Because water is used as a catalyst in preparation of other product of ethylene
Ethylene glycol is a non-volatile solute that raises the boiling point of water through the phenomenon of boiling point elevation. When ethylene glycol is dissolved in water, it disrupts the hydrogen bonding between water molecules, making it harder for them to escape into the gas phase. This results in an increase in the boiling point of the solution compared to pure water.
To determine the grams of ethylene needed to react with 0.0126 mole of water, you need to use the balanced chemical equation for the reaction between ethylene and water. Once you have the balanced equation, use the molar ratio between ethylene and water to convert moles of water to moles of ethylene. Then, use the molar mass of ethylene to convert moles of ethylene to grams of ethylene.
Ethylene is a Homogenuous mixture which means it doesn't produce water.
To determine the mass of ethylene oxide needed to react with 19 g of water, we first need to know the balanced chemical equation for the reaction between ethylene oxide (C2H4O) and water (H2O). Typically, ethylene oxide reacts with water to form ethylene glycol. The molar mass of water is approximately 18 g/mol. Since the reaction between ethylene oxide and water is a 1:1 molar ratio, 19 g of water requires 19 g of ethylene oxide to react completely, assuming you have enough ethylene oxide available.
Ethylene Glycol is about 11% more dense than pure water at the same temperature.
Ethylene glycol is antifreeze. The mixture has a lower melting point than pure water.
When ethylene glycol is added to water, the boiling point of the resulting solution increases. Ethylene glycol acts as an antifreeze, raising the boiling point and lowering the freezing point of water.
The oxygen dissolved in water is a measure of dissolved oxygen (DO).
To calculate the mass of ethylene oxide needed to react with 10 g of water, you need to determine the molar ratio of water to ethylene oxide in the balanced chemical equation for the reaction. Once you have the molar ratio, you can use it to calculate the mass of ethylene oxide needed. The molar mass of ethylene oxide is 44.05 g/mol.
Ethylene glycol can be removed from water through processes such as chemical precipitation, adsorption using activated carbon, or advanced oxidation processes. These methods help to physically or chemically separate the ethylene glycol from water, making it safe for disposal or reuse.
Go google and you will find out: the specific gravity (weight in volume) of ethylene glycol is 1.1132 g/cm³, the specific gravity of water is 0.998 g/cm³ (20C). (so ethylene glycol is heavier than water. ) a gallon of water weights 8.33 lbs. 8.33x1.1132/0.998=9.29lbs a gallon of ethylene glycol is 9.29lbs
The water is called solvent, the compounds to be dissolved are solutes