and by gravimetric determination. The conductivity was analyzed during the reaction between the sulfuric acid (H2SO4) and barium hydroxide (Ba(OH)2). Through the conductivity‚ the equivalence point can be determined; from there‚ the concentration of the Ba(OH)2 solution can be found. The final product of the reaction between sulfuric acid and barium hydroxide is insoluble. According to the lab manual‚ during the reaction‚ the total number of dissociated ions in solution is greatly reduced as a precipitate
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Joshua McMahon IB Chemistry Matt Chase 3A 11/5/14 Finding the Molar Enthalpy Change of sodium bicarbonate by using Hess Law Research Question By using Hess’ Law‚ can the Molar Enthalpy Change of sodium bicarbonate be calculated? Hypothesis If we are attempting to determine the enthalpy change of the thermal decomposition of Sodium Bicarbonate‚ then Hess’s Law will be will be the most effective. Introduction Sodium bicarbonate‚ more commonly known as baking soda‚ has many uses in todays
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Temperature and Cofactors on Enzymatic Reactions “I pledge that no unauthorized assistance has been given or received in the completion of this work. Experiments described were performed by me and/or my lab group and this write-up is entirely my own creative work.” X________________________________________ Introduction Enzymes are protein molecules that speed up the rate of reactions by reducing the activation energy of a reaction. They act as catalysts in reactions‚ increasing the rate at which
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Although I love science‚ I encountered more problems in this subject than any other. Recently‚ I was assigned a lab. The purpose was to let Copper Sulfate react with Aluminum and obtain Copper. Before the experiment‚ I set up the stoichiometric equation carefully‚ predicting the production of Copper using my assigned mass of Copper Sulfate. Additionally‚ I intentionally made Copper Sulfate an excess in my equation‚ since it would be dissolved in water and I would only have to collect Copper at the
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Thermochemistry Lab Hypothesis We predict that two different physical changes (dissolving of a chemical substance in water) will produce energy changes; one exothermic and one endothermic. We predict that the temperature change will be affected by the change in system (open vs. closed) will be as follows: the temperature change in the closed system will be greater than that of the open system. Materials Refer to attached sheet Method Refer to attached sheet Observations Substance Added
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Gas Laws Lab Introduction: The four basic physical properties of a gas sample are pressure‚ volume‚ temperature‚ and number of moles. The volume simply indicates the volume of the container since a gas will take up all space available to it. The temperature indicates the average kinetic energy of the gas particles. For gases‚ the temperature must be converted to the Kelvin unit. The pressure of the gas indicates the number of collisions with each other and the wall of the container. The number
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I2 No reaction‚ starch will remain white Reaction; black deposits on the glass tube. Starch turns black Food coloring + NaOCl No reaction; will turn lighter Reaction; the solution that was dark blue turned into light blue Food coloring + CH3COOH No reaction; color will turn lighter No reaction; when both combined‚ the color (dark blue) remained the same Food coloring + NaOCl + CH3COOH No reaction; solution will remain blue Reaction; solution turns light gray Red cabbage + NH3 No reaction; solution
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Edward Dickson CHE101 DS-01 Experiment Date 7/21/2013 Report Submitted 7/21/2013 Title: Experiment #8: Ionic Reactions Purpose: In this lab we will work with aqueous solutions of ionic substances and determine if they are soluble. If the solution appears milky than it is known as a precipitate reaction‚ meaning it is soluble‚ and that the ions separated and became surrounded by water. Precipitates in this experiment are electrically uncharged. To identify which compounds are
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Chemistry 521 Exam I‚ Spring Quarter 7:30 - 9:00 PM‚ 25 April 2000 NAME 1. [10 points] What are the concentrations of HSO− ‚ SO2− ‚ and H+ in a 0.20 M KHSO4 solution? (Hint: 4 4 H2 SO4 is a strong acid; Ka = 1.3 × 10−2 for HSO− .) 4 2. [15 points] Calculate the pH of 1.00 L of the buffer 1.00 M CH3 COONa/1.00 M CH3 COOH (pKa = 4.74) before and after the addition of (a) 0.080 moles NaOH and (b) 0.12 moles HCl. (Assume there is no change in volume). 3. [10 points] The following reaction
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Diels-Alder Reaction Heather Jost Lab Partner: Jasmina Salcinovic CHEM2642L Luise Strange de Soria Georgia Perimeter College September 29‚ 2004 Diels-Alder Reaction Resources: Mayo‚ Pike‚ Trumper‚ Strange de Soria. Microscale Organic Laboratory. New York: John Wiley and Sons‚ 2002. Strange de Soria‚ Luise. “Student Survival Guide”. http://www.gpc.edu/~lstrange/2642lab/survivalguide/grignard2.pdf. 2004. Purpose: The purpose of these experiments
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