Answer:
See the attached file for the structure
Explanation:
See the attached file
Answer: D
Explanation:
Km value is a signature of the enzyme. It is the characteristic feature of a particular enzymes for a specific substrate. Km denotes the affinity of the enzyme for substrate. The lesser the numerical value of Km, the affinity of the enzyme for the substrate is more.
In the velocity x substrate graph in a fixed quantity if enzyme. As substrate concentration is increase, the velocity is also increasing at the initial phase but the curve fatten afterwards. This is because as more substrate is added, all enzymes molecules become saturated. Further increase in substrate cannot make any effect in the reaction velocity.
The maximum velocity is called Vmax. Km is the concentration of substrate that Vmax is half.
The larger the numerical value of Km, the lesser the enzyme binds the substrate
Answer:
(a)
(b)
(c)
Explanation:
Hello,
(a) In this case, such refrigerant, we can notice that at the given conditions, the initial entropy from property tables (Cengel 7th ed) is:
Now, for the final condition, we first need to compute the initial specific volume as it remains the same (rigid tank) after the thermodynamic process:
Then, at 400 kPa we evaluate the given volume that is also between the liquid and vapor specific volume, thus, we calculate the quality at the end of the process:
With it, we compute the final entropy:
Finally, entropy change for the refrigerant turns out:
(b) In this case, by using the first law of thermodynamics we compute the acquired heat by the refrigerant from the heat source by computing the initial and final internal energy respectively (no work is done):
Hence:
Finally, the entropy change of the heat source (which release the heat, therefore it is negative):
(c) Then, the total entropy change or the entropy generation for the process is:
Which has thermodynamic agreement as it is positive
Regards.
The entropy changes in this process can be partially calculated using principles from thermodynamics. However, without the exact heat transfer, not all values can be determined.
The calculation of the entropy change in this thermodynamic process involves principles from thermodynamics and requires steps to determine the initial and final states of the refrigerant. First, we would need to find the entropy at the initial and final states using the refrigerant properties table for refrigerant-134a and the provided information (200 kPa and 40% quality initially, 400 kPa finally). The entropy change of the refrigerant is the difference between the final and initial entropy.
Next, the entropy change of the heat source is calculated as the heat transfer divided by the absolute temperature of the source. However, the problem does not provide the amount of heat transferred from the source, making it impossible to determine this value directly.
Finally, in an isolated system, the total entropy change of the process is the sum of the entropy changes of the refrigerant and the heat source. Here, the precise values cannot be calculated due to a lack of specific data including exact heat transfer.
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Answer:
1.25 g
Explanation:
Now we have to use the formula;
N/No = (1/2)^t/t1/2
N= mass of cesium-137 left after a time t (the unknown)
No= mass of cesium-137 present at the beginning = 5.0 g
t= time taken for 5.0 g of cesium-137 to decay =60 years
t1/2= half life of cesium-137= 30 years
Substituting values;
N/5= (1/2)^60/30
N/5= (1/2)^2
N/5= 1/4
4N= 5
N= 5/4
N= 1.25 g
Therefore, 1.25 g of cesium-137 will remain after 60 years.
B 30%
C 20%
D 10%