"Molar mass of a volatile liquid" Essays and Research Papers

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    Molecular Mass Lab

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    I. Purpose The purpose of this lab is to determine the molecular mass of a volatile liquid. II. Procedure • Place a cork with a small hole in it inside of a test tube and find the weight of the two together using a sensitive balance. • Pour 0.5 mL of the unknown volatile liquid into the test tube‚ insert the cork‚ and place the tube into boiling hot water while keeping the cork above water level. As the gas evaporates‚ excess gas will be released throughout the whole in the cork. Keep the test

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    CHG 3111 Unit Operation Gas-Liquid Separation Text Book: Chapter 10 Separation Processes Introduction: Many chemical and biological processes occur as a mixtures of different phases‚ gas‚ liquid and solid. To separate or remove one or more of the components from its original mixture‚ it must be contacted with another phase. The two phase pair can be gas-liquidliquid-liquid or liquid-solid. When different phases are brought into contact‚ a solute or solutes can diffuse from on phase to the

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    Lab Report Purpose The purpose of this lab is to determine the identity of an unknown liquid by measuring its density and its boiling point and try to match it with those solutions given in Table 2 of experiment 2. Procedure Part A In Part A‚ The main purpose was to find the determination of the density of the unknown (j41) and by doing that we had to determine volumes of the unknown liquid (j41) using three different volumetric devices which are graduated cylinder‚ pipette and burette

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    FINAL 1. How much energy is needed to convert 180 grams of ice at -10 ºC to liquid water at 10 ºC? (The molar heat capacity of liquid water is 75.4 J/mol ºC; the molar heat capacity of ice is 40.2 J/mol ºC. The molar heat of vaporization of water is 40.7 kJ/mol. The molar heat of fusion of water is 6.02 kJ/mol.) (A) 71.8 kJ (B) 419 kJ (C) 64.2 kJ (D) 64.6 kJ (E) 11‚620 J 2. Which physical property of a liquid is NOT the result of strong intermolecular forces? (A) high vapor pressure

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    Molar Heat of Combustion Aim: To find the molar heat of combustion for four different alkanols: 1. Methanol 2. Ethanol 3. 1-Propanol 4. 1-Butanol - And to compare the experimental value with the theoretical. Background: The Molar Heat of Combustion of a substance is the heat liberated when 1 mole of the substance undergoes complete combustion with oxygen at standard atmospheric pressure‚ with the final products being carbon dioxide gas and liquid water. (Ref. “Conquering Chemistry‚ Roland

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    Mass Lab

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    Changes and Conservation of Mass Lab Previous to the reaction‚ the magnesium appeared to be a solid‚ white‚ black‚ and grey substance with many small dark particles within the substance. The hydrochloric acid was a clear liquid that looked like water It weighed 42.2 grams in total. During the reaction‚ the two substances produced bubbles‚ creating smoke and became warm with a smell that is irritating to the human nose. After the reaction‚ it appeared to be a clear‚ bubbly liquid with white spots. It weighed

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    DISTILLATION ABSTRACT Distillation‚ one of the most significant method for separating a liquid mixture and its components‚ is a process that relies on differences by the ease of vaporization of the components. The purpose of this process is either the separation of a mixture of volatile components from nonvolatile materials is carried out by a simple distillation in which the material is placed to distill and heated‚ the vapor from the substance is removed and condensed. In this activity

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    S. Larkai (2011 -2012 ) ‚ Principles of separation and reaction laboratory booklet : continuous stirred tank reactors . pp 1 – 4. Faculty of engineering science and the built environment‚ London south bank university. F.A.Holland and F.S.Chapman "Liquid Mixing and Processing in Stirred Tanks"‚ p.109 (Chapman & Hall‚ 1996). J.J Carberry. "Chemical & Catalytic Reaction Engineering"‚ p.92 (McGraw-Hill‚ 1976). J M Coulson & J F Richardson‚ Chemical engineering 2005. Atkins. P and Jones.L (2010) Chemical

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    Conservation of Mass

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    The main objective is to demonstrate the law of Conservation of Mass. Use Vinegar and baking soda to demonstrate the law of Conservation of Mass. Introduction: The law of Conservation of Mass states that mass is neither created nor destroyed during ordinary chemical reactions or physical changes‚ which means that no matter how dramatic of a change that a substance goes through‚ it will not lose mass. It may seem like it lost mass‚ and usually‚ if you weighed the result‚ it will have a different

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    2:05 P.M. Purpose: The purpose of the experiment is to measure the densities of liquids. Specifically‚ the two liquids that were used and measured in the research were deionized water (H2O) and alcohol (C2H5OH). Methods: Density is an intensive quantity that cannot be visually identified. Therefore‚ the most straightforward approach to this problem was to record the measurements of mass and volume. For volume of each liquid‚ the instruments used were a 50ml burette‚ a 50ml graduated cylinder and a 10ml

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