CxHy + O2 --> H2O + CO2
What is combustion?
Moles per liter.
What is molarity?
Sodium chloride and silver nitrate solutions are mixed.
What are sodium & nitrate ions?
NaCl
Na^+ & Cl^-
The most essential piece of lab equipment used in a titration.
Involving a transfer of protons.
What is acid-base?
Moles per kilogram.
What is molality?
Ferrous chloride (FeCl2) is mixed with plumbous acetate (PbAc2).
What are iron(II) ion and acetate ion?
Ca(OH)2
Ca^2+ & 2 OH^-
The name of the chemical being dispensed in a titration?
What is the titrant?
Involving a transfer of electrons.
What is oxidation-reduction ("redox")?
Fraction of standardized quantities within a mixture.
What is mole fraction?
Milk of Magnesia (conc. magnesium hydroxide) is mixed with aqueous hydrochloric acid.
What is chloride ion?
NH4C2H3O2
What is NH4^+ & C2H3O2^-?
The name of the chemical being titrated?
What is the analyte?
Whenever solute-solute interactions predominate over solute-solvent interactions.
What is precipitation?
The stock concentration of a 100-mL aliquot to be diluted to 1-L and 0.5 molar concentration.
What is 5 M ("molar")?
Barium bicarbonate is dissolved in sulfuric acid.
H2SO4
What is H^+ & HSO4^-?
The name of the process by which an unknown titrant's concentration is determined via a titration and stoichiometry.
What is standardization?
Formation of a gas due to metathesis of these three specific compounds, all of which are weak electrolytes.
What are H2CO3, H2SO3, and NH4OH?
A 0.165-g sample of HSO3NH2 (MM=97) requires 20.0 mL of this KOH standard to reach the equivalence point (a.k.a. the "stoichiometric point").
What is 0.0851 M KOH?
The neutralization of any strong acid by any strong base, and vice-versa.
What are the conjugates species of the strong acid & base?
Hg2SO4
What is no dissociation?
The most important "point" throughout a titration whereby stichometry is achieved.
What is the equivalence point?