Answer:
a
Explanation:
cold water with no salt
B.
warm water with no salt
C.
warm, salty water
D.
cold, salty water
Answer:
Option 2
In process I & II entropy of the system increases proceed from left to right.
Explanation:
Entropy is an extensive property of the system. It means it depends on the amount or quantity of the system
In case for process 1
since one mole sodium chloride dissolve in water and it dissociate into two ions i.e. Na⁺ and Cl⁻
For process 2
CaCO₃(s) → CaO(s) + CO₂(g)
Change in gaseous moles = (Product moles - reactant moles)
⇒ Δng = 1
Since Δng > 0 it means randomness increases of the system from left to right. So, ΔS > 0
Processes I (dissolving NaCl) and II (decomposition of CaCO3) show an increase in entropy, whereas process III (freezing water) shows a decrease. Therefore, the entropy of the system increases for processes I and II, not III.
The student has asked which processes have an increasing entropy as they proceed from left to right. Entropy is a measure of the disorder or randomness in a system, and changes in entropy can be predicted based on phases changes, the dispersion of matter, and the change in the number of particles in a system.
For the process of dissolving NaCl (s) into Na+(aq) and Cl-(aq), entropy increases due to the dispersion of the solid into ions, hence increasing the randomness of the system. Therefore, process I has an increasing entropy. In process II, we have CaCO3 (s) decomposing into CaO (s) and CO2 (g), leading to an increase in the number of gaseous molecules, which significantly increases entropy compared to the original solid state. Lastly, process III involves the transition of H2O (l) into H2O (s), which means that water is going from a more disordered liquid state to a more ordered solid state, decreasing the entropy of the system.
Considering these details, the entropy increases for processes I and II but decreases for process III. Therefore, the correct answer to the student's question is option 2, which indicates that entropy increases for processes I and II.
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Answer is: the current solution is unsaturated.
Unsaturated solution means that more of a substance can be dissolve.
For example:
Solubility of potassium chlorate (KClO₃) at 100 grams of water at 80°C is 37.5 g, that means that all 37.5 g is completely dissolves, this is the saturated solution.
If we add 20 grams of potassium chlorate in 100 grams of water, there is less solute than the saturated solution, so this is unsaturated solution.
The current solution is .
Further explanation:
The maximum amount of solute particles that can be dissolved in fixed amount of solvent to form a saturated solution is called solubility of a salt. The units of solubility are often expressed as . Depending upon solubility the solution can be of three types:
1. Saturated solution
2. Unsaturated solution
3. Supersaturated solution
The saturated solution may be defined as a solution that has maximum amount of solute dissolved and that cannot accommodate any further solute. Such a solution has some undissolved substance at the bottom.
The unsaturated solution may be defined as the solution in which the solute concentration is smaller than the maximum amount that can be added and hence more amount can be easily added.
The supersaturated solution refers to the solution in which the solute concentration exceeds the maximum amount that can be added. Such a solution is prepared when a solution is heated to a certain temperature to dissolve this solute and then slowly cooled down to lower temperatures.
Since more solute can still be dissolved in the solution hence the current solution is unsaturated.
Learn more:
1. Determination of supersaturated solution: brainly.com/question/8834703
2. Type of mixture: brainly.com/question/11506142
Answer details:
Grade: High School
Subject: Chemistry
Chapter: Solutions
Keywords: solute, solvent,saturated solution,unsaturated solution,supersaturated solution, unsaturated and concentration.
He used a scientific method to conduct his experiment.
He wrote his results down as four parts of the atomic theory.
He verified Democritus’s idea that matter was composed of atoms.
its A) He reinterpreted and retested Joseph Proust’s results.