Module One: Grade Nine Topics Physical Change: This is a usually reversible change in which the form of matter is altered‚ but is not chemically changed to another substance. Melting an ice cube is an example of a physical change. The ice cube changes states: from a solid to a liquid (water). You can physically see this change. No new substance is formed: the matter in the liquid is the same as it was in the ice cube. It is reversible: you can freeze the liquid to turn it back to ice.
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Extraction of Aluminium Aluminium ore is called bauxite. Bauxite contains aluminium oxide‚ water‚ iron oxide and other impurities. The purified dry ore‚ called alumina‚ is aluminium oxide (Al2O3). The alumina must be molten for electrolysis to work‚ since the ions are not free to move in the solid state. Unfortunately‚ alumina has a high melting point (2040 °C) and it is not practical to do electrolysis at such a high temperature. In the middle of the nineteenth century it was found that alumina
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law theory 3. Exercise 1.5 Part A - Define chemistry. ANSWER: Chemistry is the science that seeks to understand what matter does by studying what atoms and molecules do. Chemistry is the science of matter and its motion‚ as well as space and time - the science that deals with concepts such as force‚ energy‚ mass‚ and charge. Chemistry is the science that studies the molecular transformations only in nonliving matter. Chemistry is the science that studies the molecular transformations
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Chapter 10 Banking and the Management of Financial Institutions Banks • Financial institution • Financial intermediary o Take deposits‚ make loans • Banks make money on the spread between what they take in from loans and what they pay out on interest on deposits o (minus their expenses) • Government licensed institutions o Can be licensed by the federal government or the state government o Federally chartered or state chartered • Receiving‚ keeping
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(Name) (Course Name) (Instructors Name) (Date) Summary of chemistry lab report Introduction The two factors which affect the yield of products in a chemical reaction is the amount of starting materials (reactants) and the percent yield of the reaction. Many experimental conditions for example temperature‚ and pressure can be adjusted to increase yield of the desired product‚ in chemical reaction‚ but because chemicals react according to fixed mole ratios( stoichometrically)‚ the only limited
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I. Grade Level/Unit Number: 9-12 Unit 7 II: Unit Title: Mole Concept III. Unit Length: 7 days (on a 90 min. per day block schedule) IV. Major Learning Outcomes: Students should be able to: Mole Concept • Calculate formula mass. • Convert representative particles to moles and moles to representative particles. (Representative particles are atoms‚ molecules‚ formula units‚ and ions.) • Convert mass of atoms‚ molecules‚ and compounds to moles and moles of atoms
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1. List all Functional Groups 2. What is an alkane? List its properties. 3. Write the name and formula of simple alkanes 4. Consider this compound (CH3)2CHCH2C(CH3)3. Name this. a. redraw it clearing all brackets and parentheses. b. Find the longest chain. Check from all directions. If it is not horizontal‚ rewrite the compound that so that longest chain IS horizontal. c. Number the carbons of the longest chain backwards and forwards.
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Vocab: 2.1 Mass: Measure of amount of matter in an object Volume: Measure of space occupied by object Extensive property: property that depends on amount of matter in a sample i.e.: mass and volume Intensive property: Property that depends on the type of matter in a sample(not amount) i.e.: type of basketball (leather; inside‚ rubber; outside) Substance: Matter that has a uniform and definite composition Physical property: Quality or condition of a substance that can be observed without
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Netherlands‚ 1968. 3. Hubschmann‚ H. Handbook of GC/MS: Fundamentals and Applications. Wiley-VCH Verlag‚ Germany‚ 2001. 4. Scott‚ R. P. W. Chromatographic Detectors: Design‚ Function‚ and Operation. Marcel Dekker‚ Inc.‚ USA‚ 1996. 5. J.N. Driscoll. REview of Photoionization Detection in Gas Chromatography: The first Decade. Journal of CHromatographic Science ‚ Vol 23. November 1985. 488-492. 6. Boer‚ H. ‚ "Vapour phase Chromatography"‚ ed. Desty‚ D. H.‚ 169 (Butterworths Sci. Pub.‚ London‚ 1957). 7
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Section instructor: Supratim Giri Email: girisupr@gmail.com Office: BMBT 416 1 CY 101: Electrochemistry 2 Submarines can propagate on the sea surface just like a ship Unless it’s a nuclear submarine; just like a ship‚ submarine’s propulsion is supplied by a diesel engine The sub intakes oxygen from air to run its diesel engine. But in order to strike an enemy ship‚ it has to take plunge in deep sea and remain submerged for a period between 24 to 48 hours! How the submarine
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