Neutralization reaction equations for each of the strong acids HCl, HNO 3 and H 2 SO 4 with each of strong bases NaOH and KOH in aqueous solution should be written. Concept Introduction: When strong acid and a strong base are mixed together, the basic chemical reaction that occurs is reaction between H+ ions from the acid and OH- ions from the base to form water. The driving force for acid base reaction to happen is the formation of water. Other than the water, an ionic compound is formed which is known as a salt. Salt of strong acid and a strong base is also a strong electrolyte. So it completely dissociates in aqueous solution. Neutralization of acid and a base depicts that the pH of the final solution is 7. When a strong acid and a strong base are mixed in appropriate mole ratios, the final pH should be 7.
Neutralization reaction equations for each of the strong acids HCl, HNO 3 and H 2 SO 4 with each of strong bases NaOH and KOH in aqueous solution should be written. Concept Introduction: When strong acid and a strong base are mixed together, the basic chemical reaction that occurs is reaction between H+ ions from the acid and OH- ions from the base to form water. The driving force for acid base reaction to happen is the formation of water. Other than the water, an ionic compound is formed which is known as a salt. Salt of strong acid and a strong base is also a strong electrolyte. So it completely dissociates in aqueous solution. Neutralization of acid and a base depicts that the pH of the final solution is 7. When a strong acid and a strong base are mixed in appropriate mole ratios, the final pH should be 7.
Solution Summary: The author explains the neutralization reaction equations for strong acids HCl, HNO 3 and H 2 SO 4 with strong bases NaOH and KOH in aqueous solution.
Definition Definition Transformation of a chemical species into another chemical species. A chemical reaction consists of breaking existing bonds and forming new ones by changing the position of electrons. These reactions are best explained using a chemical equation.
Chapter 7, Problem 19CR
Interpretation Introduction
Interpretation:
Neutralization reaction equations for each of the strong acids HCl, HNO3 and H2 SO4 with each of strong bases NaOH and KOH in aqueous solution should be written.
Concept Introduction:
When strong acid and a strong base are mixed together, the basic chemical reaction that occurs is reaction between H+ ions from the acid and OH- ions from the base to form water. The driving force for acid base reaction to happen is the formation of water. Other than the water, an ionic compound is formed which is known as a salt. Salt of strong acid and a strong base is also a strong electrolyte. So it completely dissociates in aqueous solution. Neutralization of acid and a base depicts that the pH of the final solution is 7. When a strong acid and a strong base are mixed in appropriate mole ratios, the final pH should be 7.
need help please and thanks dont understand a-b
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 energy
Divide the…
Please correct answer and don't used hand raiting
Chapter 7 Solutions
Bundle: Introductory Chemistry: A Foundation, Loose-leaf Version, 9th + OWLv2 with MindTap Reader, 1 term (6 months) Printed Access Card
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.