Chemistry, 24.02.2021 23:50 feliciagraham14
A 50.0 g sample of liquid water at 56.0°C, heats to 91.0 "C. How much energy is
involved in this change? (Heat capacity of liquid water is 4.17 J/gºC) (Q
=mcAT)
A. 7298 J B. 12038 J
C. 204480 J D. 17807 J
Answers: 1
Chemistry, 23.06.2019 08:00, mackaylabarnes22
Ineed this awnser fast select the correct answer. this chemical equation represents the burning of methane, but the equation is incomplete. what is the missing coefficient in both the reactants and the products? ch4 + → co2 + a. 0 b. 1c. 2d. 3 e. 4
Answers: 3
Chemistry, 23.06.2019 09:30, oscarruiz
The allotropes of carbon include a variety of structures that include three-dimensional tetrahedral lattices, planes of hexagonal rings, cylindrical tubes of hexagonal rings, and spheres of five- and six-membered rings. similar shapes of network covalent atomic solids are possible with carbon nitride, boron, and pure silicon (e. g., silicene is a graphene-like allotrope of pure silicon). in contrast, silicates exist as either highly ordered or amorphous (more random) three-dimensional lattices. what could explain why there are there no naturally occurring sheets, stacked sheets, cylindrical tubes, or spheres of network covalent atomic solids composed of silicon and oxygen (sio2)? would pure silicate structures make good lubricants or good electrical conductors?
Answers: 3
A 50.0 g sample of liquid water at 56.0°C, heats to 91.0 "C. How much energy is
involved in this ch...
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