Look for the molecular structures of water, acetone, 1-propanol, 1-butanol and 1- pentanol and predict the relative intermolecular forces between a compound and another, that is, which will have the greatest intermolecular forces and which will be the weakest
Look for the molecular structures of water, acetone, 1-propanol, 1-butanol and 1- pentanol and predict the...
Can you order these based on highest to lowest intermolecular forces? Ethanol 1-Propanol Methanol 1-Butanol Pentane Hexane Acetone
Which alcohol will oxidize to an aldehyde? Select all that apply: 1-propanol 02-butanol 2-propanol 1-pentanol E
question number 2&3 please
2. Identify the strongest type of intermolecular forces in acetone, ethanol, water and hexane (Structures listed on page 15.) 3. Predict the relative strength of the intermolecular forces in the four liquids above.
which liquid has the strongest intermolecular forces? explain please methanol,ethanol,1-propanol,1-butane,n-hexane,n-heptane,n-octane,acetone,2-propanol
Predict and EXPLAIN which compound you would think would have a) the highest rate of evaporation b) the greatest temperature change upon evaporation. These are the compounds: n-pentane n-butanol ethylene glycol acetone tertiary-butanol Hydrogen oxide n-hexane n-propanol methanol ethanol
A mixture contains acetone, methanol, 1-propanol, and water. The boiling points of the components are as follows: acetone (CH3COCH3), 50.5∘C methanol (CH3OH), 66∘C 1-propanol (CH3CH2CH2OH), 97∘C water H2O, 100∘C Which pair of the components would you expect to be the hardest to separate by distillation? Select the correct answer below: a. acetone and methanol b. acetone and 1-propanol c. acetone and water d. methanol and 1-propanol e. methanol and water f. 1-propanol and water
2. Identify the strongest type of intermolecular forces in acetone, ethanol, water and hexane. (Structures listed on page 15.) Experiment 2 Intermolecular Forces There are three general types of intermolecular forces. All substances exhibit London Dispersion Forces (LDF), and they are generally the weakest of the three types. These London forces are due to the attractions between small, temporary dipoles that arise from the constant, random movement of the electrons in a substance. As molar mass increases, the size of...
Based on the previous question and not have to predict the exact value; simply rank the liquids from greatest to least Al (Greatest AT = 1 and Lowest AT = 4) Substance Predicted AT Explanation (Why?) 1-butanol methanol n-pentane n-hexane Based on the previous question and table, Predict AT for the following liquids. You do not have to predict the exact value; simply rank the liquids from greatest to least AT (Greatest AT = 1 and Lowest AT = 4)...
Please help with equations.
Report Sheet Part A-Solubility of Alcohols in Water Compound Ethanol Observations 1-Butanol هاواي ام عصاو- سعاالباحث مع 2-Butanol 2-Methyl-2-propanol more than 5 carbons Soluble - Clear soluble - Clear 1-Pentanol 1-Octanol الدوله - عاالمكحة Unknown insoluble two lagers "Summarize your observations on the solubility of alcohols. Part B-Reactivity of Alcohols Toward Sodium Compound Observations Methanol Ethanol 1-Propanol 2-Propanol 2-Methyl-2-propanol Unknown *Rank the reactivity of alcohols towards sodium. Chem 130L Equation Observations Part C- Lucas Test Compound...
Liquid Molar Mass (g/mol) Polarity (P, NP) Strongest type of Intermolecular Force Molecular structure Methanol Polar hydrogen bonds Ethanol Ipolar 1-Propanol polar 11-Butanol Ipolar n-Hexane Inon- polar n-Heptane Inon- I polar n-octane non- polar Acetone Polar 2- propanol polar 1. Which liquid tested has the strongest intermolecular forces? Justify your answer. (pt) Table 2 (15pes total) Minimum AT Initial Liquid temperature (°C) Methanol 17.8°C Ethanol 20+C |- Propanol 19.5°C 1-Butanol 19.8°C In-Hexane 18.4°C n-Heptane 20.7°C In-octane 19.4°C | Acetone 20.1.0...