D_____ J_____ CARBOHYDRATES LAB May 22‚ 2013 Pre-lab Questions 1. The water in test tube No. 1 is a negative control. No reaction is expected to occur because water is not a carbohydrate. Reaction by a negative control is evidence of contamination. 2. The color changes expected for positive test results are Benedict’s test: orange to brick red Tollen’s test: metallic silver Starch iodine test: blue-black 3. Identify each of the samples in Part 1 as monosaccharide
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The data gathered and calculated in the experiment accurately portrayed the way the reactions would have taken place. The chloride analysis was a little bit off from other groups due to the fact that our AgCl was in clumps‚ creating less surface area‚ thus our product took longer to burn and may not have burned correctly compared to other groups; yet there are several experimental factors that could have caused us to have different results than other groups‚ i.e. different measurements for samples
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Form A Chemistry 100 Introduction to General Chemistry Fall Semester‚ 2010 Exam One‚ 150 points On this page print your name‚ your lab section number‚ and the name of your TA. Also sign this test booklet. Name________________________________Lab section____________TA___________ Signature________________________________________________________________ The exam consists of 21 problems and one extra credit problem. Partial credit is given only for work that is legible and logically and clearly
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TITLE Crime and Dye Lab Special Projects 1 Martin Enem LAB SECTION: BB2 INTRODUCTION Light is usually viewed as a result of the heating of a substance. The higher the temperature at which the substance is heated‚ the greater the vibrations that lead to certain light intensity given off by the molecule. It is this same theory that suggests why steel glows red hot when heated to high enough temperatures. The process of light emissions can also be induces through other means. 1 One
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Chemistry June Exam Notes Quantities in Chemical Reactions Molecular and formula mass o The mass of one unit of a compound (a molecule or a formula unit) o The sum of the mass of all the atoms in a compound o With knowledge of the mass of each individual atom‚ the percentage composition by mass can be determined The Mole (mol) o A counting unit‚ one mole refers to 6.02 x 1023 particles of any given substance o Known as Avogadro’s Constant and given the symbol NA Molar Mass o The
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Purpose: The purpose of this experiment was to be able to apply our knowledge of chemistry to identify 10 unknown elements that were presented to us. We were allowed to use Bunsen burners‚ hydrochloric acid‚ use PH paper to test if the unknown solution is an acid or a base‚ and precipitate each unknown solution with each other. Procedure / Data / Conclusions: Unknown #1: I found solution 1 to be KI. While doing the precipitate reactions‚ I found that it precipitates
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04.05 Chemical Reactions: Combustion: Lab Worksheet and Rubric Before You Begin: You may either copy and paste this document into a word processing program of your choice or print this page. Procedure: 1. Iron (IIII) and copper (II) sulfate solution Fill a small test tube halfway with copper (II) sulfate solution. Add a 2.0 gram iron rod to the solution and observe the reaction. 2. Lead (II) nitrate and potassium iodide solutions Pour about 2.0 mL of lead (II) nitrate into the test tube
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1. | | | What is the pressure‚ in atm‚ of a tank of gas with a regulator that reads 1250mmHg? | | | Student Response | Correct Answer | A. | 1.64 | | B. | 490 | | C. | 1.79 | | D. | 0.608 | | E. | 1.25 | | | Score: | 0/1 | | | 2. | | | A 147.9-L sample of dry air is cooled from 88.0°C to 22.1°C while the pressure is maintained at 2.85 atm. What is the final volume in L? (Do not type the units.) | | | Student Response | Correct
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05.03 Gas Laws: Lab Report Directions: Read/ Study all the lesson information in the 5.03 lesson then click the activity tab to perform two virtual labs. (There are recorded Teaching Videos for lesson 5.03. To view them click the “Help Sign” on the announcement page. Next scroll down to Lesson 5.03 stuff and you should see 5 part video links that will cover the lesson content.) Virtual Lab 1- Part I: Boyle’s Law A sample of gas is trapped in a sealed container‚ which has a movable lid. Moving
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Isotopes and Atomic Mass It’s Vegium I. Purpose The purpose of this lab is to determine the average weights of each isotope of the “element” vegium‚ determine the relative abundance of isotopes of vegium‚ and calculate from experimental data the atomic mass of vegium. II. Apparatus Sample of vegium‚ balance‚ weighing cups III. Data Tables | |Beanium |Peaium |Cornium |Total
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