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Please mention the reaction.
The equation for the reaction is Fe + Cu+2 -> Fe+2 + Cu, and the reaction is usually called a "single displacement" reaction, because the metal element higher in the electromotive series, iron in this instance, displaces the elemental form of the metal lower in the electromotive series from compounds of the latter metal, the former metal being ionized itself. (Sulfate anions have only a "spectator" role in this reaction.)
what is role of iodine in grignard reaction
chloroform is used to denature protein and settle it in the bottom during rna extraction ,also it helps to form organic and inorganic layers in which rna is dissolved in inorganic layer.
No. Enzymes are ORGANIC catalysts. Enzymes are types of protein that are very similar to inorganic catalysts. Both increase the rate of a reaction (while decreasing activation energy.) Also, neither of them are used up or changed in the reactions that they speed up. A difference between the two is that enzymes are complex proteins but catalysts are simple inorganic molecules. The main difference is the way that the two are affected by temperature. Like other proteins, an increase in temperature causes an enzyme to denature and change shape. The shape of an enzyme is essential for its role in the reaction because it must fit with the specific substrate (the thing that it is helping to break down/speeding up the reaction of). Therefore, the enzyme will not speed up the reaction if it is denatured and no longer is the same shape. An inorganic catalyst, on the other hand, is more effective at a higher temperature and increases the reaction rate even more.
what is the role of control rods in a fission reaction
Please mention the reaction.
The equation for the reaction is Fe + Cu+2 -> Fe+2 + Cu, and the reaction is usually called a "single displacement" reaction, because the metal element higher in the electromotive series, iron in this instance, displaces the elemental form of the metal lower in the electromotive series from compounds of the latter metal, the former metal being ionized itself. (Sulfate anions have only a "spectator" role in this reaction.)
you need iron for your blood and your thyroid.
what is role of iodine in grignard reaction
The phenomenon which best explains the role of catalyst in a reaction is that the catalyst lowers the Energy of Activation :)
what is the role of control rods in a fission reaction
catalyse the reaction.
It catalyses the biochemical process thus it increases the rate of reaction
See for the biological role at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manganese.
The role of iron during the 6th century BC was highly important, in fact, this period was known as the Iron Age. Iron was used in tools - such as those used to dig, and in weaponry like spears and daggers.
chloroform is used to denature protein and settle it in the bottom during rna extraction ,also it helps to form organic and inorganic layers in which rna is dissolved in inorganic layer.