purpose of laboratory assignment 3 was to measure the rate at which a chemical reaction takes place. For the purpose of this lab we measured the rate a balanced oxidation/reduction reaction between iodine‚ hydrogen‚ and bromate ion occurs. The above reaction occurs slowly so we used a coupled iodine clock reaction to measure the rate of the oxidation/reduction reaction because it occurs much faster but is still dependent upon the other reaction. To accomplish this‚ two mixtures were prepared in separate
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Science investigation Aim: To try to see if the temperature affects the rate in which Amylase breaks down starch into maltose. In this reaction starch is the substrate and maltose is the product. Amylase is an enzyme‚ Enzymes‚ also called catalysts‚ are in living things and there are thousand of them. Enzymes break down food by the active site on the Enzyme forming a chemical bond with a substrate and then water attacks the substrate until it is hydrolysed (split in 2). Equipment: Boiling
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2 Angles make a difference Aim The aim of this experiment is to test whether the angle of sunlight affects the surface temperature on earth. Hypothesis I believe Block B will receive more sunlight than Block A‚ because the lamp shines directly onto Block B. Materials * * Lamp * 2 thermometers * 2 blocks of wood * Black plastic tape Procedure 1. Cut out two small identically sized pieces of black tape and attach onto wooden blocks so that they make pockets. 2.
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RESULTS AND DISCUSSION REPORT—EXPERIMENT 3 (CHEMICAL KINETICS) CALCULATIONS Effect of Concentration on Reaction Rate [S2O32-]initand [H+]init for each run‚ knowing the original concentrations and volumes of [S2O32-]‚ [H+]‚ and water used. [S2O32-]init= __(M[S2O32-])(V[S2O32-])__ [H+]init= _____(M[H+])(V[H+])____ V[S2O32-]+V[H+]+V[water] V[H+]+V[S2O32-]+V[water] Run 1 [S2O32-]init= (0.15 M)(10 mL) (10+3+2)mL = 0.1 M [H+]init= (3 M)(2
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Comparison of the rate of reaction and yield of glycerol in saponification with different triglycerides Chemistry EE Candidate number: 0019 Word count: 3974 TABLE OF CONTENTS CONTENTS 2 INTRODUCTION 2 RESEARCH QUESTION 5 BACKGROUND INFORMATION 5 METHODOLOGY 10 DATA PRESENTATION AND PROCESSING 13 CONCLUSION 24 EVALUATION 24 BIBLIOGRAPHY 26 Introduction In 1779‚ Carl W. Scheele‚ a Swedish chemist‚ discovered a new transparent‚ syrupy liquid by heating olive oil and litharge . This
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Trial 4 Trial 5 Mass of 50 mL water (g) 50 50 50 50 50 Minimum Temperature of Water (C) 22 22.4 18.5 17.2 18.1 Maximum Temp. Of Water (C) 77.2 88.5 90.4 74.3 83.9 Initial mass of food (g) 4.8 5.4 5.1 4.7 4.5 Final Mass of food (g) 3.3 3.3 3.2 3.1 3.1 Length of time the food burned 4 minutes 4 minutes 3.45 minutes 3.83 minutes 3.6 minutes Cashews Trial 1 Trial 2 Trial 3 Trial 4 Trial 5 Mass of 50 mL water (g) 50 50 50 50 50 Minimum Temperature of Water (c) 17.8 18.5 18.5 19.2 18.3 Maximum Temp. Of Water
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find the rate equation of the reaction of hydrogen peroxide and iodide ions. This will be achieved by using an iodine clock method and colorimetric analysis. 2. Draw a graph of rate against concentration for each reactant (Hydrogen peroxide‚ potassium iodide and H+ ions). 3. Finding the order for each reactant 4. Finding the rate-determining step. 5. Proposing a mechanism for the reaction. 6. Using Arrhenius’ equation to find the activation enthalpy. Background The basic reaction for this
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of this experiment was to see if different temperatures affect the growth rate of crystals The information
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After performing this experiment‚ it was found that the surface the chocolate was placed on could make a major difference. The hypothesis that was made had mostly incorrect predictions‚ but with some correct ones. It was found that using the palm of one’s hand was the best surface on which to melt chocolate‚ as was predicted. It melted so far‚ and so fast‚ that the experiment had to be altered. Coming in second place was the surface of black paper‚ something that was not expected. The black
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will rise this is due to the fact of the reaction between the sodium bicarbonate and the acid(lemon juice) in the cake‚and as a result the cupcake will rise.Approximately 5 percent of lemon juice is citric acid‚ when an acid and a base are involved in a chemical reaction ‚ a new product is produced‚ with a neutral base. In the case of lemon juice and sodium bicarbonate‚ carbon dioxide gas‚ water and a salt is produced.The chemical formula of this reaction is H3C6H5O7(aq) + 3NaHCO3(aq) → Na3C6H5O7(aq)
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