Baccalaureate Department Group 4 – Chemistry SL Lab no.2: Acid-base titration Student: Caterina Rende Dominis Teacher: Zrinka Toplićan Date: 19 November 2012 Data Collection and Processing (DCP) Aspect 1: Recording raw data Table 1 Table showing raw data collected from titration Known measurements 25 mL of diluted acid 0‚100 M of NaOH solution Measurement Number | V of alkali needed to neutralize acid /mL/ (±0.01 mL) | 1 | 26.4 | 2 | 26.1 | 3 | 26
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Introduction Background Information To begin a discussion about acid-base titrations‚ we must first recall that there are several definitions of acids and bases. For the purpose of this exercise‚ we will consider the Arrhenius definition of acids and bases‚ in which an acid is a proton (H+) donor and a base produces hydroxide (OH-) in solution. When an acid reacts with a base‚ the products of this reaction are water and a salt. Note that salt here does not only mean table salt (NaCl)‚ but can refer
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---------------------------------- Acidspunk installation instruction ---------------------------------- Acidspunk requires an MMX processor and DirectX Place the .dll in winamp’s plugin directory. Start winamp and press "ctrl-k" Choose acidspunk and press "configure" (or "alt-k") Set the screen resolution Start the plugin "ctrl-shift-k" Check the framerate by pressing F2 while the plugin is running. The plugin should run between 20-30 frames per second to look good. If not adjust
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DNA is a double helix molecule that contains information that is used to make up a person’s body. DNA controls every aspect of a person’s body from their eye and hair color‚ height‚ and other features. DNA’s specific and unique characteristic can be crucial when solving a crime. DNA can be used to convict a suspect or exonerate an innocent person. When DNA is found it is even more important that is handle properly to ensure proper identification and accuracy of testing. The evolution of DNA technology
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TITLE/PROBLEMS * Can peanut butter with seaweed extract be a main ingredient in making poisons for rats? * “Peanut-Weed Arsenic Poison” * “Peanut-Weed Rat Killer” RRS Why Do Poisons Matter? “Long after the 1962 publication of Rachel Carson’s book‚ Silent Spring‚ and the subsequent birth of the environmental movement‚ the days of concern over the effects of at-home and commercial pesticide use are long from over. Carson’s book described numerous environmental impacts of indiscriminate
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Amino acid present in the lumen of the small intestine The goal is to cross through the epithelial cell membrane to enter into the epithelial cell’s cytoplasm – its charged cuz of side chains To get through the membrane the amino acid must cross the Simple columnar epithelial cells lining the apical surface of the small intestinal tract. These cells are impermeable to any harmful bacteria that may be ingested by the body‚ but permeable to necessary ions. Absorption of amino acids occurs through
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Experiment 2 Acid/Base Titration John J. Purdue CHM 321 – Fall 2012 TA: Scott Cole Section 1 September 4‚ 2012 Unknown Concentration: X.XX ± X.XX M (@95% confidence interval) (adapted from a report prepared by N. Skrynnikov‚ 2009) Abstract The concentration of an unknown acid (HA) solution was determined by titration with a standardized solution of sodium hydroxide. The standardization of NaOH was done by titration with a solid acid sample‚ potassium hydrogen phthalate (KHP)‚ and phenolphthalein
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Acid Rain Introduction: Titrations are often recorded on graphs called titration curves‚ which generally contain the volume of the titrant as the independent variable and the pH of the solution as the dependent variable (because it changes depending on the composition of the two solutions). The equivalence point on the graph is where all of the starting solution (usually an acid) has been neutralized by the titrant (usually a base). One can easily find the pKa of the monoprotic acid by finding
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BEHAVIOUR OF AMINO ACIDS IN SOLUTION Abstract In this practical the acid-base behaviour of amino acids was assessed. Amino acids are amphoteric. They have the basic (amine) and the acidic (carboxylic) functional groups. These show the same type of equilibrium reactions that all weak acids and bases undergo‚ and the relative amount of each can be altered by adjusting the pH of the solution. For this practical glycine was used as a model to show this unique nature of amino acids. A series of
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Acetic acid‚ a pungent smelling colourless liquid having sour taste‚ used very commonly in the chemistry laboratories. It got its name from Latin word Acetum‚ which means vinegar. Pure acetic acid is also called glacial acetic acid‚ because in winters it freezes easily as temperature goes below 16-17°C. Therefore it looks like as if a small glacier is there in the bottle‚ hence called glacial acetic acid. Laboratory and daily life uses of acetic acid are: (i) Acetic acid is used in household kitchens
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