The molality of the ethanol in a mixture of ethanol and water has to be identified. Concept introduction: Freezing point depression: The freezing point of the solution varies with the solute concentration. Depression in Freezing point = ΔT fp = K fp . m solute , where, K fp is molal freezing point depression constant, m solute is molality of solute . Weight percent: The mass of one component divided by the total mass of the mixture, multiplied by 100 % weight % A = Mass of A Mass of A + Mass of B + Mass of C + ... ×100%
The molality of the ethanol in a mixture of ethanol and water has to be identified. Concept introduction: Freezing point depression: The freezing point of the solution varies with the solute concentration. Depression in Freezing point = ΔT fp = K fp . m solute , where, K fp is molal freezing point depression constant, m solute is molality of solute . Weight percent: The mass of one component divided by the total mass of the mixture, multiplied by 100 % weight % A = Mass of A Mass of A + Mass of B + Mass of C + ... ×100%
Solution Summary: The author explains the molality of ethanol in a mixture of alcohol and water. Freezing point depression varies with the solute concentration.
9. OA. Rank the expected boiling points of the compounds shown below from highest to lowest. Place your answer
appropriately in the box. Only the answer in the box will be graded. (3) points)
OH
OH
بر بد بدید
2
3
There is an instrument in Johnson 334 that measures total-reflectance x-ray fluorescence (TXRF) to do elemental analysis (i.e., determine what elements are present in a sample). A researcher is preparing a to measure calcium content in a series of well water samples by TXRF with an internal standard of vanadium (atomic symbol: V). She has prepared a series of standard solutions to ensure a linear instrument response over the expected Ca concentration range of 40-80 ppm. The concentrations of Ca and V (ppm) and the instrument response (peak area, arbitrary units) are shown below. Also included is a sample spectrum. Equation 1 describes the response factor, K, relating the analyte signal (SA) and the standard signal (SIS) to their respective concentrations (CA and CIS).
Ca, ppm
V, ppm
SCa, arb. units
SV, arb. units
20.0
10.0
14375.11
14261.02
40.0
10.0
36182.15
17997.10
60.0
10.0
39275.74
12988.01
80.0
10.0
57530.75
14268.54
100.0…
A mixture of 0.568 M H₂O, 0.438 M Cl₂O, and 0.710 M HClO are enclosed in a vessel at 25 °C.
H₂O(g) + C₁₂O(g) = 2 HOCl(g)
K = 0.0900 at 25°C
с
Calculate the equilibrium concentrations of each gas at 25 °C.
[H₂O]=
[C₁₂O]=
[HOCI]=
M
Σ
M
Chapter 13 Solutions
OWLv2 6-Months Printed Access Card for Kotz/Treichel/Townsend's Chemistry & Chemical Reactivity, 9th, 9th Edition