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For more information, please see full course syllabus of AP Chemistry
For more information, please see full course syllabus of AP Chemistry
AP Chemistry Precipitation Reactions
Lecture Description
Aqueous reactions take place in a water solution. Precipitation reactions result in an insoluble product that “crashes” out of solution. Many ionic compounds dissociate into their individual ions in water. Strong electrolytes and strong acids dissociate completely while weak electrolytes and weak acids stay in equilibrium with the neutral compound. Solubility guidelines and tables for ionic compounds help predict electrolyte strength and which products will be insoluble as well as listing exceptions. Example problems include what happens when magnesium nitrate and potassium iodide are mixed in solution.
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1 answer
Mon Sep 23, 2019 4:47 AM
Post by Tram on September 22, 2019
Hello prof. Raffi,
For the number in front of each chemical in a balanced equation, I figured that sometimes it is being referred to as mol, and sometimes as # of the atom.
For example, A + B --> C + 2D, 1 mol of A + 1 mol of B yields 1 mol of C & 2 mol of D. Let say if D is BaCl2, is it correct to say (with number 2 in front of BaCl2):
1/ 1 mol of A + 1 mol of B yields 1 mol of C & 2 mol of BaCl2?
2/ 1 molecule of A + 1 molecule of B yields 1 molecule of C & 2 molecule of BaCl2?
3/ 2 mol of BaCl2 has 1 mol of Ba and 2 mol of Cl?
4/ 2 molecules BaCl2 have 2 Ba atoms and 4 Cl atoms?
5/ In which case do I look at the balanced number as mol and which case # of particle?
Regards,
Tram
1 answer
Fri Jan 13, 2017 7:11 PM
Post by Areez Khaki on December 9, 2016
Hi professor, i dont understand why you would need to balance the reaction solution with the barium chloride example, you added a 2 to KCl to "balence the equation" what did you mean by that
1 answer
Sun Feb 22, 2015 7:45 PM
Post by Jason Smith on February 21, 2015
Is it possible for two soluble ionic compounds to mix together and create two non-soluable compounds?
1 answer
Sun Nov 2, 2014 2:48 AM
Post by David Gonzalez on November 1, 2014
Hi professor, great lecture! Always so thorough and informative in your explanations. I have one question: why does aqueous chemistry always take place in water? Can't the solvent be anything else? Thank you!
1 answer
Fri Jan 17, 2014 9:24 PM
Post by Jérémie Lessard on January 15, 2014
Hi Professor Hovasapian !
My question refers to the second example (part 26:10). If the ions do not react with each others, can we say that they are in an dynamic equilibrium ? (since there is no precipating species)
Thank you !
Jérémie
0 answers
Post by Professor Hovasapian on December 22, 2013
Hi Burhan.
I hope all is well with you.
The topics you mention run in a straight sequence one after the other for my course, so start with the Kinetics lesson and just move forward. The redox stuff is under Electrochemistry.
I hope that helps.
Best wishes.
Raffi
1 answer
Sun Dec 22, 2013 3:51 PM
Post by Burhan Akram on December 22, 2013
Hello Professor Raffi,
I live in B.C, Canada and the grade 12 Chemistry I am studying has the following,
1) Reaction Rates
2) Equilibrium
3) Solubility
4) Acids & Bases
5) Redox Reactions
Could you please tell me which lessons I should watch to help me study efficiently rather than watching lessons which I don't require for this course?
I would really appreciate that,
Thank You
Burhan
3 answers
Tue Dec 3, 2013 12:48 AM
Post by Alexis Yates on October 15, 2013
Is there a way to measure the level of dissociation of a compound mathematically of is it something that I should just try to memorize?
1 answer
Sun Sep 1, 2013 10:51 PM
Post by Stephanie Dahlström on September 1, 2013
You're a great teacher! I've had so much trouble understanding chemistry until I started watching your lectures. You make it really easy to understand. Thank you so much!
5 answers
Fri Feb 7, 2014 6:50 PM
Post by Antie Chen on April 14, 2013
What's the formula of acetic acid? I consider it should be CH3COOH, and one molecule contains 4 Hydrogen atoms.
What's the formula H2C2H3O2?
2 answers
Last reply by: Thomas Dykstra
Wed Jul 11, 2012 2:43 PM
Post by Pierre-Alexandre Leblanc on April 21, 2012
why cant we fast forward to examples on any videos