Nationalistic d. An applied science 4. Criminal _______________ refers to the study of the relationship between criminality and the inhabitants of a certain locality: a) Ecology c) Epidiomology b) Demography d) Physical anthropology 5. The study of Criminology is said to evolve as civilization change. It is a progressive study and researches of causes and effects of crime and other factors correlated to the study of crime. a. Dynamic c. Social science b. Nationalistic d
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The Mass of Acetylsalicylic Acid in Aspirin ------------------------------------------------- Purpose The purpose of the lab is to determine the mass of the ‘active ingredient’ in a commercial ASA tablet. ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- Introduction There are three main theories surrounding acids and bases including the Arrhenius‚ Bronsted-Lowry‚ and Lewis theories. The Arrhenius theory of acids and bases states that
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Introduction Table of Contents Introduction Materials Chemicals Equipment Safety Containers Measuring Devices Other Equipment Procedure Synthesis of Aspirin Crystalizing the Aspirin Recrystallizing the Crude Aspirin Finding the Melting Point Range Safety Precautions Acetic Anhydride Sulphuric and Salicylic Acid Heating Observations Mass of Aspirin Synthesized Melting Point Calculations Percentage Yield Maximum Yield Crude Product Final Product Melting Range Percentage
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Preparation of an Ester Acetylsalicylic Acid (Aspirin) OBJECTIVE: To become familiar with the techniques and principle of esterification. DISCUSSION: Aspirin is a drug widely used as an antipyretic agent (to reduce fever)‚ as an analgesic agent (to reduce pain)‚ and/or as an anti-inflammatory agent (to reduce redness‚ heat or swelling in tissues). Chemically‚ aspirin is an ester. Esters are the products of reaction of acids with alcohols‚ as shown in the following equation using
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Lab # 4 Determination of Density of Liquids Name: Lab Partner: Period: 3 Date Completed: 9/23/2014 Date Submitted: 9/29/2014 Data TABLE 4 DENSITY OF SALT SOLUTIONS-INDIVIDUAL GROUP’S RESULTS Concentration (%) Mass (g) Volume (mL) Density (g/mL) 0 9.9522 10.00 0.9952 4 10.1291 10.00 1.013 8 10.5233 10.00 1.052 12 10.7487 10.00 1.075 16 11.0297 10.00 1.103 Unknown # 10.6234 10.00 1.062 Calculations 1. Show all density
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Name:_______________________ Date:___________ Period:______ Page:_______ Potato Diffusion Lab Hypothesis:________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________ Materials Aprons/Goggles Potato Slice (2-3cm thick) Potato Borer Triple beam balance 6 x 100mL beakers plastic wrap Paper towel 50mL Distilled Water 50mL 0.2M Sucrose solution 50mL 0.4M Sucrose solution 50mL 0.6M Sucrose
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LAB OF ENTHALPY CHANGE IN COMBUSTION Objective: Determine the Enthalpy change of combustion ΔHc of three different alcohols. Methanol‚ Ethanol and Isopropilic acid. Procedure: 1. Fill the spirit micro burner with Ethanol and weight it 2. Pour 100 cm3 of water into the aluminum cup 3. Arrange the cup a short distance over the micro burner 4. Measure the temperature of water 5. When the temperature of the water has risen by 10°C‚ record the temperature. 6. Reweight
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(dialysis tubing). The experiment will show how molecules in solution move from areas of higher concentration to areas of lower concentration in the attempt to reach homeostasis in different circumstances. Introduction: The main purpose of this lab was to observe diffusion and osmosis. This is demonstrated using dialysis tubing and a combination of monosaccharaides‚ disaccharides‚ water (H20)‚ and sodium chlorine
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MBK – Lab Report Name: ____ Section: ___ Module 1‚ Experiment 1: Observing Bacteria and Blood (No microscope needed for this lab) Questions: A. List the following parts of the microscope‚ AND Briefly describe the function of each part. A. Eyepiece – transmits and magnifies the image from the objective lens to the eye. B. Main tube – moves vertically for focusing C. Nosepiece– holds the objective lenses and rotates them. D. Objective lens - Objective lenses provide
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Coulomb’s Law Purpose: The purpose of this lab was to demonstrate that the force between two stationary charges is directly proportional to the product of the charges and inversely to the square of the distance between them. Coulomb’s law tells us that the force between two charges depends (1) linearly on the strength of each charge‚ and (2) inversely on the square of the distance between them. Mathematically we would write this as . Procedures Part1 Begin by removing the right side
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