PreparED Study Materials

CHEM 118: Organic Chemistry

School: University of California - Davis

Number of Notes and Study Guides Available: 19

Notes

Study Guides

Videos

Mastering Ionic and Net Ionic Equations for Varied Chemical Reactions
Stars

Want To Learn More? To watch the entire video and ALL of the videos in the series:

Add to cart

Discover the art of writing balanced, complete ionic, and net ionic equations for various chemical reactions. Learn the nuances that differentiate between these equations and watch them applied to diverse chemical reactants.

Stars

Want To Learn More? To watch the entire video and ALL of the videos in the series:

Add to cart

Do Rusting and Burning Violate Conservation of Mass?
Stars

Want To Learn More? To watch the entire video and ALL of the videos in the series:

Add to cart

This video explores the processes of rusting in iron and burning a match, addressing whether the observed changes in mass violate the law of conservation of mass, and explains how these processes align with the law.

Number of molecules in 3.5g H?O, 56.1g N?, 89g CCl?, 19g C?H??O?
Stars

Want To Learn More? To watch the entire video and ALL of the videos in the series:

Add to cart

This video shows how to determine the number of molecules in a given sample by utilizing the concept of moles, Avogadro's number (6.022 x 10²³), and the molar mass of the substance. It provides step-by-step calculations for different substances, converting mass to the number of molecules and highlighting the versatile application of this approach.

Stars

Want To Learn More? To watch the entire video and ALL of the videos in the series:

Add to cart

Neon Gas Pressure Change in 0.75-L Cylinder
Stars

Want To Learn More? To watch the entire video and ALL of the videos in the series:

Add to cart

In this problem, we are tasked with determining the pressure of neon gas in a 0.75-L cylinder at 30°C after compressing it from a 2.50-L sample at 0.00°C and 1.00 atm using the combined gas law equation, with step-by-step calculations leading to a final pressure value of approximately 3.699 atm.

Textbook Solutions (0)

Top Selling Study Tools

×

Login

Login or Sign up for access to all of our study tools and educational content!

Forgot password?
Register Now

×

Register

Sign up for access to all content on our site!

Or login if you already have an account

×

Reset password

If you have an active account we’ll send you an e-mail for password recovery

Or login if you have your password back