Chemistry
Chemistry, 20.10.2020 22:01, aavil5659

Karina strikes a match to light a candle

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Chemistry, 22.06.2019 02:30, brittanysanders
When you perform this reaction, what could remain at the end of the reaction? check all that apply. excess reactant aqueous copper chloride excess reactant aluminum oxygen product solid copper carbon dioxide product aqueous aluminum chloride water
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Chemistry, 22.06.2019 06:20, stephliu721
What is a property of a double replacement reaction
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Chemistry, 22.06.2019 06:30, angelrenee2000
Ineed someone to see if my answers are correct! if any are wrong let me know what the correct answers would be and how to get that answer! 1. how many moles of sodium chloride are in 28 grams od nacl? a. 265 mole naclb. 856 mole naclc. 479 mole of nacld. 1.2 mole nacl < my choice2. 734 grams of lithium sulfate (li2so4) are dissolved to make 2500 ml of solution what is rhe molaratiy? a. 2.67 mb. 4.56 mc. 3.89 m < my choiced. 1.78 m3. how many grams of cacl2 would be dissolved in 3.0 l of a 0.50 m solution of cacl2? a. 250 g cacl2 b. 166.5 g cacl2c. 113.65 g cacl2d. 98 g cacl2 < my choice4. suppose you had 58.44 g of nacl and you dissolved it in exactly 2.00 liters. the molarity if the solution would be 0.5 mtrue < my choicefalse 5. i would need 22g of naoh to make a 3.0 m solution using 250 ml of solvent. true < my choicefalse6. identify the solute: you have a .0195 m solution made from using 6.5 g of solute and 3 l of solvent. identify the solute by solving for molar weight. a. the solute is nacl because the molar weight is 58.43 g/mol < my choiceb. the solute is h2so4 because the molar weight is 98.06 g/molc. the solute is cacl2 because the molar weight is 111.11 g/mol
Answers: 1
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Chemistry, 22.06.2019 20:30, Schoolworkspace453
Consider the following unbalanced equation for the combustion of hexane: αc6h14(g)+βo2(g)→γco2(g)+δh2o(g) part a balance the equation. give your answer as an ordered set of numbers α, β, γ, use the least possible integers for the coefficients. α α , β, γ, δ = nothing request answer part b determine how many moles of o2 are required to react completely with 5.6 moles c6h14. express your answer using two significant figures. n n = nothing mol request answer provide feedback
Answers: 2
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