How much of each of the following substances would you add to water to prepare 1.10 L of a 0.20 M solution?
(a) H2SO4 from "concentrated" (18 M) sulfuric acid
(b) HCl from "concentrated" (12 M) reagent
(c) NiCl2 from the salt NiCl2·6 H2O
(d) HNO3 from "concentrated" (16 M) reagent
(e) sodium carbonate from the pure solid
How much of each of the following substances would you add to water to prepare 1.10...
meed help with part c and e
[References) How would you prepare 1.10 L of a 0.50-M solution of each of the following? . a. H2SO4 from "concentrated" (18 M) sulfuric acid Dilute 30.55 mL of concentrated H2SO4 to a total volume of 110 L with wa b. HCl from "concentrated" (12 M) reagent O EO 9 21 Dilute 45.83 mL of concentrated HCl to a total volume c. NiCl, from the salt NiCl2 - 6H2O Dissolve g NiCl, 6H2O...
I need help finding the Dilute and Dissolve.
- (References) How would you prepare 1.10 L of a 0.50-M solution of each of the following? a. H, SO, from "concentrated" (18 M) sulfuric acid Dilute mL of concentrated H2SO4 to a total volume of 1.10 L with water a b. HCl from "concentrated" (12 M) reagent Dilute mL of concentrated HCI to a total volume of 110L with water c. NiCl, from the salt NiCl, 61,0 Dissolve g NiCl ....
This question has multiple parts. Work all the parts to get the most points. How would you prepare 1.10 L of a 0.70-M solution of each of the following? a H, SO Dilute from "concentrated" (18 M ) sulfuric acid m L of concentrated H2SO4 pt 1 pt b HCl from concentrated" (12 M) reagent 1 pt Dilute mL of concentrated HCI NICI, from the salt NiCl 64,0 Dissolve g of NiCl . 61,0 in water, and add water until...
Part A Five different substances are given to you to be dissolved in water. Which substances are most likely to undergo dissolution in water? Check all that apply. sodium fluoride, NaF propanol, CH3CH2CH2OH hexane, C6H14 potassium iodide, KI heptane, C7H16 Part B Gastric acid pH can range from 1 to 4, and most of the acid is HCl. For a sample of stomach acid that is 8.22×10−3 M in HCl, how many moles of HCl are in 19.7 mL of...
How many moles of solid sodium acetate (CH3COONa) would you need to add to reduce the percent ionization of a 0.20 M solution of acetic acid (CH3COOH) to 0.0060%? The volume of the acid solution is 2.00 L and you can ignore the slight change in volume that comes from adding the solid sodium acetate. (Hint: remember that you can make the assumption that the change in molarity is small)
How would you perform the following multistep synthesis ? Benzene to 1,3,5-trimethyl benzene Step 1 HBr, Step 2 Sodium ethoxide, Ethanol, Step 3 Thionyl Chloride, Step 4 KOH Step 1 NaOH, Step 2 Water, Sulfuric acid, Mercury sulfate Step 1 HNO3/H2SO4, Step 2 Sn, HCl followed by NaOH, Step 3 3moles CH3Br, AICI3 b) Step 4 NaNO2, H2SO4, Step 5 Ethanol Step 1 3moles CH3B, AIC13, Step2 HNO3/H2SO4, Step 3 NVH2, Step 4 NaNO2, H2SO4, Step 5 Ethanol, 3Moles CH3Br,...
2.95g of sodium bicarb how much water to add to make 1.0 M solution 4.25g of Sodium carbonate how much water to add to make 1.0 M solution. Please show all the work very clearly even little steps to help me understand. "You need to create a 1.0 M solution of sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3 – baking soda). Your lab kit has a bag of sodium bicarbonate to use for this portion of the experiment. Write “sodium bicarbonate” on a sample...
Answer the following solution concentration questions How much water must be added to 40.0 g of CaCl, to produce a solution thatis 35.0% CaCl2? a. b. You can purchase hydrochloric acid in a concentrated form that is 36.0 % HCl by mass and that has a density of 1.20 g/mL. Describe exactly how to prepare 1.15 L of 0.500 M HCI from the concentrated solution
PART ONE: Sodium hydrogen carbonate NaHCO3, also known as sodium bicarbonate or "baking soda", can be used to relieve acid indigestion. Acid indigestion is the burning sensation you get in your stomach when it contains too much hydrochloric acid HCl, which the stomach secretes to help digest food. Drinking a glass of water containing dissolved NaHCO3 neutralizes excess HCl through this reaction: HCl(aq)+NaHCO3(aq)→NaCl(aq)+H2O(l)+CO2(g) The CO2 gas produced is what makes you burp after drinking the solution. Suppose the fluid in...
PART ONE: Sodium hydrogen carbonate NaHCO3, also known as sodium bicarbonate or "baking soda", can be used to relieve acid indigestion. Acid indigestion is the burning sensation you get in your stomach when it contains too much hydrochloric acid HCl, which the stomach secretes to help digest food. Drinking a glass of water containing dissolved NaHCO3 neutralizes excess HCl through this reaction: HCl(aq)+NaHCO3(aq)→NaCl(aq)+H2O(l)+CO2(g) The CO2 gas produced is what makes you burp after drinking the solution. Suppose the fluid in...