The hours taken for concentration to decrease from 0 to 74 min. to 0.21 m is 91.7 hours.
<h3>What is the rate law of a reaction?</h3>
Rate law depicts the rate of a chemical reaction depend on the concentration of the reactant.
The given reaction is second order reaction
Thus, the hours taken for concentration to decrease from 0 to 74 min. to 0.21 m is 91.7 hours.
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Answer:
The answer is (e) : phosphoglucomutase, UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase, glycogen synthase then amylo-(1,4-1,6)-transglycosylase.
Explanation:
Phosphoglucomutase: Convert glucose-6-phosphate to glucose-1-phosphate.
UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase: Form UDP-glucose from glucose-1-phosphate.
Glycogen synthase: Add the new glucose from UDP-glucose to the growing glycogen chain.
Amylo-(1,4-1,6)-transglycosylase: This is a branching enzyme, it initiates formation of branches evolving from the main chain.
No the sun is the biggest star in the universe.
Im pretty sure it nitric acid
Answer:
1.Metals
These are very hard except sodium
These are malleable and ductile pieces
These are shiny
Electropositive in nature
Non-metals
These are soft except diamond
These are brittle and can break down into pieces
These are non-lustrous except iodine
Electronegative in nature
2. The electrochemical series helps to pick out substances that are good oxidizing agents and those which are good reducing agents.In an electrochemical series the species which are placed above hydrogen are more difficult to be reduced and their standard reduction potential values are negative.
3. Arrhenius theory, theory, introduced in 1887 by the Swedish scientist Svante Arrhenius, that acids are substances that dissociate in water to yield electrically charged atoms or molecules, called ions, one of which is a hydrogen ion (H+), and that bases ionize in water to yield hydroxide ions (OH−).
4. The common application of indicators is the detection of end points of titrations. The colour of an indicator alters when the acidity or the oxidizing strength of the solution, or the concentration of a certain chemical species, reaches a critical range of values.