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Chemistry: An Introduction to General, Organic, and Biological Chemistry (13th Edition)
- Instead of using NaCl to melt the ice on your sidewalk you decide to use CaCl2. If you add 35.0 g of CaCl2 to 150. g of water, what is the freezing point of the solution? (Assume i = 2.7 for CaCl2.)arrow_forwardIf you prepared a saturated aqueous solution of potassiumchloride at 25°C and then heated it to 50°C, wouldyou describe the solution as unsaturated, saturated, orsupersaturated? Explain.arrow_forwardSamples of each of the substances listed below are dissolved in 125 g of water. Which of the solutions has the highest boiling point? (a) 3.0 g sucrose, C12H22O11 (b) 1.0 g glycerol, C3H3(OH)3 (c) 1.0 g propylene glycol, C3H6(OH)2 (d) 2.0 g glucose, C6H12(OH)2arrow_forward
- A 12-oz (355-mL) Pepsi contains 38.9 mg caffeine (molar mass = 194.2 g/mol). Assume that the Pepsi, mainly water, has a density of 1.01 g/mL. For such a Pepsi, calculate: (a) its caffeine concentration in ppm; (b) its molarity of caffeine; and (c) the molality of caffeine.arrow_forwardCaffeine is made up of 49.5% C, 5.2% H, 16.5% O, and 28.9% N. A solution made up of 8.25 g of caffeine and 100.0 mL of benzene (d=0.877g/mL) freezes at 3.03C. Pure benzene (k f =5.10C/m) freezes at 5.500C. What are the simplest and molecular formulas for caffeine?arrow_forwardYou have two aqueous solutions separated by a semipermeable membrane. One contains 5.85 g of NaCl dissolved in 100. mL of solution, and the other contains 8.88 g of KNO3 dissolved in 100. mL of solution. In which direction will solvent flow: from the NaCl solution to the KNO3 solution, or from KNO3 to NaCl? Explain briefly.arrow_forward
- Assume you dissolve 10.0 g of sucrose (C12H22O11) in 225 mL (225 g) of water and warm the water to 60 C. What is the vapor pressure of the water over this solution? (Appendix G lists P(H2O) at various temperatures.)arrow_forwardCalculate the freezing point of 525 g of water that contains 25.0 g of NaCl. Assume i, the vant Hoff factor, is 1.85 for NaCl.arrow_forwardA solution of potassium nitrate, an electrolyte, and a solution of glycerin (C3H5(OH)3), a nonelectrolyte, both boil at 100.3 C. What other physical properties of the two solutions are identical?arrow_forward
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