Chemistry, 17.09.2021 08:10, beepbeep123
LOTS OF POINTS FOR 1 BIG QUESTION
A sample of baking soda contains 34.48 g of sodium, 1.51 g of hydrogen, 18.02 g of carbon, and 72.00 g of oxygen.
a. What is the total mass of the sample?
Give your answer as a number with decimals, and a SI unit abbreviation after a space. Ex: 12.02 g
b. What is the percent by mass of each element in baking soda?
Sodium ___
Hydrogen ___
Carbon ___
Oxygen ___
Give your response as a percentage with 2 numbers after the decimal. If your answer is longer than that, round to the nearest hundreth. Ex: 12.22%
Answers: 2
Chemistry, 22.06.2019 03:30, acaciacoats
The atomic radius of sodium is 186 pm and of chlorine is 100 pm. the ionic radius for na+ is 102 pm and for clβ is 181 pm. in going from na to cl in period 3, why does the atomic radius decrease while the ionic radius increases? a. the inner electrons in the sodium cation shield its valence electrons more effectively than the inner electrons in the chloride anion do. b. the inner electrons shield the valence electrons more effectively in the chlorine atom than in the chloride anion. c. the outermost electrons in chloride experience a smaller effective nuclear charge than those in the sodium cation do. d. the outermost electrons in chloride experience a larger effective nuclear charge than those in the sodium cation do. e. monatomic ions are bigger than the atoms from which they are formed.
Answers: 2
Chemistry, 22.06.2019 04:30, coryoddoc3685
Turbo the snail moves across the ground at a pace of 12 feet per day. if the garden is 48 feet away, how many days will it take for the snail to get there?
Answers: 2
Chemistry, 22.06.2019 12:00, kayla32213
Under normal conditions, describe how increasing the temperatures effects the solubility of a typical salt
Answers: 1
LOTS OF POINTS FOR 1 BIG QUESTION
A sample of baking soda contains 34.48 g of sodium, 1.51 g of hy...
Social Studies, 13.10.2020 05:01
Arts, 13.10.2020 05:01
Medicine, 13.10.2020 05:01
World Languages, 13.10.2020 05:01
Mathematics, 13.10.2020 05:01
History, 13.10.2020 05:01
Mathematics, 13.10.2020 05:01
Mathematics, 13.10.2020 05:01