Want this question answered?
That is a question that confuses many. It is because the water is not acidic and therefore does not affect a colour change. You have a known volume of vinegar when starting the experiment.
This is not a question.
It cannot answer this question.
When one does not know the answer to a question there are few options to find refuge with. I suggest you tyr hard and stay humble. THE LYTICS!!!!
Ask your question-
That is a question that confuses many. It is because the water is not acidic and therefore does not affect a colour change. You have a known volume of vinegar when starting the experiment.
H2SO4 releases two hydrogen ions into solution. Therefore its Normality is twice its Molarity. Or to answer the question, the molarity is half the normality.
this is the chemistry answer
give me a sample of chemistry trivias with a question did you know that?
This is not a question.
Answer this question... dnt know
This is a titration question: we want to have the same number of hydroxide ions as hydroxide ions so that they will form water and the pH will be neutral. In chemistry, we count atoms and molecules in moles, and we can calculate how many moles of HBr we have, because concentration in molarity is the number of moles divided by the volume in liters... M = moles/V. We plug in what we got: 1.45M = moles/0.0350L, and solve for moles: 0.0508 moles. Now we know we need 0.0508 moles of NaOH, whose molecular weight is 40g/mole. MW x moles = grams, so (40g/mole)(0.0508 moles) = 2.03 g of NaOH.
The question, as worded, is a little ambiguous. Rather, the question you should be asking is “What is the molarity of a 125 ml aqueous solution containing 10.0g of acetone?” Acetone is roughly 58 grams per mole. Therefore, a 125 mil solution with 10 g of acetone would contain roughly 0.17 moles, and the molarity would be roughly 1.4See the Related Questions for more information about how to calculate the molarity of a solution
It cannot answer this question.
The question is a little vague. There can be many ways to look at chemistry, such as organic chemistry and inorganic chemistry.
Boron
moles per liter mol/L