Things that made me scratch my head...
-- When you are told that compounds ie. in a solubility table are 'slightly soluble', how are you supposed to predict their states in a chemical equation?---In titrations, we know the 'known volume' goes in the conical flask, but is the exact volume measured out beforehand, before putting it all in the flask with the pipette, or is the volume measured against the markings of the flask as it fills up? An odd question, I know.
--When something says that reactants are 'stoichiometrically equivalent', does that mean that the number of mole of reactants are the same, eg. 2 mole of this and 2 mole of that.
--When balancing redox half equations... if there are some of the same ions, eg. H+, K+ on both sides, do they cancel like the electrons do? I havent come across any cases yet, but I heard it someplace, dun know if it's right. eg.
bla + bla + 4H+(aq) ----> bla + bla + 6H+(aq)
does it become...
bla + bla ----> bla + bla + 2H+(aq) ...?
Any help would be much welcomed.
:wave:
-- When you are told that compounds ie. in a solubility table are 'slightly soluble', how are you supposed to predict their states in a chemical equation?---In titrations, we know the 'known volume' goes in the conical flask, but is the exact volume measured out beforehand, before putting it all in the flask with the pipette, or is the volume measured against the markings of the flask as it fills up? An odd question, I know.
--When something says that reactants are 'stoichiometrically equivalent', does that mean that the number of mole of reactants are the same, eg. 2 mole of this and 2 mole of that.
--When balancing redox half equations... if there are some of the same ions, eg. H+, K+ on both sides, do they cancel like the electrons do? I havent come across any cases yet, but I heard it someplace, dun know if it's right. eg.
bla + bla + 4H+(aq) ----> bla + bla + 6H+(aq)
does it become...
bla + bla ----> bla + bla + 2H+(aq) ...?
Any help would be much welcomed.
:wave: