Fourth midterm examination
... 2) (80 points) Reaction 1 examined in Problem 1 is also the focus of this problem. A large bomb calorimeter with a mass of 2000 Kg and a specific heat of 1.5 J/K-g is charged with 2.0 mole of ammonia, an excess of gaseous oxygen, and liquid water. The initial temperature of the calorimeter was 25ºC ...
... 2) (80 points) Reaction 1 examined in Problem 1 is also the focus of this problem. A large bomb calorimeter with a mass of 2000 Kg and a specific heat of 1.5 J/K-g is charged with 2.0 mole of ammonia, an excess of gaseous oxygen, and liquid water. The initial temperature of the calorimeter was 25ºC ...
KINETIC AND POTENTIAL ENERGY WORKSHEET Determine
... 2. A baby carriage is sitting at the top of a hill that is 21 m high. The carriage with the baby weighs 12 N. The carriage has _________________ energy. Calculate it. ...
... 2. A baby carriage is sitting at the top of a hill that is 21 m high. The carriage with the baby weighs 12 N. The carriage has _________________ energy. Calculate it. ...
Potential Energy + Kinetic Energy = Total Mechanical Energy
... b. What is the potential energy when the height equals 0.0m? [0J] c. What is the ball’s initial velocity just as it is released? [5.5m/s] d. What does 59.0cm equal when changed to a value in m? [0.59m] e. What is the total energy at a height of 59.0cm above a height of 0.0m? [48.4J] f. What is the p ...
... b. What is the potential energy when the height equals 0.0m? [0J] c. What is the ball’s initial velocity just as it is released? [5.5m/s] d. What does 59.0cm equal when changed to a value in m? [0.59m] e. What is the total energy at a height of 59.0cm above a height of 0.0m? [48.4J] f. What is the p ...
Reaction Rate-Catalyst
... • In order for reaction to occur the reactant molecules must collide in the correct orientation and with enough energy to form products. ...
... • In order for reaction to occur the reactant molecules must collide in the correct orientation and with enough energy to form products. ...
Work and Energy
... Internal force: any force exerted on an object in the system due to another object in the system. External force: any force exerted by a object that is not part of the system on an object within the system. ...
... Internal force: any force exerted on an object in the system due to another object in the system. External force: any force exerted by a object that is not part of the system on an object within the system. ...
F - Aurora City Schools
... EPE= ½ k x2 x = amount of stretch k = the spring constant (a characteristic of the object being stretched) ...
... EPE= ½ k x2 x = amount of stretch k = the spring constant (a characteristic of the object being stretched) ...
The Perfect Solution to your Problems
... It pays for itself! With the first two captures, the Leprechaun’s Pot of gold will more than cover the cost of the trap, with change to spare! Patent Pending; EG-2314509353 Put the Leprechauns back under your control! ...
... It pays for itself! With the first two captures, the Leprechaun’s Pot of gold will more than cover the cost of the trap, with change to spare! Patent Pending; EG-2314509353 Put the Leprechauns back under your control! ...
The Two-Body Problem
... • The radial movement (of the barycenter) takes place as if the effective potential was the sum of that due to an external force plus a centrifugal potential Ucf(r). • The motion of the relative coordinate, with given angular momentum, is equivalent to the motion of a particle in one (radial) dimens ...
... • The radial movement (of the barycenter) takes place as if the effective potential was the sum of that due to an external force plus a centrifugal potential Ucf(r). • The motion of the relative coordinate, with given angular momentum, is equivalent to the motion of a particle in one (radial) dimens ...
Conservation of Energy
... our mechanical energy can be converted into invisible forms of non-mechanical energy. Mechanical energy is no longer conserved, but TOTAL ENERGY IS ALWAYS CONSERVED • Let’s do a practice problem on pg. ...
... our mechanical energy can be converted into invisible forms of non-mechanical energy. Mechanical energy is no longer conserved, but TOTAL ENERGY IS ALWAYS CONSERVED • Let’s do a practice problem on pg. ...
Matter Notes
... composition or identity of the matter. Examples: color, ______________, size, texture, viscosity, length, mass, boiling point, _________________, D______________, and solubility A chemical property is a property that can be observed only when substances ___________________ with one another. Identiti ...
... composition or identity of the matter. Examples: color, ______________, size, texture, viscosity, length, mass, boiling point, _________________, D______________, and solubility A chemical property is a property that can be observed only when substances ___________________ with one another. Identiti ...
1) In the reaction H2O + CH3COOH H3O+ +
... is spontaneous. Is the standard potential for this reaction greater than zero, less than zero, equal to zero or impossible to determine? ...
... is spontaneous. Is the standard potential for this reaction greater than zero, less than zero, equal to zero or impossible to determine? ...
«First_» «Last» Kinetic Energy Problems Ek = 1/2mv2 1. What is the
... c. A horizontally thrown ball is caught in a mitt. d. A horizontally thrown ball falls and gains velocity vertically. A student is doing a problem involving a ball falling down a well. If the top of the well is chosen as a reference point for potential energy, then what is the relationship between t ...
... c. A horizontally thrown ball is caught in a mitt. d. A horizontally thrown ball falls and gains velocity vertically. A student is doing a problem involving a ball falling down a well. If the top of the well is chosen as a reference point for potential energy, then what is the relationship between t ...
Exam 1 - CSUN.edu
... a) What is the rate law? b) What is the value of the rate constant k298 K (where the subscript refers to temperature)? c) What rate law would you expect if this was an elementary reaction? d) If the pre-exponential factor A is independent of temperature and k400 K = 10 × k298 K , what would be the a ...
... a) What is the rate law? b) What is the value of the rate constant k298 K (where the subscript refers to temperature)? c) What rate law would you expect if this was an elementary reaction? d) If the pre-exponential factor A is independent of temperature and k400 K = 10 × k298 K , what would be the a ...
SHAPING THE NEW EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN ENERGY MAP
... *Russian shift towards China and the Asian market *European market dependency on imported gas at 83% in 2035. Annual supply-demand discrepancy of over 40 BCM in 2030 ...
... *Russian shift towards China and the Asian market *European market dependency on imported gas at 83% in 2035. Annual supply-demand discrepancy of over 40 BCM in 2030 ...
Potential Energy Diagrams
... forward reaction? For the reverse reaction? What is the ΔH for the forward reaction? For the reverse reaction? What is the energy of the activated complex? ...
... forward reaction? For the reverse reaction? What is the ΔH for the forward reaction? For the reverse reaction? What is the energy of the activated complex? ...
What Am I?
... mixture; I am formed when one substance, such as water, dissolves other substances. ► Solution ...
... mixture; I am formed when one substance, such as water, dissolves other substances. ► Solution ...
Energy profile (chemistry)
For a chemical reaction or process an energy profile (or reaction coordinate diagram) is a theoretical representation of a single energetic pathway, along the reaction coordinate, as the reactants are transformed into products. Reaction coordinate diagrams are derived from the corresponding potential energy surface (PES), which are used in computational chemistry to model chemical reactions by relating the energy of a molecule(s) to its structure (within the Born–Oppenheimer approximation). The reaction coordinate is a parametric curve that follows the pathway of a reaction and indicates the progress of a reaction.Qualitatively the reaction coordinate diagrams (one-dimensional energy surfaces) have numerous applications. Chemists use reaction coordinate diagrams as both an analytical and pedagogical aid for rationalizing and illustrating kinetic and thermodynamic events. The purpose of energy profiles and surfaces is to provide a qualitative representation of how potential energy varies with molecular motion for a given reaction or process.