Name ___________________________________________Date experiment performed ________________________CRN of lab section: _______________________________ | Grade: ______________Days late: ____________Instructor Initials: _____ | General Grading Items | 25 Points | Attendance at Pre-lab Meeting | /10 | Copies of lab pages attached; labeled with name and date‚ complete information‚ readable‚ data recorded matches results given in report | /5 | Waste was properly disposed of and lab area was
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Purpose This experiment shows how different concentrations of acids and bases in a solution affect its pH level. When acids and bases are combined in a solution‚ they neutralize each other. This means that depending on the concentration of both acids and bases in a solution‚ the pH will vary. A neutral pH level is 7; anything below that level is known as an acidic solution‚ while anything above is known as a basic solution. To find out the pH‚ the solutions will be diluted and tested with different
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LAB REPORT 5 – ACID/BASE CHEMISTRY No credit will be given for this lab report if the Data section is not completely filled out and if the required photographs are not received. At least one photograph must show the student’s face. NOTE: This experiment is rather lengthy. Plan accordingly. OBJECTIVES 1. Define strong electrolyte‚ weak electrolyte‚ nonelectrolyte‚ acid‚ base‚ salt‚ strong acid‚ weak acid‚ strong base‚ weak base‚ and neutralization reaction. 2. Compare and contrast the chemical
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Separation of a Carboxylic Acid from a Neutral Compound by Extraction Reference: Smith‚ Chapter 2 (Acids and Bases) Introduction Carboxylic acids and phenols are two families of organic compounds that contain carbon‚ hydrogen and oxygen‚ and also react with water to yield an excess of hydronium ions over hydroxide ions. Pure water has a pH of 7‚ which means it has a hydronium ion concentration‚ [H3O+] of 10-7 M (M = molarity‚ moles/Liter). The hydronium ions in pure water come from the self-ionization
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A buffer solution can maintains a narrow range of pH even when strong acid are added. In our experiment‚ we can see water is not a buffer‚ water can undergo very big changes when small amounts of strong acid or strong bases are added. When the strong acid‚ 100µl HCl was added into the dd water‚ the pH value changed from 7.38 to 5.83 which mean the dd water has turn into acid. The same phenomenon occurs while strong base‚ 100µl NaOH was added into the dd water. The pH value changed from 7.07 to 9
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Determination of Equilibrium Constants Introduction Bromothymol blue is an indicator for many acid-base titrations. When adding different solutions within the indicator it is to react and change colors‚ in this experiment the different colors were blue‚ green‚ and yellow. In the following experiment‚ obtaining the absorbance levels for each one makes it possible to calculate the equilibrium constant. Materials and Methods For this specific experiment there are a few materials that are crucial
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Experiment 1: "A cis to trans conversion" Saturday‚ June 25‚ 2005 4:19 PM Notes on Theory • Alkenes o They are hydrocarbons with a C=C double bond • Double bonds are stronger and more reactive than single bonds o Hydrocarbons with double bonds used to be known as "olefins"‚ because they had an oily appearance • "Oleum" means oil • "Ficare" means make • Isomers o Geometric isomers have the same molecular formula‚ but a different geometric arrangement • They also have different physical properties
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Quiz 6 Question 1 of 12 4.0/ 4.0 Points Which of these compounds would you expect to be least soluble in water? A.NH3 B.NaCl C.CH3OH Correct D.N2 E.not enough information Answer Key: D Question 2 of 12 0.0/ 4.0 Points Which of the following substances is NOT a solution? A.brass B.air C.vodka D.copper Incorrect E.All of the above are solutions. Answer Key: D Question 3 of 12 4.0/ 4.0 Points Hexane‚ a nonpolar solvent‚ will dissolve which of the following substances? A.ammonium
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Buffer Preparation (Gozani Lab) 1. 1 M Tris-HCl Buffers pH Volume (L) TrisBase (g) HCl (ml) pH 7.0 2 242.2 150-155 pH 7.5 2 242.2 120-125 pH 8.0 2 242.2 80-85 Autoclavable. 2. EDTA 0.5 M (pH8.0) 0.5M‚ 1L: 148 g EDTA + ~30-40 g NaOH to adjust pH (or 186 g EDTA-Na.2H2O + ~20 g NaOH) Note: pH adjusted by NaOH is essential for solubility. Autoclavable. 3. TAE DNA Electrophoresis Buffer (50 X) (2 M Tris‚ 50 mM EDTA) 2L 484 g Tris 114.2 ml glacial acetic acid 200 ml 0.5 M EDTA 8.0 To make
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BUFFERS By: Luis P. Bazan‚ RPh.‚ Ph.D. A buffer solution is a solution of: 1. A weak acid or a weak base and 2. The salt of the weak acid or weak base Both must be present! A buffer solution has the ability to resist changes in pH upon the addition of small amounts of either acid or base. Consider an equal molar mixture of CH3COOH and CH3COONa CH3COOH (aq) H+ (aq) + CH3COO- (aq) Adding more acid creates a shift left IF enough acetate ions are present 16.3 Which of the
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