Determination of Concentration of Potassium Hydroxide Weigh boat 0.87g Weigh boat + Sulphamic acid 3.29g Weigh boat after transfer 0.87g Sulphamic acid 2.42g | Trial | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th | Start | 3.00 | 3.20 | 5.20 | 18.55 | 1.90 | 14.65 | Finish | 17.35 | 18.10 | 18.10 | 31.50 | 14.65 | 27.65 | Titre | 14.35 | 14.90 | 14.90 | 12.95 | 12.75 | 13.00 | Average titre = 12.90cm3 NH2SO3H + KOH – NH2SO3K + H20 Sulphamic Acid Standard Solution Moles from mass
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Submitted: October 00‚ 2014 Experiment No. 7 Unknown: 2 Compound: Table 6.1Physical Examination State Liquid Odor Smells like adhesive paste Color Pink-orange Flammability Flammable Table 6.2Physical Constant: Melting Point Parameter Experimental Theoretical (From Literature) Melting Point (oC) Trial 1 Trial 2 Average 88 88 86 86 Table 6.3Solubility Test Sample Solubility Solubility Class Water Ether 5% NaOH5% Na2CO3 5% HClConc. H2SO4 Unknown Sample + + + + + + Basic Compound Table 6
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Concentration of a Solution: Beer’s Law The objective of this experiment is to determine the concentration of an unknown copper sulfate solution. You will be using the Colorimeter. In this device‚ red light from the LED light source will pass through the solution and strike a photocell. A higher concentration of the coloured solution absorbs more light (and transmits less) than a solution of lower concentration. The Colorimeter monitors the light received by the photocell as either an absorbance
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SOLUTION AND CONCENTRATION A solution is a homogeneous mixture‚ made up of a solute dissolved in a solvent. Ex. In a water (aqueous) solution of sodium chloride‚ the sodium chloride is the solute and the water is the solvent. Solute – the component that is dissolved or is the least abundant component in the solution. Ex. Sugar‚ salt Solvent – the dissolving agent or the most abundant component in the solution. Ex. Water Common Types of Solution State of Solution State of Solute
Free Concentration
Spectrophotometric Determination of the Equilibrium Constant of a Reaction DEPARTMENT OF MATERIALS‚ METALLURGICAL AND MINING ENGINEERING‚ COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING July 26‚ 2012 ------------------------------------------------- ABSTRACT ------------------------------------------------- Before proceeding to test the next solution‚ we must first clean the cuvette‚ using similar steps earlier. First‚ we rinse with water‚ then with the solution‚ and then we fill it up and test
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Chemistry 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
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Based on calculations #7 made above for solving the molecular weight‚ it was identified that the unknown liquid was Butanoic acid: 88.1g/mol. Since the calculated value was 83.5 g/mol‚ it was assumed that Butanoic acid was the only solute out of all that were listed that shared a similar value. In reference to the results and data used for calculation the molecular weight (MW) for the unknown was successfully proven to match the accepted value of 88.1 g/mol. More specifically‚ this was evident due
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QUANTITATIVE DETERMINATION OF COPPER (II) CONCENTRATION BY SPECTROPHOTOMETRY D.DEL PRADO1‚ J. BELANO1‚ M.MAHUSAY2‚and M.FRANCISCO2 1 DEPARTMENT OF FOOD SCIENCE AND NUTRITION‚ COLLEGE OF HOME ECONOMICS 2INSTITUTE OF CHEMISTRY‚ COLLEGE OF SCIENCE UNIVERSITY OF THE PHLIPPINES‚ DILIMAN‚ QUEZON CITY 1101‚ PHILIPPINES DATE SUBMITTED: 12 MARCH 2013 DATE PERFORMED: 7 MARCH 2013 ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ABSTRACT -------------------------------------------------
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Investigation to see How the Concentration of Hydrochloric acid affects the Rate of Reaction with Calcium Carbonate Rate This Paper: 1 2 3 4 5 Length: 3036 words (8.7 double-spaced pages) Rating: Red (FREE) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - An Investigation to see How the Concentration of Hydrochloric acid affects the Rate of Reaction with Calcium Carbonate I am going to investigate how concentration of hydrochloric acid affects the rate
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Purpose: I will identify an unknown liquid by obtaining an average density & boiling point for my liquid and comparing them with the known densities & boiling points of liquids in the CRC handbook of Chemistry & Physics. I will perform these experiments using three different measuring tools (graduated cylinder‚ burette & pipette) to evaluate the precision of each one. Results: Density 1‚ 2 & 3 calculated by using graduated cylinder to obtain volume. Density 4‚ 5 & 6 calculated by using volumetric
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