No, Sodium acetate (NaCH3CO2) contains the positive ion of sodium (Na+), a highly reactive metal. It is the product of acetic acid (CH3CO2H) reacting with sodium hydroxide (NaOH). Sodium acetate is mildly basic.
Ammonium acetate (NH4CH3CO2H) contains the ammonium ion (NH4+) a polyatomic ion composed of the nonmetal nitrogen and hydrogen.
It is the product of ammonia (NH3) reacting with acetic acid.
Ammonium acetate is neutral.
One mole of ammonium acetate is equal to 77.08g (this is the formula weight, FW, of ammonium acetate, which can be found on the side of the bottle). Another way of representing this is 77.08/mol (so, in one mole of ammonium acetate, there are 77.08grams of ammonium acetate).We have to use the FW value to calculate molarity (moles of solute per L of solvent).I am not sure what volume of the 50mM solution is desired, so I will assume that you need 1 L.50mM is equal to 50milli-moles of solute/1 L of solvent, which is the same as 0.05moles/L. This is what the math looks like:77.08g/mol ammonium acetate x 0.05mol/L = 3.854g/LSo, to make a 50mM solution of ammonium acetate in 1L of water, you will need to dissolve 3.854g of ammonium acetate into 1L of water.
NO.
Yes, under the right conditions, sodium acetate is flammable. In fact, a mixture of sodium acetate and potassium nitrate, when intimately mixed, and heated, will explode -- sodium acetate is incompatible with strong oxidizers. The reaction is said to be about "one third as powerful" as that between potassium nitrate, potassium carbonate, and sulfur (in a 3:2:1 ratio -- "yellow powder") under the same conditions of slow heating. Do not try this at home (but, if you must, stick to quantities of a gram or less, and use hearing and eye protection, and keep away from anything flammable).
it is same as ammonium sulphate, (NH4)2SO4
No they are not same. Ammonium hydroxide is a weak base, an aqueous compound in normal state. Ammonium chloride is a an acidic salt and is a white powder in normal state.
No. Ammonium nitrate contains the ammonium ion NH4+, and has the formula NH4NO3, and sodium nitrate has the formula NaNO3.
No
One mole of ammonium acetate is equal to 77.08g (this is the formula weight, FW, of ammonium acetate, which can be found on the side of the bottle). Another way of representing this is 77.08/mol (so, in one mole of ammonium acetate, there are 77.08grams of ammonium acetate).We have to use the FW value to calculate molarity (moles of solute per L of solvent).I am not sure what volume of the 50mM solution is desired, so I will assume that you need 1 L.50mM is equal to 50milli-moles of solute/1 L of solvent, which is the same as 0.05moles/L. This is what the math looks like:77.08g/mol ammonium acetate x 0.05mol/L = 3.854g/LSo, to make a 50mM solution of ammonium acetate in 1L of water, you will need to dissolve 3.854g of ammonium acetate into 1L of water.
The formula for sodium acetate is CH3COONa and the equivalent weight is the same as the molecular weight (molar mass) which is 82.0343 g/mol.
Firstly, when sodium acetate (CH3COONa) solidifies, it does not form "ice". It just becomes solid. This happens when the sodium acetate is heated to about 100oC, then cooled below its freezing point. When a foreign substance with the same crystal structure as sodium acetate is introduced, or a nucleation centre is provided, the sodium acetate will warm up to its freezing point and freeze at its (supposed to be) freezing point.
No. Sodium bicarbonate is NaHCO3, a compound of sodium, hydrogen, carbon, and oxygen. It contains the monatomic sodium ion (Na+) and the polyatomic bicarbonate ion (HCO3-) Ammonium bicarbonate is NH4HCO3, a compound of nitrogen, hydrogen, carbon, and oxygen. It contains the polyatomic ammonium ion (NH4+) and the bicarbonate ion. Due to the acidity of the ammonium ion, ammonium bicarbonate is a less basic than sodium bicarbonate.
Per Skoog and West "Fundamentals of Analytical Chemistry": Sodium acetate in glacial acetic acid acts as a base in the same way the that sodium hydroxide does in water. Sodium acetate (0.1 N) can be standarized using dry potassium hydrogen phthalate (0.5-0.6 g) in glacial acetic acid (60 mL).
Yes.
They are two different ionic compounds with the same anion, chloride.
NO.
acetite: since acetate is used for nomenclature of a species (ion) with more oxygens, and acetite would be the same ion but with one less oxygen for example: sodium acetate (CH3COO- Na+ ) would be the species (ion) with more oxygens although it doesnt exist : sodium acetite (CH3CO- Na+) would be the species (ion) with less oxygens there are some acetite species that due exist (for example Ammonium acetite (CH3CO- NH4+) in generale , acetite refers to the CH3CO- ion in a species
Yes, under the right conditions, sodium acetate is flammable. In fact, a mixture of sodium acetate and potassium nitrate, when intimately mixed, and heated, will explode -- sodium acetate is incompatible with strong oxidizers. The reaction is said to be about "one third as powerful" as that between potassium nitrate, potassium carbonate, and sulfur (in a 3:2:1 ratio -- "yellow powder") under the same conditions of slow heating. Do not try this at home (but, if you must, stick to quantities of a gram or less, and use hearing and eye protection, and keep away from anything flammable).