Answer:
Binding affinity measures the strength of the interaction between a molecule to its ligand; it is expressed in terms of the equilibrium dissociation constant; and the higher value of this constant, the more weaker the binding between the molecule and the ligand is. On the other hand, small constans means that the interaction is tight. So "C" binds most tightly to the enzyme and "D" binds least tightly.
Answer:
To obtain the pH of 8.0, the concentration of NaOCl needs to be 0.9 M in the 0.3 M HOCl solution
Explanation:
This problem can be solved by Henderson-Hasselbalch equation, which gives relation between the concentration of acid, its salt, pKa and the pH of the solution. This equation is given as,
By placing the known variables in the above equation we get,
The above calculations show that the required concentration of NaOCl is 0.9 M.
Answer:
3,8×10⁻⁵ mol/L of potassium permanganate solution
Explanation:
To calculate concentration in mol/L you must convert the 3,8 umol to moles and 100 mL to liters, knowing 1 umol are 1×10⁻⁶mol and 1L are 1000 mL.
3,8 umol × (1×10⁻⁶mol / 1 umol ) = 3,8×10⁻⁶mol of potassium permanganate.
100 mL × ( 1L / 1000 mL) = 0,100 L
Thus, concentration in mol/L is:
3,8×10⁻⁶mol / 0,100 L = 3,8×10⁻⁵ mol/L of potassium permanganate solution
I hope it helps!
3,5, and 1 i think maybe i uhm yeah
Explanation:
Ionic equation
NaCl(aq) --> Na+(aq) + Cl-(aq)
Na2SO4(aq) --> 2Na+(aq) + SO4^2-(aq)
In NaCl solution, 1 mole of Na+ is dissociated in 1 liter of solution while in Na2SO4, 2 moles of Na+ is dissociated in 1 liter of solution.
Molecular weight of NA2SO4 = (23*2) + 32 + (16*4)
= 142 g/mol
Molecular weight of NaCl = 23 + 35.5
= 58.5 g/mol
Masses
% Mass of NA+ in Na2SO4 = mass of Na+/total mass of Na2SO4 * 100
= 46/142 * 100
= 32.4%
% Mass of NA+ in NaCl = mass of Na+/total mass of NaCl * 100
= 23/58.5 * 100
= 39.3%
Therefore, the % mass of Na+ in NaCl and Na2SO4 are different so it cannot be used.
You cannot substitute Na2SO4 directly for NaCl based on mass since they have different molar masses. The same mass of Na2SO4 will provide more Na+ ions than NaCl, leading to a change in the Na+ ion concentration.
No, you cannot substitute the same number of grams of Na2SO4 for the NaCl in a solution. This is because NaCl and Na2SO4 have different molar masses and therefore different numbers of moles per gram. The concentration of a solution is determined by the number of moles of solute per unit volume of solvent, not the mass. Hence, using the same mass of a different compound would alter the concentration of Na+ ions in the solution.
For instance, if one mole of NaCl gives us one mole of Na+, one mole of Na2SO4 will provide two moles of Na+. In other words, the same mass of Na2SO4 contains more Na+ ions than the same mass of NaCl. So using the same mass of Na2SO4 in place of NaCl will result in a solution with a higher Na+ ion concentration.
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