subject
Chemistry, 19.05.2020 15:28 anitaacan

Can you live without body tissue? This is a yes or no question, no explaining required, but you can add it if you want. :D

ansver
Answers: 3

Another question on Chemistry

question
Chemistry, 22.06.2019 00:20
What are the spectator ions in 2h+ + so42- + ca2+ + 2r → caso4 + 2h+ + 21?
Answers: 1
question
Chemistry, 22.06.2019 08:30
Since the gas in your graduated cylinder is a mixture of butane and water vapor, you must determine the partial pressure of the butane, pbutane, alone. to do this, consult a reference and record the partial pressure of the water vapor, pwater, at the temperature you recorded. use the following formula to compute the partial pressure of the butane. pbutane = atmosphere - pwater use the following combined gas law formula and compute the volume that the butane sample will occupy at stp. (hint: convert both temperatures to kelvin.) pbutane x voriginal = pstandard x vfinal troom tstandard use the following ratio and proportion formula to determine the mass of butane needed to occupy a volume of 22.4 l at stp. grams of butane you used “x” grams of butane ml of butane corrected to stp = 22,400 ml compute the theoretical molar mass of butane based on its formula and the atomic masses on the periodic table. compare your experimental results from #3 to the theoretical value of #4, computing a percent error of your findings using this formula: % error = measured value - accepted value x 100 accepted value use the following ratio and proportion formula to determine the mass of butane needed to occupy a volume of 22.4 l at stp. need asap
Answers: 1
question
Chemistry, 22.06.2019 20:00
For the reaction c6h14(g) & longrightarrow; c6h6(g) + 4h2(g), δp(h2)/δt was found to be 2.5 x 10-2 atm/s, where δp(h2) is the change in pressure of hydrogen. determine δp(c6h14)/δt for this reaction at the same time.
Answers: 2
question
Chemistry, 23.06.2019 01:40
Calcium carbonate decomposes at high temperatures to give calcium oxide and carbon dioxide as shown below. caco3(s) cao(s) + co2(g) the kp for this reaction is 1.16 at 800°c. a 5.00 l vessel containing 10.0 g of caco3(s) was evacuated to remove the air, sealed, and then heated to 800°c. ignoring the volume occupied by the solid, what will be the mass of the solid in the vessel once equilibrium is reached?
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
Can you live without body tissue? This is a yes or no question, no explaining required, but you can...
Questions
question
Mathematics, 18.04.2020 01:27
question
Mathematics, 18.04.2020 01:27
question
Social Studies, 18.04.2020 01:27