PreparED Study Materials
CHEM 101: Intro to Chemistry
School: Ozarks Technical Community College
Number of Notes and Study Guides Available: 1
Notes
Videos
Calculating Vapor Pressure & Its Lowering: Urea in Water at 35°C
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Explore the intriguing process of determining the vapor pressure of a urea-water solution at 35°C. Using Raoult's law we'll calculate the mole fraction of water and urea leading to the solution's vapor pressure. Learn how the solution's composition affects vapor-pressure lowering
Counting Atoms in Sulfur Dioxide: From Moles to Molecules
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Learn the method to determine the count of SO? molecules, sulfur, and oxygen atoms from a given amount of sulfur dioxide (SO?). Understand the application of Avogadro's number in translating moles to molecules. Grasp key concepts of atomic structure and counting with hands-on examples.
Classify: (a) Mixture (b) Element (c) Mixture (d) Compound
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In this video, we classify substances as elements, compounds, or mixtures, with air and soy sauce as mixtures, iron as an element, and table salt as a compound.
Vaporization vs. Condensation: Heat Absorption & Release
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Discover the contrasting processes of vaporization and condensation and their thermal nature. Understand why boiling is endothermic, absorbing heat, while condensation is exothermic, releasing heat, and how these processes impact ?H values.
Ranking WO? Rb?SO? Pb(C?H?O?)? RbI by Decreasing Formula Mass
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Discover the method to rank compounds like Tungsten Dioxide Rubidium Sulfate Lead Acetate and Rubidium Iodide based on their formula masses. Learn about the significance and calculation of a compound's formula mass. Conclude with an ordered list from heaviest to lightest based on our calculations
Determining Ionizable H Atoms in Malonic Acid via Neutralization
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Explore the process of determining ionizable hydrogen atoms in malonic acid using its molecular formula C3H4O4 and a neutralization reaction with Sodium hydroxide. Through methodical calculations involving the given mass of malonic acid and the required volume of Sodium hydroxide for neutralization we uncover that each molecule of malonic acid contains two ionizable H atoms.
