How has the study of chemistry affected the lives of ordinary people? Every single day‚ without even realising it‚ we use so many things that are brought to us by the discoveries and advances in chemistry. Many of these things we take for granted‚ and don’t even bother to question how it got there‚ why it is there‚ and how it works. Chemistry makes up everything in our lives‚ from the air that we breathe‚ to the plastic on the keyboard I’m typing on now‚ and a in depth study of some of the wonderful
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Organic Chemistry I – CHEM 201-DL01 September 26‚ 2014 Organic Chemistry Experiment 4B Lab Report Extraction of Organic Compounds From Natural Sources: Extraction of Trimyristin From Nutmeg Introduction The purpose of this experiment is to illustrate how a solid natural product can be extracted from its natural source through the use of an organic solvent. Natural products are organic compounds that are synthesized by natural biological processes in plants‚ animals
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Chapter 4 - Chemical Bonding Outline • 4.2 Naming Compounds and Writing Formulas • 4.1 Types of Chemical Bonds • 4.4 Electronegativity‚ Unequal Sharing‚ and Polar Bonds • 4.5 Vibrating Bonds and the Greenhouse Effect • 4.3 Lewis Structures • 4.6 Resonance • 4.7 Formal Charge: Choosing among Lewis Structures • 4.8 Exceptions to the Octet Rule • 4.9 The Lengths and Strengths of Covalent Bonds © 2014 W. W. Norton Co.‚ Inc. 1 Chemical Bonds All chemical bonds consist of _______ that
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Practice problems Chapter 6 Name___________________________________ MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1) Which one of the following is correct? A) ν ÷ λ = c B) ν = cλ 1) C) νλ = c D) λ = c ν E) ν + λ = c 2) The photoelectric effect is __________. A) a relativistic effect B) the ejection of electrons by a metal when struck with light of sufficient energy C) the darkening of photographic film when exposed to
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CHE 140 Name__Chesi Spriggs First Hour Exam Potentially useful information 1000 g = 1 kg 1000 mL = 1 L 1 in = 2.54 cm 1 mL = 1 cm3 D = m/v Select the best choice for the following questions. ___e___ 1. A hypothesis is a(n) a. formulation of principles based on facts. b. modification of a theory. c. organized body of knowledge. d. tentative explanation of observations. e. None of the above. __b___ 2. The initial success of the Bohr theory was based
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Experiment 7 Gooch filter crucible or fritted-glass funnel Mother liquor- liquid from which a substance precipitates or crystallizes Filtrate- liquid that passes through the filter Slurry- suspension of solid in liquid Calcium ion can be analyzed by precipitation with oxalate in basic solution to form CaC2O4.H2O The precipitate is soluble in acidic solution because the oxalate anion is a weak base CaC2O4.H2O (calcium oxalate monohydrate ; MW = 146 g/mol) Equation: Ca2+(aq) + C2O42-(aq)
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In the Lewis symbol for a fluorine atom‚ there are __________ paired and __________ unpaired electrons. A) 4‚ 2 B) 0‚ 5 C) 2‚ 5 D) 6‚ 1 E) 4‚1 2. Which of the following would have to gain two electrons in order to achieve a noble gas electron configuration? O Sr Na Se Br A) Sr B) Br C) Sr‚ O‚ Se D) Na E) O‚ Se 3. The electron configuration of the S2- ion is __________. A) [Ne]3s23p2 B) [Ne]3s23p6 C) [Kr]3s22p-6 D) [Ar]3s23p2 E) [Ar]3s23p6 4. The ion NO- has __________
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Stoichiometry • Calculations involving quantities of consumed reactants and formed products based on a BALANCED chemical equation. Mass Molar Mass Mole Coeff Bal Eqn Mole Molar Mass Mass Example 2 • The Haber Process involves reacting gaseous nitrogen and gaseous hydrogen to form ammonia. Determine the mass in grams of hydrogen gas required to form 1.00 x 103 g ammonia. Your Turn 2 • If you react 52.9 g of potassium chlorate (KClO3) with excess phosphorus
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then computing with them. This type of data is either nominal or ordinal. Nominal The number we assign to some object‚ idea‚ or behavior is entirely arbitrary‚ although in some cases a tradition may establish the rules of assignment. If measurements are assigned arbitrary numbers‚ they are called nominal numbers‚ and their sole purpose in the analysis is to differentiate an item possessing one characteristic from an item possessing a different characteristic. Nominal data is a type of categorical
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Chemistry 59 – 110‚ Winter Term 2013 Lectures: Section 1‚ Tues.‚ Thurs.‚ 1:00 – 2:20; Room‚ 1101 Education Section 2‚ Tues.‚ Thurs.‚ 10:00 – 11:20; Room‚ 102 Toldo Professor: Dr. K.E. Taylor‚ office EH 262; tel. 519-253-3000‚ ext. 5031; e-mail: taylor@uwindsor.ca. Office hours: 4 per week‚ tentatively 3:00 – 5:00 Tues.‚ Thurs. Lab Co-ordinator (office EH 175): Ms. Tina Lepine‚ tel. ext. 3547; e-mail: tlepine@uwindsor.ca. Evening Lab Supervisor (EH 175): Ms. Nedhal
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