an acid and a base in order to determine the of the weak acid‚ . is a constant for a given acid at a given temperature. In this experiment we determined the Ka using two different methods: 1) the measurement of the pH of a solution containing a known concentration of a weak acid‚ and 2) measurement of the pH at the half-neutralization point in the titration of a weak acid and a strong base. Theory and Concept: When titrating a weak acid‚ HA‚ with a strong base the equilibrium between the weak
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Name : Andi Nadya Amanda Period : 4 Grade : 11 Enzyme Lab Report Question How heats effect the length of reaction time of an enzyme? Hypothesis I think the heat will make the length of reaction time of an enzyme become slowly. Heat is one of a way to denature the substrate. It means the heat will break down the structure of substrate in order the reaction of enzymes that we activated into it become slowly. Method for Collecting Data First I will record the length of reaction time
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2013 Lab Day/TA/Group: Wednesday(1:35pm)/Group A Labs reports must be typed and chemical structures must be drawn with ChemDraw. Report must not exceed three pages (including this page). Page limit does not include any attached spectra or references. ** Deductions for hand written report/structures and exceeding page limit ** Report Breakdown Data/Results: _________________ /10 Discussion: _________________ /10 Report Total: _________________ /20 Other Lab Marks
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CardioLab Report Full Name || Date | 01/02/2011 | Use this document to report your findings from the CardioLab Exploration Experiment. The lab report consists of three sections: Data‚ Exploration‚ and Lab Summary. * Data: copy any data‚ graphs‚ charts‚ or notes that you have saved in your CardioLab online notebook into this section. * Exploration: Answer the questions. The questions in the Exploration section are the same questions in your CardioLab instructions. * Lab Summary:
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NANYANG TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY [pic] ANALOG CIRCUIT DESIGN LAB312 REPORT (S2-B4a-04) Student name: xxx Student no: xxx Group: xxx Date of submission: xxx TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. Introduction……………………………………………………….3 • 1.1 Background…………………………………………..3 • 1.2 The Capture Work Environment……….…………. 4 • 1.3 The PSPICE A/D Simulation Environment……… 5 • 1.4 Objective……………………………………………. 6
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defined as the amount of energy necessary to produce a temperature change of 1°C per gram of substance. The specific heats of different substances vary‚ and therefore this quantity may be useful in identifying an unknown. The measurement of heat changes is called calorimetry. In this lab activity‚ calorimetry will be used to determine the specific heat of an unknown metal. This will be done by using a styrofoam cup calorimeter containing water. A calorimeter is insulated so as to minimize any loss of energy
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Enzyme Lab Report Introduction: Enzymes are proteins that enable chemical reactions. In the enzyme lab‚ the effects of concentration‚ temperature and pH on the functionality of the enzyme catalase. The enzyme lab was also about measuring reactions by capturing the oxygen that was generated by the reaction. Materials and Methods: Experiment 1‚ 2‚ & 3 Experiment 1 examined the effects of concentration on catalase activity. Experiment 2 examined the effects of concentration in temperature
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Formal Scientific Lab Report Osmosis Katy Hunter 10-26-2012 Abstract: The objectives of this lab was to be able to create models of cells with the dialysis tubing to show us how the plasma membrane is selectively permeable‚ to study the effects of osmosis on a model cell‚ and to foresee the effect of solute concentration on osmosis. In order to achieve these objectives‚ we had to fill the dialysis tubing with either water‚ or different amounts of sucrose. We then tied off the tubes and put
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shown in Figure A. Two separate adjustable supplies (VGG and VDD) were used for the experiment. The grounds for both supplies were connected to the circuit ground. 2) The VDD was adjusted to 24V A. With VDD = 24V‚ VGG was adjusted to 0V. i) Measurements. Answers were recorded in Table 1 The Gate-Source voltage (VGS) and Drain-Source (VDS) were measured and recorded. ii) Calculations. Answers were recorded in
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Lab Report Microbiology Introduction Bacteria can be found almost anywhere. For human life‚ some help us‚ some hurt us‚ and others are neutral. It is now known that good bacteria‚ or normal microflora‚ can reach 1014 microbial cells. This is far more than the 1013 cells that make up the human body (Tannock‚ 1995). The total number of bacteria on Earth is estimated to be around 4-6 x 1030 (Horner-Devine‚ 2004). It is important to know the extent of bacteria‚ how they live‚ and how they are
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