It's the proper name for KCl.
What is "Potassium Chloride"?
It is the term for the material into which another material dissolves.
What is a solvent?
Chemical reaction equations are written in these units.
What are molecules or moles?
It's the common term for a solid solution of some other solid in a metal -- for example, steel.
What is an alloy?
It's the proper name for CO.
What is "Carbon Monoxide"?
The grouping of solvent molecules around a dissolved ion or molecule is called this.
What is "solvation?"
It is the material which is present in the least quantity based on the molar ratios needed for a given chemical reaction.
What is the limiting reagent?
It is the only kind of chemical formula that ionic compounds can have.
What is an empirical formula?
It's the proper name for K2CO3.
What is "Potassium Carbonate"?
When a polar covalent compound dissolves, it splits up into these.
What are "individual molecules?"
These are the two materials produced when a material containing only hydrogen and carbon is fully oxidized (burned) in oxygen.
What are carbon dioxide and water?
It is the term for the phase change from solid directly to gas.
What is sublimation?
It is the proper name for Fe(NO3)3.
What is "Iron (III) Nitrate"?
It is the term for the limit to how much of a material can dissolve in a given amount of a solvent?
What is "solubility" or "solubility limit?"
It is the percent yield when a reaction produces 49.0 grams of a material, when the theoretical yield was 50.0 grams.
What is 98%
It is the term for when a solid is formed by the addition of one liquid solution to another.
What is precipitation?
It's the proper name for Cu2SO4.
What is "Copper (I) Sulfate"?
These are the units in which molarity, the measure of concentration of a solute, are expressed.
What are moles per liter of solution?
It is the empirical formula of the 80 g of the compound formed when 32 g of sulfur are burned in oxygen.
What is SO3?
It is the lab or demonstration that we did that is represented by this chemical equation?
CO2 (s) --> CO2 (g)
This is the sublimation of CO2, which happened when we put the dry ice into water.