\(1\,\text{g}\) of \( \mathrm{AB_2} \) is dissolved in \(50\,\text{g}\) of a solvent such that \( \Delta T_f = 0.689\,\text{K} \). When \(1\,\text{g}\) of \( \mathrm{AB} \) is dissolved in \(50\,\text{g}\) of the same solvent, \( \Delta T_f = 1.176\,\text{K} \). Find the molar mass of \( \mathrm{AB_2} \). Given \( K_f = 5\,\text{K kg mol}^{-1} \). \((\textit{Report to nearest integer.})\) Both \( \mathrm{AB_2} \) and \( \mathrm{AB} \) are non-electrolytes.
Given:
1. Formula for Freezing Point Depression:
The freezing point depression is given by: \[ \Delta T_f = i \cdot K_f \cdot m \] Where: - \( \Delta T_f \) is the freezing point depression, - \( i \) is the van't Hoff factor (number of particles the solute dissociates into), - \( K_f \) is the cryoscopic constant (5 K kg/mol), - \( m \) is the molality of the solution.
2. Molarity and Van't Hoff Factor:
For \( \text{AB}_2 \), the van't Hoff factor \( i = 3 \) (since \( \text{AB}_2 \) dissociates into 3 ions). Thus, the equation for \( \text{AB}_2 \) becomes:
\[ \Delta T_f = 3 \cdot K_f \cdot \left( \frac{1}{50 \times \text{molar mass of } \text{AB}_2} \right) \] For \( \text{AB} \), the van't Hoff factor \( i = 2 \) (since \( \text{AB} \) dissociates into 2 ions). The equation for \( \text{AB} \) becomes: \[ \Delta T_f = 2 \cdot K_f \cdot \left( \frac{1}{50 \times \text{molar mass of } \text{AB}} \right) \]
3. Solving for Molar Mass of \( \text{AB}_2 \):
For \( \text{AB}_2 \):
\[ 0.689 = 3 \cdot 5 \cdot \left( \frac{1}{50 \times \text{molar mass of } \text{AB}_2} \right) \] Solving for the molar mass of \( \text{AB}_2 \), we get: \[ \text{molar mass of } \text{AB}_2 = \frac{15}{50 \cdot 0.689} = 435 \, \text{g/mol}. \]
Final Answer: The molar mass of \( \text{AB}_2 \) is approximately 145 g/mol.

Inductance of a coil with \(10^4\) turns is \(10\,\text{mH}\) and it is connected to a DC source of \(10\,\text{V}\) with internal resistance \(10\,\Omega\). The energy density in the inductor when the current reaches \( \left(\frac{1}{e}\right) \) of its maximum value is \[ \alpha \pi \times \frac{1}{e^2}\ \text{J m}^{-3}. \] The value of \( \alpha \) is _________.
\[ (\mu_0 = 4\pi \times 10^{-7}\ \text{TmA}^{-1}) \]