SCI/241 Fat and Water Soluble Vitamins There are many different types of vitamins and each has its own special role in the body‚ they might all be different but they all are essential for the body’s health. All the different vitamins are categorized into two groups‚ Fat soluble vitamins (vitamins A and E) and then there are water soluble vitamins (vitamins B-complex and C). Vitamins are an important part of the body’s daily intake‚ because they
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Abstract Water “hardness” was analyzed in this experiment‚ through the determination of CaCO3 concentration. This was achieved by the titration of an unknown solution using a standardized 0.1M EDTA‚ and addition of Eriochrome Black T to the unknown‚ to indicate the endpoint of the titration. The average concentration of CaCO3 obtained was 1034 ppm‚ with a standard deviation of 2.4495. The results indicate that the unknown solution can be considered as hard water. Introduction The
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Name: Name of lab partner: Date: Title: Determination of the valency of magnesium Objective: To study the quantitative relationship between the amount of reactant and products of a reaction. A known starting mass of magnesium and the measured collection of hydrogen gas will be used to determine the reaction stoichiometry and the valency of magnesium. Introduction: In Chemistry‚ stoichiometry is the study of the quantitative relationship between amounts of reactants and products of a reaction
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CHM 3120L ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY I LABORATORY REPORT EXPERIMENT: SPECTROPHOTOMETRIC DETERMINATION OF IRON IN DRINKING WATER Name: Steven Adrien Section: 3 Date Experiment Completed: Wednesday‚ July 17‚ 2013 1. Complete the following table Fe(II) stock solution | mass‚ g | 0.1756 | volume‚ mL | 500.0 | MW(Fe(NH4)2(SO4)2 x 6H2O)‚ g/mol | 392.14 | AW(Fe)‚ g/mol | 55.85 | conc. Fe(II)‚ ppm | 50.0 | Use Equation Editor to show how you calculated the concentration of Fe(II)
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CHM152LL LAB MANUAL COMPLEXOMETRIC DETERMINATION OF WATER HARDNESS Complexometric Determination of Water Hardness Introduction Complex ions When a neutral molecule or anion (a Lewis base) donates electron pairs and attaches itself to a metal ion center (a Lewis acid)‚ the resulting cluster‚ or complex‚ of atoms becomes a single complex ion. When such complexes form‚ the electron donating groups (called ligands) form coordinate covalent bonds through empty orbitals on the metal ion. An example
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Determination of Chemical Formulae: The Reaction of Zinc and Iodine By Sarah Abstract: The main objective of this experiment was to use to the reaction between zinc and iodine to examine the validity of the Law of Conservation of Mass and the Law of Constant Composition. The Law of Constant Composition was tested by determining the mass of each of the reactants‚ zinc and iodine‚ and comparing their total to the mass of the zinc iodide product plus the excess zinc. The total mass of the reactants
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Microbiology Lab Report II Title: Determination of a Bacteriophage Titer Purpose: To determine the number of phage particles or plaque-forming units in a suspension of T4 bacteriophage. Materials: 18 24 hour broth culture of Escherichia coli B. 2 ml suspension of T4 bacteriophages with a titer of at least 10‚000 phages/ml 5 trypticase soy agar (TSA) plates. These should be warmed to 37c before use 5 tubes of soft agar (0.7% agar). Prior
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| | 1 | 0.2123 | 0.00 | 42.34 | 42.34 | 2 | 0.2195 | 0.00 | 47.24 | 47.24 | 3 | 0.2049 | 0.00 | 26.65 | 46.65 | After Boiling | 1 | | 31.52 | 32.22 | 0.70 | 2 | | 29.34 | 30.61 | 1.27 | 3 | | 30.61 | 31.52 | 0.91 | Week 2: Determination of Sodium Carbonate in the unknown via titrating using bromocresol indicator Sample number: SC 8 Table 2: Titration of the unknown using hydrochloric acid Trial | Mass of unknown (g) | Burette reading (before boiling) | Final Volume
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DETERMINATION OF COPPER BY COMPLEXATION‚ SOLVENT-EXTRACTION AND SPECTROPHOTOMETRY ABSTRACT To determine the concentration of copper in an unknown solution by using copper complexation‚ solvent extraction and spectrophotometry. Standards are used to create a calibration curve and the unknown concentration of copper is then calculated by using the linear equation from the calibration curve. The concentration of copper in the unknown solution 201 was found to be 12.57± 0.25 μg/mL. INTRODUCTION Copper
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PRACTICAL 15: DETERMINATION OF HEAT OF NEUTRALIZATION Data collection: |Reaction |Initial Temperature/°C (±0.25) |Final Temperature of Mixture/°C (±0.25) | | |Acid |Base | | |HNO3 + NaOH |28.00 |28.25 |34.50 | |HNO3 + KOH |28.25 |28.25 |34.00
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