Chemistry In Context
9th Edition
ISBN: 9781259638145
Author: Fahlman, Bradley D., Purvis-roberts, Kathleen, Kirk, John S., Bentley, Anne K., Daubenmire, Patrick L., ELLIS, Jamie P., Mury, Michael T., American Chemical Society
Publisher: Mcgraw-hill Education,
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Question
Chapter 4.9, Problem 4.30YT
Interpretation Introduction
Interpretation:
The amount of carbon dioxide is Earth’s atmosphere is increasing; the reasons behind this has to be listed out.
Concept introduction:
- Ø Global warming is a serious environmental issue, in which there is an increase in the overall temperature of the earth by various factors.
- Ø Greenhouse gases are one type of gas which traps the heat within the system and thus it increases the overall temperature of the earth resulting global warming.
Examples:
- Ø Greenhouse effect: The heat near the earth surface gets trapped by the gases present in the earth atmosphere. The carbon dioxide is the primary gas that traps more heat.
- Ø Atmosphere: The atmosphere is defined as air that is layer of gases which surrounds the earth due to gravity of earth.
- Ø The earth atmosphere consists of layers such as thermosphere, mesosphere, stratosphere and troposphere depending on the temperature and its composition.
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Part 1
A student carried out an investigation to observe the effect of changing
concentration of sulfuric acid on the breakdown of calcium carbonate
(marble) chips. They changed the concentration of the acid between
each test but kept the size of the marble chips constant. The full equation
for the reaction and a graph of the overall results can be seen below.
CaCO3(s) + H₂SO4(aq) → CaSO4(aq) + CO2(g) + H₂O (1)
a)
b)
Rate of Reaction
*
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Explain, using collision theory, why the student obtained
these results, and state what they could conclude about the
effect of changing concentration of acid on the rate of reaction
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Part 2
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Chapter 4 Solutions
Chemistry In Context
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