the space below. Also include any observations you made over the course of Part II. Calculations: Show your work and write a short explanation with each calculation. Part I: Calculate the energy change (q) of the surroundings (water) using the enthalpy equation qwater = m × c × ΔT. We can assume that the specific heat capacity of water is 4.18 J / (g × °C) and the density of water is 1.00 g/mL. The water has absorbed the heat of the metal. So‚ qwater = qmetal Using the formula qmetal
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ST ANDREW’S JUNIOR COLLEGE JC 2 Preliminary Examination CHEMISTRY 9647/03 Higher 2 13 September 2010 Paper 3 Free Response 2 hours Candidates answer on separate paper. Additional Materials: Answer paper‚ Graph Paper‚ Data Booklet READ THESE INSTRUCTIONS FIRST Write your name and civics group on all the work you hand in. Write in dark blue or black pen on both sides of the paper. You may use a soft pencil for any diagrams‚ graphs or rough working. Do not use staples‚
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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. Add 5 to 10 drops
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lipids can be found. Data Part 1 – Testing for Protein Description Observations 1 Egg white / albumin Purple‚ 8 drops 2 Pepsin solution Purple‚ 8 drops 3 Sugar No color change 4 Water No color change The Biuret reagent contains sodium hydroxide and copper
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OxidatiOn and ReductiOn OxidatiOn & ReductiOn 9.2 9 Introduction to oxidation and reduction Redox equations Some common oxidising agents and reducing agents (EXT) 9.3 Reactivity 9.4 Voltaic cells 19.1 Standard electrode potentials (AHL) 9.5 Electrolytic cells 19.2 cORe 9.1 Electrolysis (AHL) TOK Are oxidation numbers real? I remember contemplating on the nature of reality back in Chapters 2 and 4‚ with regard to electrons and hybridization respectively
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cylinder {± 0.5cm³} • Different chemicals Introduction/Theory: Exothermic reactions are those reactions that release energy in the form of heat. Endothermic reactions need to absorb energy in the form of heat to proceed. Enthalpy is the heat content of a substance. Enthalpy change is positive for an endothermic reaction‚ as energy is absorbed {for example in the form of heat absorbed‚ the test-tube becomes cool to touch} and negative in the case of exothermic reactions {the test-tube becomes warm/hot
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Oxidation Lab Part 1: Purpose: You are going to investigate the ease with which different metals undergo oxidation and reduction. Materials: | 4 samples of each of: lead‚ zinc‚ iron‚ copper | spot plates steel wool/sand paper | | | | Solutions of: | copper(II) sulfate Ferric nitrate Silver nitrate Lead (II) nitrate | | Procedure: 1. Obtain 4 samples of each metal and clean with steel wool or sand paper. Wash your hands after cleaning the metals so you are not exposed to lead
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Water in a Compound CHEM 1315-022 For experiment one‚ The Determination of the Percent of Water in a Compound‚ the sole purpose of conducting this experiment was to determine the percent of water found in compounds such as Magnesium Sulfate‚ Copper Sulfate‚ and so on. Along with determining the percentages of the hygroscopic compounds the experiment allowed for the exploration of separation of hydrogen bonds to ionic solids through the use of heat. The reason that the water clings to the ionic
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REPORT PRACTICAL M1 TESTING FOR MACROMOLECULES Title : Testing for Macromolecules Abstract : To test for macromolecules (carbohydrates‚ lipids‚ nucleic acids‚ and proteins)‚ iodine solution‚ alcohol‚ aceto-orcein stain and copper sulfate solution are used. The conclusions for all of the tests are positive. Introduction: A) Carbohydrate (starch) Carbohydrates are chemical compounds that contain oxygen‚ hydrogen‚ and carbon atoms. They consist of monosaccharide sugars of
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concentration‚ catalyst‚ and surface area. Apparatus and Materials Available 3 x 250 mL beakers magnesium ribbon (1 cm) 3 x test tubes magnesium powder test tube rack mossy zinc 10 mL graduated cylinder copper turnings 3 x Alka Seltzer® tablets copper(II) sulfate 0.1 M hydrochloric acid‚ HCl hot bath 1.0 M hydrochloric acid‚ HCl ice bath 6.0 M hydrochloric acid‚ HCl steel wool pieces of zinc (1 cm x 1 cm) thermometer *additional materials may be made available
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