- Messages
- 9
- Reaction score
- 2
- Points
- 3
Mine was great! It was really short and quite simple
oh really ? i took a lot of time to draw the graphs !!!
We are currently struggling to cover the operational costs of Xtremepapers, as a result we might have to shut this website down. Please donate if we have helped you and help make a difference in other students' lives!
Click here to Donate Now (View Announcement)
Mine was great! It was really short and quite simple
Electronic configuration of Cu is 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 3d10 4s1... its d orbital is completely full so how is it a transition element??
thanks..could you please explain the spliiting of degenerate orbitals.. as in why it happens.. And why d x2-y2 and dz2 move to a higher energy level..It's the transition metal ION which needs to have a partially filled d-orbital, not the element itself. Remembering the following definition will help:
"A transition element is an element that forms at least one ion with a partially filled d-orbital." [Cu forms Cu+(aq) and Cu2+(aq) ions, both having partially filled d-orbitals]
thanks..could you please explain the spliiting of degenerate orbitals.. as in why it happens.. And why d x2-y2 and dz2 move to a higher energy level..
http://www.xtremepapers.com/papers/CIE/Cambridge International A and AS Level/Chemistry (9701)/9701_s07_qp_4.pdf
Q4 c.i..why is the ans for solution D blue..why not violet?
and the reason why lines in an NMR spectrum can be split into doublets, triplets, quartets and
multiplets ??
i dont get part i..(i) The absorption peak (D) is ~ 650 nm which corresponds to the color (emitted) having a wavelength of 450 nm, i.e. blue. If the peak were to be shifted towards 700 nm, you would see a much darker (violet) solution.
(ii) Apply E = h.f =h. (c/λ) [Since E is inversely proportional to λ, the shorter wavelength (450 nm) of C will have a larger ΔE]
pls can u tell what is the disappearance of NMR peaks on the addition of D2O means in the NMR spectrum??
i dont get part i..
thnx mateOn adding heavy water (D2O), peaks (Eg. -OH) disappear because the deuterium nucleus has a nuclear spin of +/- 1 rather than +/- .5, so it does not absorb the same frequency range as H1.
See how the -OH is removed from ethanol after adding heavy water:
CH3CH2OH + D2O <---> CH3CH2OD + HOD
hmm..so if talk in terms of the pastpaer question.. C has an absorption peak at 450nm aprrox. frm the table we get it as blue. but the answer is red!Try to understand that the wavelength of the light absorbed is not equal to the wavelength of the light emitted. [i.e. if yellow light (600 nm) is absorbed, the same yellow light is not emitted! A light with the corresponding wavelength in the ABSORPTION SPECTRUM ~ blue is emitted]
Here, this will clear your dubiety: read the third paragraph;
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~chemlab/chem6/dyes/full_text/chemistry.html
hmm..so if talk in terms of the pastpaer question.. C has an absorption peak at 450nm aprrox. frm the table we get it as blue. but the answer is red!
Electronic configuration of Cu is 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 3d10 4s1... its d orbital is completely full so how is it a transition element??
http://www.xtremepapers.com/papers/CIE/Cambridge International A and AS Level/Chemistry (9701)/9701_s07_qp_4.pdf
Q4 c.i..why is the ans for solution D blue..why not violet?
OH. so they want us to memorize the spectrum..that sounds weird. but anyway thanksExactly!
C's absorption peak is ~ 450 - 500 nm which corresponds to RED*.
*You need to infer this from the emission spectrum, not from the table. It's best if you memorize the colors and their corresponding frequencies.
For almost 10 years, the site XtremePapers has been trying very hard to serve its users.
However, we are now struggling to cover its operational costs due to unforeseen circumstances. If we helped you in any way, kindly contribute and be the part of this effort. No act of kindness, no matter how small, is ever wasted.
Click here to Donate Now