Want this question answered?
About 36 N, 36 mole H+/L. (It contains 18 mole/L H2SO4)
8N
The normality of 98 g of sulfuric acid in 500 mL of solution is 4 N
use the equation: NaVa=NbVb Where N is the normality and V is the volume. NOTE a is the original and b is what you're making. You would sove for Va
Concentrated sulfuric acid has sulfuric acid molecules where dilute sulfuric acid has sulfate ions and hydrogen ions. Water in the diluted solution acts as the ionization medium.
About 36 N, 36 mole H+/L. (It contains 18 mole/L H2SO4)
Yes, concentrated sulfuric acid is a liquid.
8N
The normality of 98 g of sulfuric acid in 500 mL of solution is 4 N
use the equation: NaVa=NbVb Where N is the normality and V is the volume. NOTE a is the original and b is what you're making. You would sove for Va
Concentrated sulfuric acid has sulfuric acid molecules where dilute sulfuric acid has sulfate ions and hydrogen ions. Water in the diluted solution acts as the ionization medium.
is concentrated sulphuric acid toxic
In concentrated sulfuric acid usually about 1%
No, although "concentrated" sulfuric acid (essentially pure H2SO4) is less dissociated than dilute sulfuric acid, simply because there's no water around for it to dissociate in.
Dissolve excess Sulfur trioxide in concentrated Sulfuric acid
You need to remove the water by evaporation.
The normality of a solution is the gram equivalent weight of a solute per liter of solution. For example, 1 M sulfuric acid (H2SO4) is 2 N for acid-base reactions because each mole of sulfuric acid provides 2 moles H+ ions.