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- 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
- Why does Co2+ have 7 electrons in the 3d orbital, and not 5 like Mn?
Why does Co2+ have 7 electrons in the 3d orbital, and not 5 like Mn? Ask Question Asked 11 years, 4 months ago Modified 7 years, 4 months ago
- 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
- Baking Soda + Citric Acid + Water = CO2, how much though?
Baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) + citric acid react when mixed with water to form some amount of carbon dioxide gas ($\ce {CO2}$) I am trying to determine what percentage of the products is carbon dioxide: in other words, how much does reaction make?
- 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
- Why is carbon dioxide considered a Lewis acid?
$\ce {CO2}$ is considered a Lewis acid How it is an acid? According to Lewis: “species that accept an electron pair are acids” But $\ce {CO2}$ can't accept electron pairs because oxygen and carbon
- 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
- reaction mechanism - Why NaOH (s,l) + CO2 (g) → Na2CO3 (s)? Why not . . .
$\ce {2NaOH + CO2 <=> Na2CO3 + H2O}$ tends to favor more gas molecules with fewer atoms apiece, which is seen to be the left side (the sodium compounds, even if ionic, exist in the gas phase as neutral clusters of said ions)
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