Ocean County College Department of Chemistry Stoichiometry of a Precipitation Reaction Submitted by Hendy Zelishovsky Date Submitted: 4/26/2012 Date Performed: 4/25/2012 Lab Section: Chem-180-DL1 Course Instructor: Dr. Cynthia Spencer Purpose
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the amount of product produced in a precipitation reaction using stoichiometry by accurately measuring the reactants and products of the reaction. I will also determine the actual yield vs. the theoretical yield by calculating the percent yield. Materials: 1 Distilled water 1 Paper towels 1 Small paper cup 1 Coffee cup or mug 1 Beaker‚ 100 mL‚ glass 1 Funnel 1 Cylinder‚ 25 mL 1 Goggles-Safety 1 Scale-Digital-500g 1 Weighing boat‚ Plastic 1 CaCl2·2 H2O-Calcium Chloride‚ Dihydrate - 2.5 g 1 Filter
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Determining the Stoichiometry of Chemical Reactions Mrs. Farrales Nikita Pandya October 23‚ 2012 December 3‚ 2012 INRODUCTION In the method of continuous variations the total number of moles of reactants is kept constant for the series of measurements. Each measurement is made with a different mole ratio of reactants. A mole ratio
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Lab 3: Stoichiometry of a Precipitation Reaction NOTE: All photos should be taken so the reading on the electronic balance is readable. Photo 1: filter paper being weighed on electronic balance‚ along with your student information card. Photo 2: beaker with precipitate slurry in it (after step 5) ‚ along with your student information card Photo 3: dried precipitate/filter paper being weighed on electronic balance‚ along with your student information card Additional Question Guidelines:
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will create a reaction of sodium carbonate and calcium chloride dihydrate to produce a precipitate of calcium carbonate. This formula is: Na2CO3(aq) + CaCl2. 2H2O(aq) à CaCO3(s) + 2NaCl(aq) + 2H2O 1. Put on your goggles. 2. Weigh out 1.0 g of CaCl2·2H2O and put it into the 100-mL beaker. Add 25 mL of distilled water and stir to form the calcium chloride solution. Use only distilled water since tap water may have impurities that interfere with the experiment. 3. Use stoichiometry to determine
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4‚5‚ and 6 Study Guide Chapter 4 - Chemical Quantities and Aqueous Reactions * Reactions Stoichiometry * mole-mole conversions * mass-mass conversions * Limiting Reactants * What is the Limiting Reagent * How do we find the L.R. * Solutions * Molarity - definition and how to calculate * Dilutions Calculations (M1V1 = M2V2‚ careful with M2) * Solution Stoichiometry * volume-volume conversions * volume-mass conversions
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AP Chemistry Unit 2 Notes Stoichiometry You should understand all that is presented in chapter 3 of your text (Zumdahl: Chemistry‚ 8th edition). Some of the highlights are presented below. Atomic Masses (Section 3.1) Nearly every element is made up of atoms of more than one isotope for that element. A few‚ like Be‚ only have one isotope. Others can have a large number of isotopes. Tin (Sn) has ten isotopes. (No pun intended.) Isotopic abundance is determined by the use of
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Practicum 2: Stoichiometry of Chemical Reactions Written by: Ade Istianto (2014990003) Aprizky Bagus Heldinto (2014990002) Deas Pratama (2014360004) Paskah Andreas Deo Gratias (2014370005) Sampoerna University ABSTRACT This experiment is endure to determine and study about the stoichiometry of chemical reactions in certain chemicals. The experiments were to make sure student are able to use and learn the Job’s method-the method of continuous variation-for determine the reaction stoichiometry. In the
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The progress of the reaction was monitored in my case using two TLC plate. It first started off with the spotting of Standard benzoin and benzil which were provided in the lab and followed by the addition of the reaction mixture at once it starts changing colour/boiling‚ then at 10 and 20 mins into the reflux. Once all the necessary steps were spotted‚ the TLC plate was placed in in a beaker containing CH₂Cl₂(methylene chloride)‚ which was used as the developing solvent in this experiment. To check
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Harvesting CaCo2 in a precipitate reaction results in less grams desired amount (2 grams) Abstract: The objective of this experiment was to synthesize 2.00 grams of CaCo2 for a hypothetical manufacturing company using the two least detrimental (in regards to health and the environment) and least expensive chemicals possible through a precipitate reaction. A precipitate reaction happens when cations and anions of certain aqueous solutions react and combine forming a precipitate‚ which is an insoluble
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