Answer:
Ionic bonds
Explanation:
It rymes. haha i dont even know how to spell it! ;)
Answer:
0.10M HCN < 0.10 M HClO < 0.10 M HNO₂ < 0.10 M HNO₃
Explanation:
We are comparing acids with the same concentration. So what we have to do first is to determine if we have any strong acid and for the rest ( weak acids ) compare them by their Ka´s ( look for them in reference tables ) since we know the larger the Ka, the more Hydronium concentration will be in these solutions at the same concentration.
HNO₃ is a strong acid and will have the largest hydronium concentration.
HCN Ka = 6.2 x 10⁻¹⁰
HNO₂ Ka = 4.0 x 10⁻⁴
HClO Ka = 3.0 x 10⁻⁸
The ranking from smallest to largest hydronium concentration will then be:
0.10M HCN < 0.10 M HClO < 0.10 M HNO₂ < 0.10 M HNO₃
694,563,239 rounded to the nearest thousand is 694,563.
It's because the first digit from the right is for ones, second for tens, third for hundreds and fourth for thousands and that's the one that we should take a closer look at. You can round it either to 3 or 4, depends on the digit of hundreds. In this case 3239 is clearly closer to 3000 than 4000, that's why we round it to 694,563, not 694,564.
Answer:
0,07448M of phosphate buffer
Explanation:
sodium monohydrogenphosphate (Na₂HP) and sodium dihydrogenphosphate (NaH₂P) react with HCl thus:
Na₂HP + HCl ⇄ NaH₂P + NaCl <em>(1)</em>
NaH₂P + HCl ⇄ H₃P + NaCl <em>(2)</em>
The first endpoint is due the reaction (1), When all phosphate buffer is as NaH₂P form, begins the second reaction. That means that the second endpoint is due the total concentration of phosphate that is obtained thus:
0,01862L of HCl×= 1,862x10⁻³moles of HCl ≡ moles of phosphate buffer.
The concentration is:
= <em>0,07448M of phosphate buffer</em>
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I hope it helps!
one mole of sulfuric acid will contain 2 moles of hydrogen atoms. The molar mass of sulfuric acid is 98.0795 g/mol. This means that every mole of sulfuric acid has a mass of 98.0795 g. Since you're dealing with one mole of sulfuric acid, it follows that you will also be dealing with two moles of hydrogen.