The ionization energy of the F 2 − ion has been given. The various satted questions are to be answered using this given value. Concept introduction: Bond energy is defined as the amount of energy required to break a chemical bond . It can be determined by the addition of the ionization energy, bond dissociation energy and the electron affinity values. The bond order is calculated by difference between the anti-bonding electrons and the bonding electrons by two. This can be stated as, Bond order = [ ( Electrons in bonding orbitals ) − ( Electrons in anti-bonding orbitals ) ] 2 To determine: The bond energy of F 2 − .
The ionization energy of the F 2 − ion has been given. The various satted questions are to be answered using this given value. Concept introduction: Bond energy is defined as the amount of energy required to break a chemical bond . It can be determined by the addition of the ionization energy, bond dissociation energy and the electron affinity values. The bond order is calculated by difference between the anti-bonding electrons and the bonding electrons by two. This can be stated as, Bond order = [ ( Electrons in bonding orbitals ) − ( Electrons in anti-bonding orbitals ) ] 2 To determine: The bond energy of F 2 − .
Solution Summary: The author explains the ionization energy of the F_2- molecule. The bond order is calculated by the difference between the anti-bonding electrons and the bonding
Formula Formula Bond dissociation energy (BDE) is the energy required to break a bond, making it an endothermic process. BDE is calculated for a particular bond and therefore consists of fragments such as radicals since it undergoes homolytic bond cleavage. For the homolysis of a X-Y molecule, the energy of bond dissociation is calculated as the difference in the total enthalpy of formation for the reactants and products. X-Y → X + Y BDE = Δ H f X + Δ H f Y – Δ H f X-Y where, ΔHf is the heat of formation.
Chapter 4, Problem 122CP
(a)
Interpretation Introduction
Interpretation: The ionization energy of the F2− ion has been given. The various satted questions are to be answered using this given value.
Concept introduction: Bond energy is defined as the amount of energy required to break a chemical bond. It can be determined by the addition of the ionization energy, bond dissociation energy and the electron affinity values.
The bond order is calculated by difference between the anti-bonding electrons and the bonding electrons by two. This can be stated as,
Learning Goal:
This question reviews the format for writing an element's written symbol. Recall that written symbols have a particular format. Written symbols use a form like this:
35 Cl
17
In this form the mass number, 35, is a stacked superscript. The atomic number, 17, is a stacked subscript. "CI" is the chemical symbol for the element chlorine. A general way to show this form is:
It is also correct to write symbols by leaving off the atomic number, as in the following form:
atomic number
mass number Symbol
35 Cl or
mass number Symbol
This is because if you write the element symbol, such as Cl, you know the atomic number is 17 from that symbol. Remember that the atomic number, or number of protons in the nucleus, is what defines the element. Thus, if 17 protons
are in the nucleus, the element can only be chlorine. Sometimes you will only see 35 C1, where the atomic number is not written.
Watch this video to review the format for written symbols.
In the following table each column…
need help please and thanks dont understand only need help with C-F
Learning Goal:
As discussed during the lecture, the enzyme HIV-1 reverse transcriptae (HIV-RT) plays a significant role for the HIV virus and is an important drug target. Assume a concentration [E] of 2.00 µM (i.e. 2.00 x 10-6 mol/l) for HIV-RT. Two potential drug molecules, D1 and D2, were identified, which form stable complexes with the HIV-RT.
The dissociation constant of the complex ED1 formed by HIV-RT and the drug D1 is 1.00 nM (i.e. 1.00 x 10-9). The dissociation constant of the complex ED2 formed by HIV-RT and the drug D2 is 100 nM (i.e. 1.00 x 10-7).
Part A - Difference in binding free eenergies
Compute the difference in binding free energy (at a physiological temperature T=310 K) for the complexes. Provide the difference as a positive numerical expression with three significant figures in kJ/mol.
The margin of error is 2%.
Part B - Compare difference in free energy to the thermal…
need help please and thanks dont understand only need help with C-F
Learning Goal:
As discussed during the lecture, the enzyme HIV-1 reverse transcriptae (HIV-RT) plays a significant role for the HIV virus and is an important drug target. Assume a concentration [E] of 2.00 µM (i.e. 2.00 x 10-6 mol/l) for HIV-RT. Two potential drug molecules, D1 and D2, were identified, which form stable complexes with the HIV-RT.
The dissociation constant of the complex ED1 formed by HIV-RT and the drug D1 is 1.00 nM (i.e. 1.00 x 10-9). The dissociation constant of the complex ED2 formed by HIV-RT and the drug D2 is 100 nM (i.e. 1.00 x 10-7).
Part A - Difference in binding free eenergies
Compute the difference in binding free energy (at a physiological temperature T=310 K) for the complexes. Provide the difference as a positive numerical expression with three significant figures in kJ/mol.
The margin of error is 2%.
Part B - Compare difference in free energy to the thermal…
Chapter 4 Solutions
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