Chemistry (OER)
2nd Edition
ISBN: 9781947172616
Author: OpenStax
Publisher: OpenStax College
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Textbook Question
Chapter 4, Problem 15E
Silver can be separated from gold because silver dissolves in nitric acid while gold does not. Is the dissolution of silver in nitric acid an acid-base
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A buffer is prepared by adding 0.50 mol of acetic acid (HC2H3O2) and 0.75 mol of sodium acetate
(NaC2H3O2) to enough water to form 2.00L solution. (pKa for acetic acid is 4.74) Calculate the pH of the
buffer.
Modify the given carbon skeleton to draw the major product of the following reaction. If a racemic mixture of enantiomers is
expected, draw both enantiomers. Note: you can select a structure and use Copy and Paste to save drawing time.
HBr
کی
CH3
کی
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Sort the following into the classification for a reaction that is NOT at equilibrium versus a reaction system that has reached equilibrium.
Drag the appropriate items to their respective bins.
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The forward and reverse reactions
proceed at the same rate.
Chemical equilibrium is a dynamic
state.
The ratio of products to reactants is
not stable.
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The state of chemical equilibrium will
remain the same unless reactants or
products escape or are introduced into
the system. This will disturb the
equilibrium.
The concentration of products is
increasing, and the concentration of
reactants is decreasing.
The ratio of products to reactants
does not change.
The rate at which products form from
reactants is equal to the rate at which
reactants form from products.
The concentrations of reactants and
products are stable and cease to
change.
The reaction has reached equilibrium.
The rate of the forward reaction is
greater than the rate of the reverse
reaction.
The…
Chapter 4 Solutions
Chemistry (OER)
Ch. 4 - What does it mean to say an equation is balanced?...Ch. 4 - Consider molecular, complete ionic, and net ionic...Ch. 4 - Balance the following equations: (a)...Ch. 4 - Balance the following equations: (a)...Ch. 4 - Write a balanced molecular equation describing...Ch. 4 - Write a balanced equation describing each of the...Ch. 4 - Colorful fireworks often involve the decomposition...Ch. 4 - Fill in the blank with a single chemical formula...Ch. 4 - Aqueous hydrogen fluoride (hydrofluoric acid) is...Ch. 4 - A novel process for obtaining magnesium from sea...
Ch. 4 - From the balanced molecular equations, write the...Ch. 4 - Use the following equations to answer the next...Ch. 4 - Indicate what type, or types, of reaction each of...Ch. 4 - Indicate what type, or types, of reaction each of...Ch. 4 - Silver can be separated from gold because silver...Ch. 4 - Determine the oxidation states of the elements in...Ch. 4 - Determine the oxidation states of the elements in...Ch. 4 - Determine the oxidation states of the elements in...Ch. 4 - Classify the following as acid-base reactions or...Ch. 4 - Identify the atoms that are oxidized and reduced,...Ch. 4 - Complete and balance the following acid-base...Ch. 4 - Complete and balance the following acid-base...Ch. 4 - Complete and balance the following...Ch. 4 - Complete and balance the following...Ch. 4 - Complete and balance the equations for the...Ch. 4 - When heated to 700—800 C, diamonds, which are pure...Ch. 4 - The military has experimented with lasers that...Ch. 4 - Write the molecular, total ionic, and net ionic...Ch. 4 - Great Lakes Chemical Company produces bromine,...Ch. 4 - In a common experiment in the general chemistry...Ch. 4 - Lithium hydroxide may be used to absorb carbon...Ch. 4 - Calcium propionate is sometimes added to bread to...Ch. 4 - Complete and balance the equations of the...Ch. 4 - Copper(II) sulfide is oxidized by molecular oxygen...Ch. 4 - Write balanced chemical equations for the...Ch. 4 - Calcium cyclamate Ca(C6H 11 NHSO3)2 is an...Ch. 4 - Complete and balance each of the following...Ch. 4 - Complete and balance each of the following...Ch. 4 - Balance each of the following equations according...Ch. 4 - Balance each of the following equations according...Ch. 4 - Balance each of the following equations according...Ch. 4 - Write the balanced equation, then outline the...Ch. 4 - Write the balanced equation, then outline the...Ch. 4 - Write the balanced equation, then outline the...Ch. 4 - Write the balanced equation, then outline the...Ch. 4 - H2 is produced by the reaction of 118.5 mL of a...Ch. 4 - Gallium chloride is formed by the reaction of 2.6...Ch. 4 - I2 is produced by the reaction of 0.4235 mol of...Ch. 4 - Silver is often extracted from ores such as...Ch. 4 - What mass of silver oxide, Ag2O, is required to...Ch. 4 - Carborundum is silicon carbide, SiC, a very hard...Ch. 4 - Automotive air bags inflate when a sample of...Ch. 4 - Urea, CO( NH2)2, is manufactured on a large scale...Ch. 4 - In an accident, a solution containing 2.5 kg of...Ch. 4 - A compact car gets 37.5 miles per gallon on the...Ch. 4 - What volume of 0.750 M hydrochloric acid solution...Ch. 4 - What volume of a 0.2089 M Kl solution contains...Ch. 4 - A mordant is a substance that combines with a dye...Ch. 4 - The toxic pigment called white lead, Pb3(OH)2(...Ch. 4 - The following quantities are placed in a...Ch. 4 - What is the limiting reactant in a reaction that...Ch. 4 - Which of the postulates of Dalton’s atomic theory...Ch. 4 - A student isolated 25 g of a compound following a...Ch. 4 - A sample of 0.53 g of carbon dioxide was obtained...Ch. 4 - Freon-12, CCl2F2, is prepared from CCl4 by...Ch. 4 - Citric acid, C6H5CH3, a component of jams,...Ch. 4 - Toluene, C6H5CH3, is oxidized by air under...Ch. 4 - In a laboratory experiment, the reaction of 3.0...Ch. 4 - Outline the steps needed to solve the following...Ch. 4 - Outline the steps needed to determine the limiting...Ch. 4 - Outline the steps needed to determine the limiting...Ch. 4 - What is the limiting reactant when 1.50 g of...Ch. 4 - Uranium can be isolated from its ores by...Ch. 4 - How many molecules of C2H4Cl2 can be prepared from...Ch. 4 - How many molecules of the sweetener saccharin can...Ch. 4 - The phosphorus pentoxide used to produce...Ch. 4 - Would you agree to buy 1 trillion...Ch. 4 - What volume of 0.0105-M HBr solution is required...Ch. 4 - Titration of a 20.0-mL sample of acid rain...Ch. 4 - What is the concentration of NaCl in a solution if...Ch. 4 - In a common medical laboratory determination of...Ch. 4 - Potatoes can be peeled commercially by soaking...Ch. 4 - A sample of gallium bromide, GaBr3, weighing 0....Ch. 4 - The principal component of mothballs is...Ch. 4 - A 0.025-g sample of a compound composed of boron...Ch. 4 - Sodium bicarbonate (baking soda), NaHCO3, can be...Ch. 4 - What volume of 0.600 M HCl is required to react...Ch. 4 - What volume of 0.08892 M HNO3 is required to react...Ch. 4 - What volume of a 0.3300-M solution of sodium...Ch. 4 - What volume of a 0.00945-M solution of potassium...Ch. 4 - A sample of solid calcium hydroxide, Ca(OH)2, is...Ch. 4 - What mass of Ca(OH)2 will react with 25.0 g of...Ch. 4 - How many milliliters of a 0.1500-M solution of KOH...Ch. 4 - Potassium acid phthalate, KNaC8H4O4, or KHP, is...Ch. 4 - The reaction of WCl6 with Al at ~400 C gives black...
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- 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…arrow_forwardneed 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…arrow_forwardneed 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…arrow_forward
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