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- dipole - Is the carbon atom in the carbon dioxide molecule partially . . .
In $\ce {CO2}$ 's symmetric vibrational mode, that symmetry is maintained But $\ce {CO2}$ has three other vibrational modes: a linear asymmetric vibrational mode, and two bending vibrational modes (the collection is nicely pictured here: Is carbon dioxide IR inactive?) Why is this important environmentally?
- Reaction between NaOH and CO2 - Chemistry Stack Exchange
So I wanted to know what the reaction between sodium hydroxide and carbon dioxide can be, and upon research I got 2 answers The first one is $$\\ce{CO2 + NaOH(aq) - gt; NaHCO3(aq)}$$ and the seco
- How does the relationship between carbonate, pH, and dissolved carbon . . .
Fish keepers use a table like the one below to determine dissolved $\\ce{CO2}$ by observing the color of a pH indicator in water with a known concentration carbonate solution (typically 4 degrees KH
- Is carbon dioxide slightly or highly soluble in water?
Carbon dioxide content in air is only 0 03%, but it is highly soluble in water unlike oxygen and one volume of CO2 dissolves in equal volume of water, the solubility being higher at low temperature From European Environment Agency: Carbon dioxide is a colourless, odourless gas, denser than air that occurs naturally in the earth's atmosphere
- Whats the diff between CO2 and beer gas? - Homebrew Talk
What is the major difference between using straight CO2 or using the beer gas mix? Can you taste any difference, is it more stable or stay in solution longer? The reason I am asking is because beer gas is a specialty gas at my supplier and is much more expensive and I am trying to understand
- Does CO2 dissolve in water? - Chemistry Stack Exchange
The amount of CO2 dissolved in water is proportional to the outer pressure At 20°C, 1 liter water dissolves about 1 7 g CO2 at normal pressure (1 atm) If the pressure is twice as large, the amount of dissolved CO2 is twice as much, 3 4 g
- Why is carbon dioxide nonpolar? - Chemistry Stack Exchange
I understand that polarity corresponds to an electronegativity difference and that the larger the electronegativity difference, the more polar the bond However, I have read that carbon dioxide is
- How much heat is needed to break CO2 down to CO?
Heating CO2 at atmospheric pressure: At 1000K it is still essentially all CO2 At 2000K: 98% CO2, 1 4% CO, 0 7% O2 At 3000K: 44% CO2, 36% CO, 16% O2, 4% O At 5000K: 50% CO, 50% O only at even higher temperature does significant atomic C appear (9% at 6000K) See Thermal decomposition of carbon dioxide in an argon plasma jet for more information
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