You have seven closed containers each with equal masses of chlorine gas ( Cl 2 ) . You add 10.0 g of sodium to the first sample, 20.0 g of sodium to the second sample, and so on (adding 70.0 g of sodium to the seventh sample). Sodium and chloride react to form sodium chloride according to the equation :math> 2 Na ( s ) + Cl 2 ( g ) → 2 NaCl ( s ) ter each reaction is complete, you collect and measure the amount of sodium chloride formed. A graph of your results is shown below. mg src=Images/HTML_99425-9-18ALQ_image001.jpg alt="" align="top"/> swer the following questions: l type='a'> Explain the shape of the graph. lculate the mass of NaCl formed when 20.0 g of sodium is used.Calculate the mass of Cl 2 , in each container. lculate the mass of NaCl formed when 50.0 g of sodium is used. Identify the leftover reactant and determine its mass for parts b and d above.
You have seven closed containers each with equal masses of chlorine gas ( Cl 2 ) . You add 10.0 g of sodium to the first sample, 20.0 g of sodium to the second sample, and so on (adding 70.0 g of sodium to the seventh sample). Sodium and chloride react to form sodium chloride according to the equation :math> 2 Na ( s ) + Cl 2 ( g ) → 2 NaCl ( s ) ter each reaction is complete, you collect and measure the amount of sodium chloride formed. A graph of your results is shown below. mg src=Images/HTML_99425-9-18ALQ_image001.jpg alt="" align="top"/> swer the following questions: l type='a'> Explain the shape of the graph. lculate the mass of NaCl formed when 20.0 g of sodium is used.Calculate the mass of Cl 2 , in each container. lculate the mass of NaCl formed when 50.0 g of sodium is used. Identify the leftover reactant and determine its mass for parts b and d above.
Solution Summary: The author explains the shape of the graph. The graph shows a constant straight line after the addition of Na in the reaction mixture.
You have seven closed containers each with equal masses of chlorine gas
(
Cl
2
)
. You add 10.0 g of sodium to the first sample, 20.0 g of sodium to the second sample, and so on (adding 70.0 g of sodium to the seventh sample). Sodium and chloride react to form sodium chloride according to the equation
:math>
2
Na
(
s
)
+
Cl
2
(
g
)
→
2
NaCl
(
s
)
ter each reaction is complete, you collect and measure the amount of sodium chloride formed. A graph of your results is shown below.
My question is whether HI adds to both double bonds, and if it doesn't, why not?
Strain Energy for Alkanes
Interaction / Compound kJ/mol kcal/mol
H: H eclipsing
4.0
1.0
H: CH3 eclipsing
5.8
1.4
CH3 CH3 eclipsing
11.0
2.6
gauche butane
3.8
0.9
cyclopropane
115
27.5
cyclobutane
110
26.3
cyclopentane
26.0
6.2
cycloheptane
26.2
6.3
cyclooctane
40.5
9.7
(Calculate your answer to the nearest 0.1 energy unit, and be sure to specify units, kJ/mol or kcal/mol. The answer is case
sensitive.)
H.
H
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A certain half-reaction has a standard reduction potential Ered +1.26 V. An engineer proposes using this half-reaction at the anode of a galvanic cell that
must provide at least 1.10 V of electrical power. The cell will operate under standard conditions.
Note for advanced students: assume the engineer requires this half-reaction to happen at the anode of the cell.
Is there a minimum standard reduction
potential that the half-reaction used at
the cathode of this cell can have?
If so, check the "yes" box and calculate
the minimum. Round your answer to 2
decimal places. If there is no lower
limit, check the "no" box..
Is there a maximum standard reduction
potential that the half-reaction used at
the cathode of this cell can have?
If so, check the "yes" box and calculate
the maximum. Round your answer to 2
decimal places. If there is no upper
limit, check the "no" box.
yes, there is a minimum.
1
red
Πν
no minimum
Oyes, there is a maximum.
0
E
red
Dv
By using the information in the ALEKS…
Chapter 9 Solutions
Introductory Chemistry: Foundation - Text (Looseleaf)
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