Asked by memo
1- The equipment needed to carry out a titration is:
A)
hot plate, pipet, and filter paper
B)
heat source, test tube, and filter paper
C)
heat source, pipet, and burette
D)
erlenmeyer flask, pipet, and burette
2- A student correctly predicted that 10.0 g of a precipitate would form when two aqueous solutions were reacted. When the solid was filtered and weighed, only 8.0 g of solid had been collected. A cause for the discrepancy is that
Question 12 options:
A)
the student forgot to subtract the mass of the filter paper
B)
some precipitate went through the filter paper or funnel
C)
the sample was still wet when weighed
D)
the student did the reaction at STP instead of SATP
A)
hot plate, pipet, and filter paper
B)
heat source, test tube, and filter paper
C)
heat source, pipet, and burette
D)
erlenmeyer flask, pipet, and burette
2- A student correctly predicted that 10.0 g of a precipitate would form when two aqueous solutions were reacted. When the solid was filtered and weighed, only 8.0 g of solid had been collected. A cause for the discrepancy is that
Question 12 options:
A)
the student forgot to subtract the mass of the filter paper
B)
some precipitate went through the filter paper or funnel
C)
the sample was still wet when weighed
D)
the student did the reaction at STP instead of SATP
Answers
Answered by
DrBob222
1 is D.
I don't know what you did for #2.
I don't know what you did for #2.
Answered by
memo
Thanks Dr. Bob
for #D this is the question given, there is no lab given!
for #D this is the question given, there is no lab given!
Answered by
DrBob222
Some educated guesses.
It can't be C as extra H2O when weighed would make the apparent weight more than 8.0 g.
B is a good possibility.
I doubt D since this was not a gas experiment.
A. It isn't clear how the mass of the filter paper figures into the mass of the ppt and since B looks like a good answer I would go with B.
It can't be C as extra H2O when weighed would make the apparent weight more than 8.0 g.
B is a good possibility.
I doubt D since this was not a gas experiment.
A. It isn't clear how the mass of the filter paper figures into the mass of the ppt and since B looks like a good answer I would go with B.
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.