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Folie 1
Folie 1

... horizontal part of the isotherm have merged to a single point, the critical point of the gas. The corresponding parameters are the critical temperature, Tc, critical pressure, pc, and critical molar volume, vc, of the substance. • The liquid phase of a substance does not form above Tc. ...
Chemistry Syllabus
Chemistry Syllabus

...  Products (given reactants) or reactants (given products) for each reaction type  Solubility rules for precipitation reactions and the activity series for single and double displacement reactions 3rd Nine Weeks 3d. Use stoichiometry to calculate the amount of reactants consumed and products formed ...
Chemistry Syllabus - Madison County Schools
Chemistry Syllabus - Madison County Schools

Lecture 5 – Chemical Reactions
Lecture 5 – Chemical Reactions

... All of the matter present in the reactants is also present in the products of the reaction. c. This allows us to treat chemical equation like mathematical equations The coefficients are use to balance the equation. a. For example, in the chemical equation describing the formation of liquid water fro ...
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Study Guide

Chemistry Midterm Review 2006
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... 2. Know the difference between an ideal gas and a real gas. What conditions does a real gas deviate from an ideal gas. 3. What is the difference between effusion and diffusion of a gas? 4. What happens to average kinetic energy when Kelvin temperature doubles? 5. Both methane gas(CH4) and hydrogen ...
conductometric and potentiometric determination of the dissociation
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... a. A plot of 1/[A] vs. t will produce a straight line with a slope equal to k. b. [A] depends on time and can be used to calculate [A] at any time t, provided k and [A]o are known. 4. Half-Life. * Equation: ...
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THE GENERAL LAW OF CHEMICAL KINETICS, DOES IT EXIST?

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Basic Chemistry – Terminology and Reactions

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THERMODYNAMICS OF REACTING SYSTEMS

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... Then indicate: a) The oxidation step: ----------------------------------------------------b) The reduction step: ------------------------------------------------------c) The oxidizing agent: ------------------------------------------------------d) The reducing agent: -------------------------------- ...
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Thermodynamics Free-Response

... the complete combustion of one mole of CH3OH (l). Assume products are in their standard states at 298 K. Coefficients do not need to be whole number. b) On the basis of your answer to part (a) and the information in the table, determine the enthalpy change for the reaction: C (s) + H2 (g) + H2O (l) ...
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Student Exploration Sheet: Growing Plants

... Username – btesta Password - science Vocabulary: coefficient, combination, compound, decomposition, double replacement, element, molecule, product, reactant, single replacement, subscript ...
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... e) Sketch and label a PE diagram for this reaction: ...
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Practice Exam #2

... A) The system loses heat and has work done on it by the surroundings. B) The system loses heat and does work on the surroundings. C) The system gains heat and does work on the surroundings. D) The system gains heat and has work done on it by the surroundings. E) None of the above is correct. ...
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Chemical equilibrium



In a chemical reaction, chemical equilibrium is the state in which both reactants and products are present in concentrations which have no further tendency to change with time. Usually, this state results when the forward reaction proceeds at the same rate as the reverse reaction. The reaction rates of the forward and backward reactions are generally not zero, but equal. Thus, there are no net changes in the concentrations of the reactant(s) and product(s). Such a state is known as dynamic equilibrium.
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