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2 H 2 O Carbon Monoxide
1,607 words1. State the five assumptions of the Kinetic-Molecular Theory of gases. a) Gases consist of large numbers of tiny particles. These particles, usually molecules or atoms, typically occupy a volume about 1000 times larger than occupied by the same number of particles in the liquid or solid state. Thus molecules of gases are much further apart than those of liquids or solids. Most of the volume occupied by a gas is empty space. This accounts for the lower density of gases compared to liquids and so...
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Nitric Acid Scientific American
825 wordsChemistry Connections of nitrogen - saltpeter, nitric acid, ammonia - were known long before invention of nitrogen in a free condition. In 1772 D. Rutherford, burning phosphorus and other substances in a glass bell, has shown that the gas remaining after combustion does not support breath and burning. He named it suffocating air. In 1787 A. Lavoisier has established, that the "vital" and "suffocating" gases included in air, are simple substances, and has offered the name "nitrogen." In 1784 G. C...
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Carbon Dioxide Uric Acid
925 wordsAim: Exretory System Excretory System Aim: To examine and understand the structure, function and differences between different types of excretory systems. The difference between excretion and egestion is that whereas excretion is the process of removing toxic waste by-products of the body s metabolism, egestion is the removal of indigestible remains / substances through the alimentary canal. Through egestion, substances that were not able to be used in the body are removed, and through excretion...
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Nobel Prize Chemical Warfare
1,487 wordsThe name Fritz Haber has long been associated with the well-known process of synthesizing ammonia from its elements. While primarily known for developing a process which ultimately relieved the world of dependence on Chilean ammonia, this twentieth century Nobel prize winner was also involved in the varying fortunes of Germany in World War I and in the rise to power of the Nazi regime. Haber was born on December 9, 1868 in Prussia. He was the son of a prosperous German chemical merchant and work...
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Nobel Prize Chemical Warfare
1,486 wordsThe name Fritz Haber has long been associated with the well-known process of synthesizing ammonia from its elements. While primarily known for developing a process which ultimately relieved the world of dependence on Chilean ammonia, this twentieth century Nobel prize winner was also involved in the varying fortunes of Germany in World War I and in the rise to power of the Nazi regime. Haber was born on December 9, 1868 in Prussia. He was the son of a prosperous German chemical merchant and work...
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Produce The Ammonia Ammonia Gas Nitrogen
251 wordsYou Haber Process HABER PROCESS You are to develop a new industrial plant in the area and a committee has decided that a new ammonia facility is to be built. This plant will use the Haber process in the ammonia production. The ammonia will eventually be used in the production of ammonium nitrate fertilizer. You are to discuss how the ammonia gas is to be produced and where your raw materials can be obtained. Combining Hydrogen (g) and Nitrogen (g) would produce the ammonia. First the gases would...
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Sulfuric Acid Nitric Acid
11,285 wordsPreparation And Mechanisms Of High And Low Preparation And Mechanisms Of High And Low Grade Explosives EXPLOSIVE FORMULAS Once again, persons reading this material should never attempt to produce any of the explosives described here. It is illegal and extremely dangerous to do so. Loss of life and limbs could easily result from a failed (or successful) attempt to produce any explosives or hazardous chemicals. These procedures are correct, however many of the methods given here are usually scaled...
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