalents or milliequivalents per liter. An Equivalent ( E q ) of an ion is the molar amount of a certain ion required for supplying one mole of negative or positive charge. Few examples for the relationship between number of equivalent and charge of an ion is given below, 1 mole = 1 equivalent ( For ions with charge 1+ or 1 − ) 1 mole = 2 equivalent ( For ions with charge 2+ or 2 − ) 1 mole = 3 equivalent ( For ions with charge 3+ or 3 − ) Unit Conversion: 1 Eq = 10 3 mEq
Solution Summary: The author explains that the number of equivalents of SO_42- present in the solution is determined.
Number of equivalents of SO42− present in the solution containing 5.0 mEq SO42− ions has to be determined.
Concept-Introduction:
Body fluids have small amounts of different type electrolytes and its concentration is measured in equivalents or milliequivalents per liter. An Equivalent (Eq) of an ion is the molar amount of a certain ion required for supplying one mole of negative or positive charge.
Few examples for the relationship between number of equivalent and charge of an ion is given below,
1 mole = 1 equivalent(For ions with charge 1+ or 1−)1 mole = 2 equivalent(For ions with charge 2+ or 2−)1 mole = 3 equivalent(For ions with charge 3+ or 3−)
Unit Conversion:
1 Eq = 103 mEq
(b)
Interpretation Introduction
Interpretation:
Number of moles present in the solution containing 5.0 mEq SO42− has to be determined.
Concept-Introduction:
Body fluids have small amounts of different type electrolytes and its concentration is measured in equivalents or milliequivalents per liter. An Equivalent (Eq) of an ion is the molar amount of a certain ion required for supplying one mole of negative or positive charge.
Few examples for the relationship between number of equivalent and charge of an ion is given below,
1 mole = 1 equivalent(For ions with charge 1+ or 1−)1 mole = 2 equivalent(For ions with charge 2+ or 2−)1 mole = 3 equivalent(For ions with charge 3+ or 3−)
We learned four factors (ARIO) for comparing the relative acidity of compounds. When two of these factors are in
competition, the order of priority is the order in which these factors were covered ("atom" being the most important factor
and "orbital" being the least important). However, we also mentioned that there are exceptions to this order of priority.
Compare the two compounds and identify the exception.
OH
PK-4.75
SH
PK-10.6
5.
"Resonance" is more important than "atom" because the conjugate base of first compound is more stable than the
second.
"Atom" is more important than "resonance" because the conjugate base of first compound is more stable than the
second.
"Resonance" is more important than "atom" because the conjugate base of second compound is more stable than
the first.
"Atom" is more important than "resonance" because the conjugate base of second compound is more stable than
the first.
The relative fitnesses of three genotypes are WA/A= 1.0, WA/a = 0.7, and Wa/a =
0.3. If the population starts at the allele frequency p = 0.5, what is the value of p
in the next generation? (3 pts)
12pt v
Paragraph V
BIU AL
Identify the most acidic proton in the compound:
a
d
b
Оа
Ob
Ос
○ d
Chapter 10 Solutions
Study Guide with Selected Solutions for Stoker's General, Organic, and Biological Chemistry, 7th
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, chemistry and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.