CHEM 1C Study Guide - Midterm Guide: Sodium Nitrate, Dissociation Constant, Bond-Dissociation Energy

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13 Oct 2017
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Low questions this week: must be everyone liked ksp :-). Nearly always when you are asked to find the mass of things in chemistry, you end up first having to find the moles. The lack of specificity makes it tough to say how to find the moles here, but generally for buffers you want to use the henderson hasslebalch equation to find either molarity, or moles themselves, depending on the information given. Once you have moles, you can then use the periodic table to solve for grams. I"m going to guess that here you are speaking about in galvanic and electrolytic cells since that is the thing we are talking about, but this changes alittle bit if you are talking about other situations. The basic idea is that the negative and positive ions are mobile. So as the electrons move through a wire to the cathode, there must be something that balances the charges in the half cells.

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