The weakest intermolecular force.
What is London Dispersion Forces (LDF)?
When the substance transforms into a new substance irreversibly.
What is chemical change?
This agent slows down chemical reactions.
What is inhibitor?
Citrus fruits like lemons and limes taste sour because they contain high amounts of this organic compound.
What is citric acid?
The liquid part of a solution.
What is solvent?
The phase transition of a liquid (or solid) into a gas.
What is vaporization?
Energy of condition or position.
What is potiental?
This substance lowers the activation energy to speed up a reaction.
What is catalyst?
A solution with this exact number on the pH scale is considered perfectly neutral.
What is 7?
When a solution cannot dissolve any more solute, the solution is?
The unit of temperature scientifically measured in.
What is Kelvin?
The law of conservation of matter.
What is energy cannot be created or destroyed; it can only be transformed?
When reactions occur, this theory states that reactant particles must collide.
This common laboratory indicator paper turns red in acidic solutions and blue in basic solutions.
What is litmus paper?
How can outer forces speed up/slow down the dissolving process?
What is heating/stirring/cooling?
Where a liquid climbs through narrow spaces, i.e. a paper towel absorbing water.
What is capillary action?
The minimum amount of energy required to start a chemical reaction.
What is Activation Energy?
This was taught to us as the person who takes the longest time to get ready.
What is reaction rates?
This term describes the chemical reaction between an acid and a base that produces water and a salt.
What is neutralization?
This is a universal solvent.
What is water?
The encounter between two objects where momentum and kinetic energy are conserved.
What is Elastic Collision?
The amount of energy needed to raise the temperature of one gram of substance by one Celsius.
What is Specific Heat?
The more of this, the faster the reaction, (ie. a star-shaped ice cube in a cup of water compared to a sphere-shaped ice cube.)
What is surface area?
According to this theory, a base is defined specifically as a chemical substance that accepts a hydrogen ion (proton).
What is the Brønsted-Lowry theory?
A solution with more solute dissolved than normally possible is..
What is a supersaturated solution?