PreparED Study Materials

CHEM 315: Quantitative Environmental Analysis

School: University of Washington

Number of Notes and Study Guides Available: 2

Notes

Videos

Understanding Boiling Points: Ethylene Glycol, Alcohols & Ethers Expla
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This video offers insights into the properties and boiling points of different alcohols and ethers, including antifreeze agents like ethylene glycol. We also discuss how molecular structures and interactions impact boiling points, shedding light on key differences among related compounds.

Determining Moles of Released Ions in Dissolution Reactions
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When an ionic compound dissolves in water, it undergoes dissociation into its constituent ions. The total moles of ions released is determined by adding up the moles of each ion generated during this dissociation process. In the case of (a) disodium hydrogen phosphate (Na?HPO?), it dissociates into two sodium ions and one hydrogen phosphate ion. For (b) copper(II) sulfate pentahydrate (CuSO? · 5H?O), it dissociates into one copper ion and one sulfate ion. In (c), nickel(II) chloride (NiCl?) diss

Chemical Formulas for Barium Hydroxide, Magnesium Sulfite, and More
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This video discusses the process of writing chemical formulas for different compounds, providing details on the types and charges of ions involved in each compound's composition. The video concludes with the chemical formulas for barium hydroxide, magnesium sulfite, calcium carbonate, ammonium sulfate, and lithium hydrogen carbonate.

Pure Substances vs. Mixtures: Classifying Based on Composition & Distr
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Understand the fundamental distinctions between pure substances and mixtures. Unpack the definitions and real-world examples of elements, compounds, homogeneous, and heterogeneous mixtures.

Determining Bond Types: Ionic, Polar Covalent, or Covalent in Chemical
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This discussion revolves around the classification of chemical bonds as ionic, polar covalent, or covalent based on the electronegativity difference between the atoms involved. The general criteria for this classification are explained: a difference greater than 1.7 indicates an ionic bond, between 0.5 and 1.7 signifies a polar covalent bond, and less than 0.5 designates a covalent bond. It then applies these criteria to four specific examples, including the CC bond in ethane (H?CCH?), the KI bo

Converting Moles to Grams: Aluminum & Chlorine Atomic Mass Breakdown
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"Explore the intricate world of atomic masses using aluminum and chlorine as examples. Understand the concept of 'mole' and its relevance in chemistry. Learn to calculate masses of moles for elements based on atomic weights.

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