Enigmatic Eve
Member
Whats the standard conditions question?! Is that the standard potentials or was is about SLC/STP?
Arent they the same thing? The one that asked what where the conditions used for getting the standard reductions used to calculate the EMF, why is it necessary?Enigmatic Eve said:Whats the standard conditions question?! Is that the standard potentials or was is about SLC/STP?
Thats what I interpreted the question as Hope I read it correctly...Enigmatic Eve said:Oh no!!!! So the conditions used to determine those standard potentials was STP and SLC??! I remember writing crap about keeping the conditions constant (such as temperature, pressure, concentration). Lol... I didnt know the answer to that question, so I made up anything.. worth 3 marks.. I hope they'll give me at least one!! Lol
I got 0.3mol/L as well but my working out seemed iffy - to say the least. I wrote that as sulfuric acid is diprotic it would be 2 times as many moles of sodium hydroxide - then multiplied it by the ratio given - 3/2 - so 0.3 mol/L - is this correct?Enigmatic Eve said:Oh crap!!! Can't believe it!!! I got that sulfur/carbon question wrong!! Didn't read the q properly!! How many marks was it worth?!! Dude... I totally forgot about the carbon: eqn I used was S + O2 ----> SO2
Anyway... just agreeing with everyone that the Chemistry Catholic trials were easier than I expected!! Yay!!!
For the molarity question, I got 0.3mol/L. Is that the correct answer?!! I sure hope it is!!!
Lol... I was blown off by the standard potentials questiong.... made a lot of crap up.... hopefully I can scab at least one mark for it.... hee hee!
Anyways, good luck everyone for the rest of your trials!!
Take care
The second part of that question was also ambiguous, what is important? Did it mean the conditions or the standard potential values?Heinz said:Thats what I interpreted the question as Hope I read it correctly...
S_Kaye said:yeah here are a couple that i can remember
Haber process impact on society
AAS impact on society and environment
The prac: finding molar heat of combustion of an alkanol - justify your procedure.
the chem of art long answer was on bohr model ...
thats all i can really remember.
hope that helps
S_Kaye said:yeah i got 0.3 M and so did heaps of people at my school for the titration so fingers crossed. i thought it was a pretty nice paper, they left so much out but i guess its always like that. the chem of art elective was pretty easy. i know ppl at my school didnt like the shipwrecks last question, so how did you guys find that.
for the sulfur/coal question
i got 0.1/100 times 10 000 000
then transfer to g
then do n=m/MM
then using equation
S2 + 202 ---- 2SO2.
so times n times two to get the SO2.
and then i used n=V/Vm
and i ended up with 7 million something.
haha it was so screwed.
hopefully ill get a couple of marks
thought the trial was pretty easy overall. was expecting much much worse!!!
for the titration the answer is just 0.100 mole, 0.3 is definately wrong, you and your friends proly took the 30ml instead of 10ml for the acid.Zarathustra said:I got 0.3mol/L as well but my working out seemed iffy - to say the least. I wrote that as sulfuric acid is diprotic it would be 2 times as many moles of sodium hydroxide - then multiplied it by the ratio given - 3/2 - so 0.3 mol/L - is this correct?
are u serious?! well... i got the titration wrong then... does it matter if we didnt round the volume to 1 significant figure? will we lose a mark for that?!coca cola said:for the titration the answer is just 0.100 mole, 0.3 is definately wrong, you and your friends proly took the 30ml instead of 10ml for the acid.
so you should lose one mark for it.
and for the volumn its 8 million litres to 1 sig.fig since the least accurate data in the question is to 1 sig.fig.
good luck with the physics and math ccsa trial if anyone of you do it.
ooh... was the answer D: 1.9???xeriphic said:yer I agree the fact that some of the questions asked wasn't even referred to the syllabus, by the way I wasn't so sure about the question in multiple choice about the pH of H2SO4