C125 NEED TO KNOW AND STUDY!!!
Solubility Rules: Sulfates SO2-4
All sulfates are soluble except Ba2+, Pb2+, Ca2+ & Sr2+
Four general types of reactions:
Combination, decomposition, single-displacement, double-displacement (metathesis)
Why use DI water instead of tap water?
DI water is stabilized to room temperature (environment) compared to DI tap
Ideally, an equivalent amount of NaOH will be used to neutralize the acetic acid CH3COOH and this is called
the equivalent point
Random errors affect
the precision or scatter of results because of random fluctuations in the instruments or procedures
Percent Concentration includes
volume percent concentration and mass percent comcentration
If acids or bases ionize incompletely, they are called
weak acids or weak bases
What does each variable represent in y=mx+b?
y = outcome (y value) m = slope x = input (x-value) b = y-intercept
What is used to characterize accuracy?
% error
If plotting Volume on the y-axis, what do you need to plot on the x-axis?
1/P since inverse relationship PV and slope would be V/P
How many Pa in 1 atm?
101,325 Pa
How many psi in 1 atm?
14.7 psi
Mass % concentration of 5g of acetic acid in every 100g of solution?
5% acidity
How many Torr in one atm?
760
How many mm Hg in 1 atm?
760 mm Hg
Partial pressure of CO2 if the Patm is 98.5 kPa and vapor pressure 3.169 kPa?
95.4 kPa or 0.9413 atm Patm- P water vapor
Example of weak acid
Acetic acid CH3COOH
Solubility rules: Acetates C2H3O2
All acetates are soluble (except Ag)
Solubility Rules: Carbonates CO2-3 and Phosphates PO3-4
All carbonates and phosphates are insoluble except those of Na+, K+ & NH4+
Solubility Rules: Cl- Br- I-
All chlorides, bromides and iodides are soluble except Ag+, Pb+ & Hg2+
Solubility Rules: Hydroxides OH-
All hydroxides are insoluble except those of Na+ & K+. Ba2+ and Ca2+ are sligthly soluble
Solubility rules: Nitrates NO3
All nitrates are soluable
Solubility Rules: Na+, K+, NH4+
All salts of the sodium and potassium and ammonium ion are soluble (mostly)
Solubility Rules: Sulfides S^2-
All sulfides are insoluble except those of Na+, K+, NH4+ and those of alkaline earths: Mg2+, Ca2+, Sr2+ & Ba2+
Example of weak base
Ammonia NH3
The zero on the pressure gauge actually corresponds to?
Atmospheric pressure
Molar mass of a gas is 16g/mol. If avg molar mass of air is 29g/mol... will the balloon rise or sink?
Balloon would rise
Regression Statistics provides?
Best fit line equation and R^2 (goodness of fit) R^2 values greater than .95 are good
Predict CaCO3(s) + HCl oberservations
Bubbling since CO2
How can random errors be reduced?
By carrying out multiple trials and averaging the results
How can systematic errors be eliminated?
By paying careful attention to detail and understanding of proper use of equipment
Net Ionic equation
Chemical equation only including the ions or molecules directly involved in the reaction
To obtain density, what has to be the independent and dependent variable? What is the density?
D=m/v Therefore, mass is the dependent and volume is independent. Slope is the density
Extrapolation
Extending the best fit line outside the range of measured data at either the high or low end
Four categories of a double displacement/metathesis reaction?
Formation of a precipitate, formation of a gas, formation of water & formation of a soluble weak electrolyte
What happens when an acid and base are mixed? (Acid-base reaction or neutralization)
H+ from the acid (weak or strong acid) combine with the OH- from the base to form H2O
7 common strong acids
HCl, HBr, HI, H2SO4, HNO3, HClO3, HClO4
Common strong bases include
Hydroxides of group IA andn larger member of group IIA Mentals such as NaOH, KOH and Ba(OH)2
List the halogens Br2, I2 and Cl2 in order of increasing activity and explain why
I2<Br2<Cl2 The brown color showed that Bromide was produced, proving that chloride is strong since it displaced the bromide from the solution The pink color (Iodine) was produced in the other experiment showing that the Iodine was displaced by the bromide
Spectator ions
Ions that do not participate in the actual reaction and are omitted
Why is it important to use the same balance when weighing?
It ensures the same units and differences there could be between scales
What does it really mean when a pressure gauge reads zero?
It means that real pressure - atmospheric pressure = 0
What equation to use when comparing the Molarity and Volume?
M1V1=M2V2
Mass % concentration
Mass of solute divided by mass of solution times 100%
Precision
Measure of how close each measurement is to the other measurements
Accuracy
Measure of how well experimental results are to the actual literature values
Therefore, many weak acids and bases are written in?
Molecular forms
Predict NaOH + H2SO4 observations
No obvious obersvations
How many sig figs should the standard deviation have? And that limits the sig figs for what?
One; average/mean value
Boyle's Law
P1V1 = V1V2 constant n & T
Rearranged Ideal Gas Law equation to determine slope?
P= (1/V)nRT/ nRT is the slope
Ptotal = ?
Patm = Pgas + Pwater vapor
Partial pressure is basically?
Pgas
Pcorrected = ?
Pgauge + Patmosphere
Are equivalent points possible to reach? What are used instead?
Practically impossible; pH indicators are used to determine end point of titration
Predict Pb(NO3)2 + Na2SO4 observations
Precipitate cause of PbSO4
Formation of a soluble weak electrolyte reaction
Reaction in which acetic acid (CH3COOH) a weak electrolyte only dissociates partially. Formation of HC2H3O2 ?
Gas-forming reaction
Reaction in which ions are removed from a solution creating a driving force (gas produced)
Acid-Base reaction (Formation of water) Reaction
Reaction where an acid and base are mixed and a water and salt is produced; Also called acid-base neutralization
Real footballs are to be inflated between 12.5 psi - 13.5 psi. Some game balls were 10 psi. What is the real air pressure inside a 10 psi game ball?
Real P = Patm + pgauge 10 + 14.7 = 24.7 psi
Process of gaining an electron
Reduction
Interpolation
Results lie within the range of measured data
Common product of acid and base
Salt and water
For the equation lnN/lnNo = -kt what is the slope and y-int?
Slope is -k and y-intercept is lnNo
Why must you record the volume only when the height of the column of water inside the graduated cylinder is the same as the liquid level in the trough?
So that the pressure inside the cylinder is the same as the atmospheric pressure
Equation for standard deviation?
Square root of each value minus the average/mean squared, added with each other and divided by n-1
What is used to present precision?
Standard deviation
What are strong electrolytes?
Strong acids, strong bases and soluble ionic salts
When writing ionic equations, only ______ are written in ionic forms?
Strong electrolytes
When waiting long enough, the light pink color from titration may disappear due to CO2 from the air, why?
The CO2 reacts with the water in the solution to dorm carbonic acid and the light pink color disppears
AgNO3 is colorless but when red copper wire is added the solution changed to light blue and the copper is grey. What is causing the solution color to change from colorless to light blue? What is the shiny grey stuff on the copper wire?
The Cu2+ ion; silver
The total pressure of the gas and water vapor collected inside a graduated cylinder is equal to?
The atmospheric pressure outside the cylinder if the height of the water inside the cylinder is the same as the liquid level in the trough
Before titration , if a student rinsed the buret with DI water instead of NaOH solution, how will that affect mass % concentration? what if some of the NaOH solution remained on the wall of the flask and never reach the rxn mixture?
The concentration would be higher; the volume would be high making the experimental result higher
For the Gas Laws lab, students are asked to leave water in the trough so that the water will be ready for other labs? Why can't we use DI water from the faucet directly?
The water from the faucet is not at room temperature like the DI water we are using. (DI water should be close to room temp)
Why rinse the burets with NaOH solution instead of DI water before titration?
Using DI water could possibly mess up the NaOH concentration; we want the buret to only contain NaOH
Charles's Law
V1/T1 = V2/T2 constant n & P
For PV=nRT, what is the formula rearranged to y=mx+b and what is the slope and y-intercept?
V=(nR/P) * T Slope = RT/P Y-intercept = 0
Acid-Base reactions usually produces what?
Water and ionic compound (salt)
Precipitation reaction
When two substances result in the formation of an insoluble solid
Changes such as in color or state of matter often indicate a chemical reaction has occurred, if there is no obvious change when two solutions are mixed, can we conclude that there is no reaction?
Without obvious changes, it is not enough to conclude that there is no reaction. Some reactions may need additional things to see changes, such as pH indicator or it's just slow
When writing the Net Ionic Equation, what should you do first?
Write down balanced equation then total ionic equation then cancel out to get net ionic
Standard deviation follows what format?
X +- S (average plus or minus s.d.)
When the y-intercept is zero, the slope is?
Y/X
Y-intercept is the y-value when x is?
Zero
Acid-Base titration
analytical method to determine the concentration of an unknown acid or base
Though many weak acids and weak bases still dissolve in water, they only ________ __________ into ions and majority remain __________
dissociate partially; molecules
M = ? How is it plugged into the Ideal gas law equation when moles is not given?
m/n (mass over number of moles) PV=(m/M)RT
density (d) = ?
m/v or PM/RT
For the Ideal gas law equation PV=nRT with constant temperature and pressure, what is plotted on the X and Y axis?
n = x-axis v = y-axis
Molarity
number of moles of given solute dissolved in 1 Liter of solution; unit mol/L
Process of losing an electron
oxidation
Dependent Variable
quantity that you measure in the lab (outcome)
Independent Variable
quantity you control in the experiment
If acids or bases ionize completely, they are called
strong acids or strong bases
Acids are substances
that produce H+ ions in an aqueous solution
Bases are substances
that produce OH- ions in an aqueous solution
Systematic errors affect
the accuracy of the measurement ex. improper calibration, contamination, etc.