
Concept explainers
(a)
Interpretation:
Chemical equation given below has to be balanced.
Concept Introduction:
Steps followed to obtain balanced chemical equation:
- Chemical formulas of the products and reactants are written. Individual reactants and products are separated using plus sign while the reactants are separated from products by an arrow.
- Elements that appear only once on the reactant side and product side is balanced first. Subscript should not be changed in chemical formula while balancing coefficients can be added until the total number of atoms of an element becomes equal on reactant and product side.
- Other elements present also balanced in the same way by adding balancing coefficients.
- Final check has to be performed in order to check that each element that is present in the chemical equation is balanced.
- Symbols have to be added for solids, liquids gases and aqueous solutions to indicate the physical state of the known reactants and products.
(a)

Explanation of Solution
Chemical equation given is shown below.
Above chemical equation is not balanced. There are three oxygen atoms on the left side of the equation while there are two oxygen atoms on right side of equation. Adding coefficient
In the above equation, there are four aluminium atoms in reactant side while there is only one aluminium atom on the product side. Adding coefficient
In the above equation, there are two fluorine atoms in reactant side while there are twelve fluorine atoms on the product side. Adding coefficient
(b)
Interpretation:
Chemical equation given below has to be balanced.
Concept Introduction:
Refer part (a).
(b)

Explanation of Solution
Chemical equation given is shown below.
Above chemical equation is not balanced. There are three hydrogen atoms on the left side of the equation while there are two hydrogen atoms on right side of equation. Adding coefficient
In the above chemical equation, there are two nitrogen atoms on the reactant side while only one nitrogen atom is present on the product side. Adding coefficient
In the above chemical equation, there are two oxygen atoms on the reactant side while there are three oxygen atoms on the product side. Adding coefficient
(c)
Interpretation:
Chemical equation given below has to be balanced.
Concept Introduction:
Refer part (a).
(c)

Explanation of Solution
Chemical equation given is shown below.
Above chemical equation is not balanced. There are six carbon atoms on the reactant side while only one carbon atom is present on the product side. Adding coefficient
In the above chemical equation, there are six hydrogen atoms on the reactant side while only two hydrogen atoms are present in the product side. Adding coefficient
In the above chemical equation, there are two oxygen atoms on the reactant side while there are fifteen oxygen atoms on the product side. Adding coefficient
(d)
Interpretation:
Chemical equation given below has to be balanced.
Concept Introduction:
Refer part (a).
(d)

Explanation of Solution
Chemical equation given is shown below.
Above chemical equation is not balanced. There is one sulfur atom present on the reactant side while three sulfur atoms are present on the product side. Adding coefficient
In the above equation, there are six hydrogen atoms on the reactant side while there are two hydrogen atoms on the product side. Adding coefficient
In the above equation, there are three carbon atoms on the reactant side while there is only one carbon atom on the product side. Adding coefficient
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Chapter 3 Solutions
Student Solutions Manual to Accompany General Chemistry
- Draw the major product of this reaction. Ignore inorganic byproducts. N S S HgCl2, H2SO4 く 8 W X Parrow_forwardtab esc く Drawing the After running various experiments, you determine that the mechanism for the following reaction occurs in a step-wise fashion. Br + OH + Using this information, draw the correct mechanism in the space below. 1 Explanation Check F2 F1 @2 Q W A os lock control option T S # 3 80 F3 Br $ 4 0105 % OH2 + Br Add/Remove step X C F5 F6 6 R E T Y 29 & 7 F D G H Click and drag to start drawing a structure. © 2025 McGraw Hill LLC. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use | Privacy Ce A F7 DII F8 C Ո 8 * 9 4 F10 F C J K L C V Z X B N M H command P ge Coarrow_forwardIndicate compound A that must react with ethylbenzene to obtain 4-ethylbenzene-1-sulfonic acid. 3-bromo-4-ethylbenzene-1-sulfonic acid.arrow_forward
- Part 1 of 2 Draw the structure of A, the minor E1 product of the reaction. esc I Skip Part Check H₂O, D 2 A + Click and drag to start drawing a structure. -0- F1 F2 1 2 # 3 Q A 80 F3 W E S D F4 $ 4 % 5 F5 ㅇ F6 R T Y F G X 5 & 7 + Save 2025 McGraw Hill LLC. All Rights Reserved. DII F7 F8 H * C 80 J Z X C V B N 4 F9 6arrow_forwardFile Preview The following is a total synthesis of the pheromone of the western pine beetle. Such syntheses are interesting both because of the organic chemistry, and because of the possibility of using species specific insecticides, rather than broad band insecticides. Provide the reagents for each step. There is some chemistry from our most recent chapter in this synthesis, but other steps are review from earlier chapters. (8 points) COOEt COOEt A C COOEt COOEt COOH B OH OTS CN D E See the last homework set F for assistance on this one. H+, H₂O G OH OH The last step is just nucleophilic addition reactions, taking the ketone to an acetal, intramolecularly. But it is hard to visualize the three dimensional shape as it occurs. Frontalin, pheromone of the western pine beetlearrow_forwardFor the reaction below: 1. Draw all reasonable elimination products to the right of the arrow. 2. In the box below the reaction, redraw any product you expect to be a major product. C Major Product: Check + ◎ + X ง © Cl I F2 80 F3 I σ F4 I F5 NaOH Click and drawing F6 A 2025 McGraw Hill LLC. All Rights E F7 F8 $ # % & 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Q W E R T Y U A S D F G H Jarrow_forward
- Can I please get help with this graph. If you can show exactly where it needs to pass through.arrow_forwardN Draw the major product of this reaction. Ignore inorganic byproducts. D 1. H₂O, pyridine 2. neutralizing work-up V P W X DE CO e C Larrow_forwardDraw the major product of this reaction. Ignore inorganic byproducts. N O' 1. H2O, pyridine 2. neutralizing work-up く 8 W aarrow_forward
- Ideal Gas Law Practice Name If you need a refresher on Ideal Gas Law, go back to your Ideal Gas Law Reading Assignment from last week! On all of the following, you'll need to make sure to convert pressures to atm and convert temperatures to Kelvin in order to be able to use the R gas constant on your equation sheet! Given: Ideal Gas Law = then P= pressure V = volume R= ideal gas consent PV=nRT namount of substance n=PV/TR P=nRT/V I = temperature V=nRT/P T=PV/nR R=PV/nT 1. What pressure is required to contain 0.023 moles of nitrogen gas in a 4.2 L container at a temperature of 20.°C? 2. Oxygen gas is collected at a pressure of 123 kPa in a container which has a volume of 10.0 L. What temperature must be maintained on 0.500 moles of this gas in order to maintain this pressure? Express the temperature in degrees Celsius. 3. How many moles of chlorine gas would occupy a volume of 35.5 L at a pressure of 100.0 kPa and a temperature of 100. °C? After determining the number of moles,…arrow_forward1. The following conversion includes chemistry we have covered very recently, some chemistry from last term, and chemistry from the first chapter of this unit. Provide curly arrows and an explanation for this mechanism. Use the reagents in the order given. You do not need any other reagents. 1. NaOEt OEt 2.arrow_forwardCOOEt COOEt Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 COOEt COOEt COOH Step 6 OH Step 4 Step 7 (racemic) cyclizes under conditions (8) OTS Step 5 Step 8 ОН OH (racemic) Frontalin (racemic) Shown above are the steps in one of the several published syntheses of Frontalin, a pheromone of the western pine beetle. From the choices provided, show the reagents and conditions by which step 3 of this synthesis might be accomplished. List the reagent(s) in order that will accomplish this transformation. No more than 4 steps are required. List your answer as a single letter (single-step transformation) or a series of letters (multi-step transformation) with no commas separating them. For example, "ab" corresponds to: 1. Eto Na+ 2. NaOH, H₂O NOTE: The order in which you list your letters matters! Reagents: a. Eto Na* g. NaCN b. NaOH, H₂O h. SOCI₂ c. H3O+, heat i. (CH3)2CuLi, ether, -78°C d. LiAlH4 j. H₂O e. p-TsCI, pyridine k. RCO3H f. Br I. H3O+ 1,024arrow_forward
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