Stoichiometry lab 1 Purpose: The purpose of this lab is to find the limiting reactant‚ also to find the percentage yield and percentage purity of the reaction that happens between Calcium Chloride and Sodium Carbonate. The other purpose was to know how the reaction can be balanced and created. Hypothesis: In this lab we are going to see a precipitation reaction. This is a reaction where two soluble salts Sodium Carbonate and Calcium Chloride are added together and the result is the precipitation
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In the Stoichiometry Challenge Lab we compared the theoretical results of the reaction between sodium carbonate (Na2CO3) and sulfuric acid (H2SO4) with the actual data we found. I hypothesised that If the mole ratio between Na2SO4 and H2SO4 is 1:1 then when I react 0.5 grams of Na2SO4 (reactant with H2SO4) I should get 0.669 grams of Na2SO4. The actual reaction between .05 grams of Na2CO3 and 5 mL of of H2SO4 produced 0.79g of Na2SO4. When I were testing the reaction‚ I measured out the reactants
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Stoichiometry Lab Stoichiometry is the end result of adding up chemical elements that were involved in chemical reactions (http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/stoichiometry). The word stoichiometry was obtained from two greek words meaning element and measure. This explains the definition for the term. A chemist named Jeremias Benjamin Richter was the chemist responsible for first realizing what stoichiometry was (http://www.chemteam.info/Stoichiometry/What-is-Stoichiometry.html). In 1972
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Chem 121L Part I: Introduction Stoichiometry is the study of the quantitative‚ or measurable‚ relationships that exist in chemical formulas and also chemical reactions. In this experiment hydrogen gas will be produced from the reaction of a known mass of magnesium metal with an excess of hydrochloric acid. The theoretical number of moles of hydrogen gas may be calculated using stoichiometry and the balanced chemical equation. The theoretical volume of hydrogen gas may then be determined from
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Name: Harrison Jones States of Matter Lab Procedure: Go to: http://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/states-of-matter and click on Run Now States of Matter Review: 1) Kinetic energy (KE) is the energy of _____Motion_______. 2) Potential energy (PE) is the energy of _____Position_______. 3) What property of a substance corresponds to the average KE of its particles? Temperature 4) What property
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Go http://phet.colorado.edu/simulations/sims.php?sim=My_Solar_System and click on Run Now. I After the simulation loads click Start. Describe what you see in this simple sun-planet system. The planet is rapidly rotating around the sun‚ while the sun is slowly revolving around its own centralized location. Specifically‚ what happens to the central object (the Sun)? It slowly revolves around its own central point. Can you explain why the central object moves? I would say that
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Hugh Kim Lab Report: Stoichiometry Lab 1. Prelab Part1. 1) Create no waste = The principle that encourages chemists to not create waste at the first place rather than cleaning it up afterwards effectively shifts the chemistry more environmentally conscious‚ as creating no waste would make the experiment efficient; the reactants will be reduced to only the essential ones and the product will be maximized‚ a change that would make the experiment economic. Also‚ if chemists aim to
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Chapter 3: Stoichiometry 3: Stoichiometry 5: Thermochemistry 8: Covalent Bonding and Molecular Structure 15: Chemical Equilibrium 16: Acids and Bases 3.2 Stoichiometry and Compound Formulas 3.1 The Mole and Molar Mass 3.2 Stoichiometry and Compound Formulas 3.3 Stoichiometry and Chemical Reactions 3.4 Stoichiometry and Limiting Reactants 3.5 Chemical Analysis Chapter Summary Chapter Summary Assignment Reference Tools Periodic Table Molarity Calculator Molar Mass Calculator Unit
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For those of you who came to the review in class today‚ The stoichiometry question from class. I read the answer to the wrong decimal place. --What is the total mass of oxygen in 0.26mol of Cu2O? Find the percent of oxygen in Cu2O first. The molar mass of Cu2O is 143‚ the mass of just the oxygen in it is 16. % Composition of oxygen would be 16/143 times 100 is 11.19%‚ To determine the mass of Cu2O in 0.26 mol‚ multiply by the molar mass of Cu2O. This gives
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Collision Lab Simulation Purpose: To study elastic and inelastic collisions in one-dimension. Background Information: Momentum: is a measure of mass in motion. It is the product of mass x velocity. Conservation of Momentum: in the absence of external forces‚ such as friction‚ the linear momentum of a system remains constant. Procedure: 1. Open web browser and go to the site: http://phet.colorado.edu 2. Click “play with sims”‚ then “physics”‚ and then “motion” 3. Find the “Collision Lab” 4
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