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    General Chemistry 1 Lab 4 Properties of Gases LabPaq - Properties of gases General Chemistry Introduction Background This report covers Properties of Gases and will allow me the opportunity to explore chemical and physical properties of gases. Collection and use of these gases will also be conducted in this lab. Statement of Problem Collecting gases is a difficult process. Singling out a gas and obtaining only that gas is the challenge we face in this experiment. Purpose

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    Title: Colligative Properties & Osmotic Pressure Background: Important terms to study from this lab assignment are colligative properties‚ membrane permeability and osmotic pressure. First‚ colligative properties are “those of a solution that depend solely on the number of solute particles present‚ not the identity of those solute particles. These properties include: vapor pressure lowering‚ boiling point elevation‚ freezing point depression‚ and osmotic pressure” (p. 17 lab manual). In this experiment

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    Colligative Properties & Osmotic Pressure (Lab – Chapter 13) Introduction: In this lab‚ we are going to observe the difference in freezing point between pure water and salt water. We will also observe the permeability of an egg shell membrane and dialysis tubing‚ acting in place of a human cell‚ when placed into a hypertonic or hypotonic solution. We will observe the changes in size‚ shape‚ and characteristic. Materials and Methods: First we begin this experiment by making an ice bath in

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    Colligative properties in your Coke Have you ever put salt on snow to get rid of it‚ or wondered how your car engine stays warm in cold weather? If you have‚ you’ve probably noticed that the salt quickly melts the snow‚ and you’ve wondered how the engine can stay warm‚ when the metal on the outside of the car is cold. These are just some of the many examples of how colligative properties work in our everyday lives. A colligative property is a property of a solvent that depends on the amount

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    can separate solutions into two categories‚ colligative properties and non-Colligative properties. Colligative properties are different from non-colligative properties because they focus on the dissolved particles‚ not the solute itself. Non-colligative properties depend on the specification of the dissolved particles and the solvent. Colligative properties are properties that depend on the dissolved solutes in the solution. There are four main colligative properties; vapor pressure‚ freezing point

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    Labpaq Exp 6

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    Title: Physical and Chemical Properties Purpose: The purpose of this experiment is to investigate the physical and chemical properties of pure chemical substances by subjecting them to various environmental extremes. Procedure: Filled each test tube with substances provided and subjected them to various conditions. These conditions included‚ heat‚ cold water‚ hot water‚ acid and basic additions and tested on litmus paper. The reactions were observed and documented at each step. Data tables:

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    Labpaq Experiment 1

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    Name: |Date:| Exp 1: Observations of Chemical Changes|Lab Section: | Data Tables: Part 1: |Chemicals|Well No.|Observations of the Reaction| A.|NaHCO3 + HCl| H12|White and bubbled slightly and settled down to smaller smaller bubbles| B.|HCl + BTB| H11|Golden yellow; looked darker under the black paper| C.|NH3 + BTB|H10 |Dark blue| D.|HCl + blue dye| H9|Greenish color| E.|Blue dye + NaOCl| H8|Blue and lighter than NH3+BTB solution color| | with the 1 drop of HCl| H8|Turned blue green

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    Labpaq Case Study

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    Manual Testing Faq’s What is software testing? Software testing is the process used to help identify the correctness‚ completeness‚ security‚ and quality of developed computer software. Testing involves operation of a system or application under controlled conditions and evaluating the results. Controlled conditions should include both normal and abnormal Why Management some times not serious about testing? Solving problems is a high-visibility process; preventing problems is low-visibility

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    polar solvents. Liquids that are attracted by charged objects are composed of polar molecules‚ those that are not attracted by a charged body are non polar. COLLIGATIVE PROPERTIES  properties of solutions that depend upon the ratio of the number of solute particles to the number of solvent molecules in a solution. Colligative properties include: 1. Relative lowering of vapor pressure 2. Elevation of boiling point 3. Depression of freezing point 4. Osmotic pressure Vapor

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    Labpaq Lab 10

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    Lab 2: Infra-Red (IR) - Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) Exercises In Molecular Spectroscopy - Structural Determination Organic Chemistry II CHEM 2425 Manrique October 30‚ 2012 Alex Wolf Introduction For the purposes of this lab‚ the chemical formula will be given‚ and the degrees of unsaturation can be calculate from the formula (2C+2)-(H+Hal-N)/2. The degrees of unsaturation will give clues as to the structure. A double bond‚ as well as a ring will have one degree of unsaturation each

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