1ST SIX WEEKS PERIOD Unit A Chapter 1 Lesson 2 Classifying Plants Modeling Water Transport Material: * small sponge‚ * pie tin‚ * water‚ * glass‚ * red food coloring‚ * celery stalk. Procedure 1. Pour a cup of water into the pie tin and the glass. Add food coloring to the glass. 2. Have a student place the sponge in the pie tin and the celery stalk in the glass. 3. After 24 hours‚ ask students how the sponge and celery model water transport systems in
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Calcium Hydroxide Titrated with Hydrochloric Acid By: Juliana Kadiasi Signature__________________________________________ (Experimental team: Ashley Tsao‚ Sophie Alvarez‚ Catherine Hering) IB Chemistry HL B3 For: Mr. Ahmed. Belmir 15 September 2014 Criteria Aspect IA IA Total Design 1. Identified Problem & relevant variables 2. Procedure controls variables 3. Procedure & relevant sufficient data Data Collection & Processing 1. Precise & accurate
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The solubility of calcium hydroxide Aim: to find out the solubility of a substance that only partially dissolves in water. Method: place about 100cm3 of distilled water in a flask and add about one spatula of solid calcium hydroxide. Stopper the flask and shake well for one minute. Leave to stand for at least 24 hours. Titrate 10cm3 samples against 0.05 mol dm-3 hydrochloric acid solution using methyl orange as an indicator. Obtain enough results to calculate an accurate average‚ and then
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Experiment 4: Analyze a solution of potassium hydroxide using standard hydrochloric acid Theory . Introduction: Titration is a procedure used in chemistry in order to determines the molarity of an acid or a base. In the other words‚ it is also consider as acid-base neutralization reaction (Darrell D. Ebbing 1976). A chemical reaction is set up between a know volume of a solution of unknown concentration and a known volume of a solution with a known concentration. The relative acidity or
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Finding the Activation Energy of the reaction between Hydrochloric Acid and Sodium Thiosulfate The equation for the reaction is: S2O32- (aq) + 2H+(aq) ⋄ SO2 (g) + S(s) + H2O (l) Equipment - 2 boiling tubes - 400 cm3 beakers - Marker pen - Stand and clamp - Timer - Bunsen burner‚ tripod and gauze - 0 – 100 oC thermometer - 2 x 10 cm3 measuring cylinders - Access to a fume cupboard. Method 1. Label two boiling tubes A and B. Mark a dark spot on the side of a 400cm3 beaker‚ then ½ fill
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reaction of ethanoic acid and sodium hydrogen carbonate Cristina Li 17th April 2017 Introduction The hypothesis is the balloon will be bigger and bigger with the increase of vinegar. The chemical reaction between the baking soda and vinegar produces bubbles of carbon dioxide gas as part of this acid-base reaction. Sodium hydrogen carbonate (baking soda) reacts with
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Experiment 2: Estimation of protein concentration Name: Wong Jiun Hao ID: 00000011136 Cohort: BM114 Module: Biological Science Table of Contents Title 1 Table of Contents 2 Introduction 3 Objectives 4 Procedure 4 Results 5-6 Discussion 7-8 Conclusion 9 References 9 Introduction The concentration of protein in a sample can be obtained by using the Bradford protein assay method. The method requires a spectrophotometer
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reaction was the reaction from the sulfate anion test between Sodium Sulfate and Barium Chloride. If the compound was in fact Sodium Sulfate it would produce a white precipitate and it did. The second reaction was first between Sodium Sulfate and Hydrochloric Acid‚ and then Silver Nitrate was added. For the compound to be confirmed‚ a white precipitate should form again‚ and it did. The next reaction started with the combination of Sodium Sulfate and Ammonia Hydroxide and
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Practical 3 Investigation of Action of Saliva and Hydrochloric Acid in Two Carbohydrate Solution | Objective: 1. To show the action of saliva in two carbohydrate solutions. 2. To show the action of hydrochloric acid in two carbohydrate solutions. Apparatus & Equipment’s: Boiling tubes Metal test tube racks Beaker Graduated plastic dropper Water bath‚~37°C Water bath‚~95°C Stop watch
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Reactions of acids Aim To investigate and compare some reactions of a strong acid‚ hydrochloric acid‚ and a weak acid‚ ethanoic acid (common name‚ acetic acid) Equipment Dropper bottles containing: • 0.1 M hydrochloric acid‚ HCl • 0.1 M ethanoic acid (acetic acid)‚ CH3COOH • 0.1 M sodium hydroxide‚ NaOH • 1 M hydrochloric acid‚ HCl • 1 M ethanoic acid (acetic acid)‚ CH3COOH • universal indicator solution • limewater (calcium hydroxide‚ Ca(OH)2) Marble chips (calcium carbonate‚ CaCO3) Copper(II)
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