femboys4life
Active Member
- Joined
- Aug 18, 2024
- Messages
- 182
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- Female
- HSC
- 2024
that makes 2 of us bbg my dms r free anytimeyeah no fr i don’t know what’s up with me, maybe im secretly a masochist
that makes 2 of us bbg my dms r free anytimeyeah no fr i don’t know what’s up with me, maybe im secretly a masochist
no I dont think sohave answers been posted yet?
barium and lead precipitate with the sulfate so its invalidwhat did people say for 27 - the barium and lead question
i put B for 2 and C for 17What was the answer for Q2(cycad leaching stuff) and 17(titration curve, identify acid) for MCQ?
Lol I was hesitant putting B as well because I thought that was contradictory, but ended up putting it anyway.Same, but why did Q2 option B say low solubility toxin, I thought cycasin was highly soluble?
But the alcohol and water don't mix so wouldn't you not consider the entire volume? Just the halves that go to the water and alcohol respectivelyThe reason that a Keq value of 0.53 is incorrect is due to the fact that you can’t do 0.1 - [BrCH2COOH](aq) to calculate [BrCH2COOH](octanol). This is because of the keyword “an AQUEOUS solution of 0.1M bromoacetic acid is shaken with an equal volume of octan-1-ol. This means that the concentration of bromoacetic acid in the entire solution is 0.05 M. Thus, instead of calculating the concentration of bromoacetic acid in water this way, you must instead replace [BrCH2COOH](aq) in the Ka expression with (0.1 - 9.18*10^3 - x) where x is [BrCH2COOH](octanol).
Because the concentration of bromoacetic acid in octanol and in water are not contributing to a singular molarity, it isn’t possible to do a simple 0.1 - [BrCH2COOH](aq) to solve the question.
I added mass of HCL and carbonate for mass of solution.For question 36 - the calculating the enthalpy of reaction between HCL and NaHCO3 - does the mass include the 14.7g NaHCO3 and the mass of the solution? do you also have to minus the CO2 produced?
idk- i didnt, but i think it works out to like 4 g of Na in the solution at the end, so its not like its insignificantFor question 36 - the calculating the enthalpy of reaction between HCL and NaHCO3 - does the mass include the 14.7g NaHCO3 and the mass of the solution? do you also have to minus the CO2 produced?
surelysurely someone has solutions up by now?
noDo we have to add the mass of the solid?
surely yes: https://www.cognitotuition.com/blog/2024-hsc-chemistry-worked-solutions-by-past-state-ranking-tutorssurely