1. What are the advantages of high performance liquid chormatography for the analysis of durgs compared to an analysis technique based on column chromatography? Hmm...
2. In gas liquid chromatography, why is the column packed with very fine particles?
3. AAS: A solution of distilled water can give an absorbance reading that was not zero. Suggest a reason for this.
According to my teacher, the answer is that the water may be contaminated and the contaminants might absorb light, but the glass might also absorb. Glass? I thought AAS involved spraying solution into a flame. You don't have something like a beaker holding the solution, do you?
4. What does a flame ionisation detector (gas liquid chromatography do)?
5. Last, quick question-- 2.200g sample of an unknown organic compound was extracted from plant material. When burnt in oxygen, hydrogen in the ocmpound was converted to 1.32g of h20, carbon to 3.23g of CO2 and the remainder of the compound was oxygen. Find the empirical formulao f the compound.
For this, I was wondering, how do we find the number of moles of oxygen? I got CH2O3 as answer, and I figured I'd done something wrong 'cause the answer's CH2O.
2. In gas liquid chromatography, why is the column packed with very fine particles?
3. AAS: A solution of distilled water can give an absorbance reading that was not zero. Suggest a reason for this.
According to my teacher, the answer is that the water may be contaminated and the contaminants might absorb light, but the glass might also absorb. Glass? I thought AAS involved spraying solution into a flame. You don't have something like a beaker holding the solution, do you?
4. What does a flame ionisation detector (gas liquid chromatography do)?
5. Last, quick question-- 2.200g sample of an unknown organic compound was extracted from plant material. When burnt in oxygen, hydrogen in the ocmpound was converted to 1.32g of h20, carbon to 3.23g of CO2 and the remainder of the compound was oxygen. Find the empirical formulao f the compound.
For this, I was wondering, how do we find the number of moles of oxygen? I got CH2O3 as answer, and I figured I'd done something wrong 'cause the answer's CH2O.