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Moles, my love.
LOL I FEEL YOUR PAIN!I just spent the past half-hour solving a chemistry paper, and was like "WOW! This is super easy, I'm amazing at chemistry"
Obviously since I'm not amazing at chemistry I started to doubt this was even a paper, took a look down.. realize its paper 2..
Im going to go shoot myself, brb.
LOL I FEEL YOUR PAIN!
I remember opening an A Level past paper in curiosity
And being like...WOAH I CAN SOLVE HALF OF THIS!
Then i realized not only is it CORE but it's AS not A2 >.>
*monumental facepalm*
kk thnxx diss toooo http://www.xtremepapers.com/papers/CIE/Cambridge IGCSE/Chemistry (0620)/0620_w10_qp_31.pdf Q8bMoles, my love.
Ok
So moles of FeSO4 = 9.12 / 152 = 0.06
Fe2O3 moles formed = 0.06 / 2 = 0.03 (2:1 ratio)
16x3 = 48
56x2 = 112
112 + 48 = 160g
Mass of iron(x) oxide formed 0.03x160= 4.8g
Moles of SO3 = 0.03
Volume of sulphur = 0.03*24 = 0.72
Check with ms, since you said asap, i couldn't do it mself
Weirdude is here, he shall take care of it.
Since woowoooo as alredy solved ur question which i just did for u
You smart smart smart kid. Send me the paper please? I wanna try solving it too, I'm too bored in life, reallyLOL I FEEL YOUR PAIN!
I remember opening an A Level past paper in curiosity
And being like...WOAH I CAN SOLVE HALF OF THIS!
Then i realized not only is it CORE but it's AS not A2 >.>
*monumental facepalm*
LOL It was back in December and unlike Taylor Swift I can't just go Back to December. :|You smart smart smart kid. Send me the paper please? I wanna try solving it too, I'm too bored in life, really
Wow man, thanks a heaven of a lot, thats some clear cut explanation.Alright the difference is that structural actually shows the positioning/structure of the atoms
Now the first thing you do when drawing structural formulas is draw the skeleton of carbon atoms.
For example lets say they tell you to draw pent-2-ene
We know three things as soon as they tell us pent-2-ene
a) It has a formula of C5H10
b) The double bond is located after the second carbon atom (hence the 2)
c) It has 5 carbon atoms
SO first thing you do is draw the carbon atoms since they form like the main structure
in this case it is:
C-C=C-C-C
Then you have to remember; carbon atoms can form four bonds, so you have to fill whatever bonds that are not filled!
The first carbon atom only has one bond, so add three hydrogens
The second carbon atom has three bonds, so add one hydrogen
The third carbon atom also has three bonds so add one hydrogen
The fourth carbon atom has 2 bonds so add two hydrogens.
The last carbon atom has 1 bond so add 3 hydrogens.
The end result is this:
View attachment 11052
In general you can apply this anywhere. If they said to draw 1,3 dichloropentane, you know there is 2 chlorines and that they are located on the first and third carbon atom. You have to understand what the numbers mean so you can put things such as hydroxyl groups, halogens and double bonds in the right place.
Fe2O3+3CO=2Fe+3CO2Could someone with a few minutes to spare, post the SYMBOL equation for the reduction of Iron (III) oxide to iron.
Mark scheme just says "Correct equation" .. Need to make sure mine's correct x)
It does! but it doesn't help alot.. all you need to know is how electrons flow from the negative terminal to the iron preventing it from ionising/ rustingBy the way it doesn't.
Fe2O3+3CO=2Fe+3CO2
Iron oxide + carbon mono oxide = iron+ carbon dioxide
If u have the book Chemistry for o level by Christopher Prescott there's whole description in there about various metals certify useful
The product is sodium stearate (i.e. soap) and a complicated alcohol.Question: When fat is hydrolysed by boiling with NaOH what are the products?
umm, is that complicated alcohol glycerol??The product is sodium stearate (i.e. soap) and a complicated alcohol.
open this website: http://www.chemguide.co.uk/orgmenu.html <--- it helpsCan someone please explain hydrolysis.. i'm clueless.. and its use in fats, amino acids.. etc. Please reply! I'm eating my book to get the concept..
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