Yes they do!
A catalyst is something which speeds up a chemical reaction without itself being one of the reactants or products (in other words, without being consumed). Magnesium sulfate is probably a good catalyst for some reactions, not for others. What reaction are you interested in? Best, Prof. Topper ========================================================== A catalyst is a substance that accelerates a chemical reaction without being changed by the reaction. Different substances catalyze different reactions. For example, platinum catalyzes the burning of hydrogen in air, acid catalyzes the decomposition of starch into glucose, and iron catalyzes the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide into water and oxygen. I do not know of any reaction that is catalyzed by magnesium sulfate, so I don't know why it might be a good catalyst. by Robert john at the aveland high school 11ad head of science teacher s.dancey 26th September 2008
They are used to, with an unexpected degree of efficiency, catalyze a specific chemical reaction. This means maximizing harmless and useful chemical-reaction products while minimizing the [inevitable] wasteful and useless byproducts of the chemical reaction.
I would guess that reflux is virtually guaranteed if you had swallowed some of it. Please don't try it at home.
A one degree rise on the Celsius scale is bigger. A one degree rise on the Celsius scale is 1.8 rise on Fahrenheit scale.
No. Fahrenheit to Celsius is figured out by this equation: C=(F-32) x 5/9 AND Celsius to Fahrenheit uses this equation: F=(9/5 x C) + 32 No, 1 degree Fahrenheit = -17.22 degrees Celsius
No. The iron would melt, which is a physical change.
The bomb calorimeter formula used to calculate the heat released during a chemical reaction is: q C x T where: q heat released (in joules) C calorimeter constant (in joules per degree Celsius) T change in temperature (in degrees Celsius)
A catalyst is something which speeds up a chemical reaction without itself being one of the reactants or products (in other words, without being consumed). Magnesium sulfate is probably a good catalyst for some reactions, not for others. What reaction are you interested in? Best, Prof. Topper ========================================================== A catalyst is a substance that accelerates a chemical reaction without being changed by the reaction. Different substances catalyze different reactions. For example, platinum catalyzes the burning of hydrogen in air, acid catalyzes the decomposition of starch into glucose, and iron catalyzes the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide into water and oxygen. I do not know of any reaction that is catalyzed by magnesium sulfate, so I don't know why it might be a good catalyst. by Robert john at the aveland high school 11ad head of science teacher s.dancey 26th September 2008
The degree of reduction for a chemical reaction is the number of electrons gained by the atoms of a substance. It indicates how much the atoms have been reduced in terms of their oxidation state.
There is no difference between "degree Celsius" and "-degree Celsius." Both terminologies refer to the unit of temperature measurement known as Celsius, which is commonly used in scientific and everyday applications. The hyphen in "-degree Celsius" is not necessary and may be a typographical error.
35 degree Celsius = 95 degree Fahrenheit 35 degree Celsius = 554.67 degree Rankine 35 degree Celsius = 28 degree Reaumur 35 degree Celsius = 308.15 kelvin
no difference
No difference.
No difference.
They are used to, with an unexpected degree of efficiency, catalyze a specific chemical reaction. This means maximizing harmless and useful chemical-reaction products while minimizing the [inevitable] wasteful and useless byproducts of the chemical reaction.
There is no difference between degree Celsius and Celsius degree. Both terms are used interchangeably to refer to a unit of temperature measurement on the Celsius scale.
35.6 degree Celsius = 96.08 degree Fahrenheit