subject
Chemistry, 06.10.2021 22:00 brandyrushing3

we can predict many things about a chemical reaction using the equilibrium constant. which of the following cannot be predicted using the equilibrium constant?

ansver
Answers: 2

Another question on Chemistry

question
Chemistry, 21.06.2019 17:30
What is the percentage by mass of silicon (si) in iron aluminum silicate (fe3al2(sio4)3)?
Answers: 2
question
Chemistry, 22.06.2019 07:50
Many reactions take place in aqueous solution. when potential reactants are mixed, a reaction will occur if there is some driving force that favors the formation of products. it is often convenient to categorize reactions in terms of these driving forces: precipitate formation, in which an insoluble solid is formed, weak electrolyte formation, as in a neutralization reaction involving water, or transfer of electrons, as in a redox reaction. these reactions can be represented by full molecular equations, which contain all species in the reaction mixture, or by net ionic equations, which show only the species that actually undergo a change. the latter does not contain the spectator ions, which do not undergo a net change or do not take part in the reaction. part a when the following two solutions are mixed: k2co3(aq)+fe(no3)3(aq) the mixture contains the ions listed below. sort these species into spectator ions and ions that react. drag the appropriate items to their respective bins. view available hint(s) spectator ions ions that react part b what is the correct net ionic equation, including all coefficients, charges, and phases, for the following set of reactants? assume that the contribution of protons from h2so4 is near 100 %.ba(oh)2(aq)+h2so4(aq)→ express your answer as a chemical equation. view available hint(s) nothing provide feedback
Answers: 3
question
Chemistry, 23.06.2019 13:00
Write the balanced chemical reaction for the formation of fe2(so4)3 from fe2o3 and so3 and determine how many moles of fe2(so4)3 are formed when 12.7 mol of so3 are reacted.
Answers: 1
question
Chemistry, 23.06.2019 16:00
Challenge question: this question is worth 6 points. as you saw in problem 9 we can have species bound to a central metal ion. these species are called ligands. in the past we have assumed all the d orbitals in some species are degenerate; however, they often are not. sometimes the ligands bound to a central metal cation can split the d orbitals. that is, some of the d orbitals will be at a lower energy state than others. ligands that have the ability to cause this splitting are called strong field ligands, cnâ’ is an example of these. if this splitting in the d orbitals is great enough electrons will fill low lying orbitals, pairing with other electrons in a given orbital, before filling higher energy orbitals. in question 7 we had fe2+, furthermore we found that there were a certain number (non-zero) of unpaired electrons. consider now fe(cn)6 4â’: here we also have fe2+, but in this case all the electrons are paired, yielding a diamagnetic species. how can you explain this?
Answers: 2
You know the right answer?
we can predict many things about a chemical reaction using the equilibrium constant. which of the fo...
Questions
question
Mathematics, 18.03.2021 03:20
question
English, 18.03.2021 03:20
question
History, 18.03.2021 03:20
Questions on the website: 13722363