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Temperature

AP Chemistry Zumdahl 7E Chapter 5 Notes

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AP Chemistry A. Allan Chapter 5 - Gases 5.1 Pressure A. Properties of gases 1. Gases uniformly fill any container 2. Gases are easily compressed 3. Gases mix completely with any other gas 4. Gases exert pressure on their surroundings a. Pressure = force/area B. Measuring barometric pressure 1. The barometer a. Inventor - Evangelista Torricelli (1643) 2. Units a. mm Hg (torr) (1) 760 torr = Standard pressure b. newtons/meter2 = pascal (Pa) (1) 101,325 Pa = Standard pressure c. atmospheres (1) 1 atmosphere = Standard pressure 5.2 The Gas Laws of Boyle, Charles, and Avogadro A. Boyle's Law (Robert Boyle, 1627 - 1691) 1. the product of pressure times volume is a constant, provided the temperature remains the same kPV = a. P is inversely related to V

AP Chemistry Zumdahl 7E Chapter 1 Notes

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1 AP Chemistry A. Allan Chapter 1 Notes - Chemical Foundations 1.1 Chemistry: An Overview A. Reaction of hydrogen and oxygen 1. Two molecules of hydrogen react with one molecule of oxygen to form two molecules of water 2H2 + O2 ? 2H2O 2. Decomposition of water 2H2O ? 2H2 + O2 B. Problem Solving in Chemistry (and life) 1. Making observations 2. Making a prediction 3. Do experiments to test the prediction 1.2 The Scientific Method A. General Framework 1. Making observations a. Quantitative ( measurement) b. Qualitative (color, phase, shape, etc) 2. Making a prediction 3. Do experiments to test the prediction B. Vocabulary 1. Observation a. Something that is witnessed and can be recorded 2. Theory (Model)

inorganic chemistry lab report: Calorimeter – the science of measuring Heat

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Liu1 Experiment 8: Calorimeter ? the science of measuring Heat Objective: The objective of this experiment is to determine the specific heat capacity of an unknown metal and the heat of solution for the salt. Method: A calorimeter is a device used for calculate the enthalpy change of reaction, the science of measuring the heat of chemical reactions or physical change as well as heat capacity. The heat capacity of an object is the amount of heat needed to raise the temperature by 1K (or 1?C). The heat capacity of one gram of a substance is called its specific heat capacity.

Enzymes

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INQUIRY LAB: ENZYMES Overall Research Question: What Makes the Bubble Gum Stretch? Research Question: What conditions would affect the rate of an enzymatic reaction? Null Hypothesis: The pH and temperature will have an effect on the rate of enzymatic reactions. #1 Alternative Hypothesis: The pH and temperature will have an effect on the rate of enzymatic reactions. #2 Alternative Hypothesis: The pH and temperature will not have an effect on the rate of enzymatic reactions. Control Group: The pH level of 7 (neutral) Independent Variable: pH- 3,5,7,9,11 (I will get data for pH 5 and 7) Temperature- 4,21, 30, 40, 60 (In degrees Celsius) (I will get data for 30 and 40 degrees Celsius) Independent Variable: The pH level Dependent Variable: The rate of the enzyme reactions pH

Chapter 11

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Kinetic Theory Of Gases Postulates of the Kinetic Theory of Gases: A gas consists of a large number of tiny particles that are in constant, random motion The gas particles occupy a net volume so small in relation to the volume of their container that their contribution to the total volume can be ignored The collisions between particles and the walls of the container are perfectly elastic (no energy transfer) Kinetic Theory of Gases relates temperature to average kinetic energy Kinetic Theory of Gases (aka Kinetic Molecular Theory) can be used to explain the Gas Laws: Pressure-Volume Relationship (Boyle?s Law) P? 1/V or V ? 1/P (at constant n, T) Pressure-Temperature Relationship (Guy-Lussac?s Law) ?T, ?v ?v, ?P Volume-Temperature Relationship (Charles?s Law)

Math Review Answers

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AP BIO EQUATIONS AND FORMULAS REVIEW SHEET #1 Formulas: Mode = value that occurs most frequently in a data set Median = middle value that separates the greater and lesser halves of a data set Mean = sum of all data points divided by the number of data points Range = value obtained by subtracting the smallest observation (sample minimum) from the greatest (sample maximum) Standard Deviation = where = mean and n = size of the sample Example problem: One of the lab groups collected the following data for the heights (in cm) of their Wisconsin Fast Plants: 5.4 7.2 4.9 9.3 7.2 8.1 8.5 5.4 7.8 10.2 Find the mode, median, mean, and range. Show your work where necessary. 4.9 5.4 5.4 7.2 7.2 7.8 8.1 8.5 9.3 10.2 Mode:__5.4, 7.2 ___

Math Problems Answer

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AP BIO EQUATIONS AND FORMULAS REVIEW SHEET #1 Formulas: Mode = value that occurs most frequently in a data set Median = middle value that separates the greater and lesser halves of a data set Mean = sum of all data points divided by the number of data points Range = value obtained by subtracting the smallest observation (sample minimum) from the greatest (sample maximum) Standard Deviation = where = mean and n = size of the sample Example problem: One of the lab groups collected the following data for the heights (in cm) of their Wisconsin Fast Plants: 5.4 7.2 4.9 9.3 7.2 8.1 8.5 5.4 7.8 10.2 Find the mode, median, mean, and range. Show your work where necessary. 4.9 5.4 5.4 7.2 7.2 7.8 8.1 8.5 9.3 10.2 Mode:__5.4, 7.2 ___

Bob Jones PPT Notes -- Chapter 2b

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Energy and Matter Energy Energy the ability to do work Work Work a force moving matter through a distance Both energy and work are measured in joules (J). Forms of Energy Mechanical ? objects Kinetic ? moving Potential ? stored Thermal ? kinetic energy of atoms and molecules Forms of Energy Acoustic (sound) ? periodic, wave-like motion of atoms and molecules Electromagnetic ? moving electrons Chemical ? breaking and forming bonds Forms of Energy Nuclear ? from center of atom 6 Energy Conservation Despite Change ?the study of the flow of energy? Thermodynamics ?the law of conservation of mass-energy? (Conservation doesn?t refer to turning off the lights.) First Law of Thermodynamics ?the law of conservation of mass-energy?

Chemistry Chapter 1~3

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Lecture 1 (Chapter 1 ~ Chapter 3) Chapter 1 Chemistry ? The?study?of?the?composition,?structure,?and?properties?of?MATTER?and?CHANGES?it?undergoes? Scientific method ? Observation? o Observe? o Gather??Data? ? Qualitative?(Description)? ? Quantitative?(Number?[followed?by?unit])? ? Identify?Problem? o Known? o Unknown? ? Hypothesize? o If_____________?then_______________? ? Test?&?Collect?Data? ? Analyze?Data? ? Theorize? Branch of Chemistry ? Biochemistry? ? Organic?chemistry? ? Inorganic?chemistry? ? Etc.? Significant figures ? All??0?s?between?two?nonzero?=?significant? ? Place?holding??0?s?=?not?significant? ? All?nonzero?=?significant? ? All??0?s?on?the?right?of?the?non??0?s?=?significant? ? All??0?s?on?the?right?of?decimal,?except?place?holders?=?significant?

Chemistry Basics (1st half of chemistry books)

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CHAPTER ONE: Mass Kilogram (kg) Balance scale Volume Cubic Meter (m?) Graduated cylinder Temperature Kelvin (K) Thermometer Length Meters (m) Meter stick Time Seconds (sec) Stopwatch Energy Joules (J) (Measured Indirectly) Independent: what you control Dependent: what you measure or observe CHAPTER TWO: Ionic Compounds: 2 elements/ a metal & nonmetal Write the name of the metal (cation) Write the name of the non-metal (anion) with the suffix ?-ide? Polyatomic ions don?t change their name Molecular Compounds: 2 non-metals/ no hydrogen First word= name of first element with no name change Second word= name of second element with ending change to ?-ide? Prefix with mono, di, tri, tetra, penta, hexa, hepta, octa, nona, or deca

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