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yes its correct
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yes its correct
they kind of help you, you always use a solvent that the substance to do chromatography to dissolves in. because its the main concept.no , a paper had a question saying suggest a suitable solvent for water-soluble fruit coloring's... i put ethanol,, but the answer is water
yeah i realized that..they kind of help you, you always use a solvent that the substance to do chromatography to dissolves in. because its the main concept.
ahano , a paper had a question saying suggest a suitable solvent for water-soluble fruit coloring's... i put ethanol,, but the answer is water
its quite obviousno , a paper had a question saying suggest a suitable solvent for water-soluble fruit coloring's... i put ethanol,, but the answer is water
same!!!!i dont get hw do u find the equations in electrolysis??
View attachment 10406 is this the right answer???????
so as to avoid liquid suck back, or so that the glass wont break.
exactly!!!!same!!!!
i dnt get how to write ionic equations! :,(
well, im guessing its related to the positions if the electrde (anode(oxidation) ) etc...exactly!!!!
if you know the products in each electrode then the equations become easy. first here are some basics you need to know. 1- the ions that are less reactive deposite in the electrodes e.g if we have sodium ions and Cu ions , then the Cu will deposite because its less reactive, reactive ones tend to stay as ion form.i dont get hw do u find the equations in electrolysis??
yes its correctno i mean the positions of aluminium oxide and ethanol
i got it , u need 2 know the cations nd anions nd if the ion is +ve it goes 2 the cathode nd if its -ve it goes 2 the anodewell, im guessing its related to the positions if the electrde (anode(oxidation) ) etc...
yup.... thxis that clear ??
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