1.0 x 10-6 mol L-1
1.0 x 10-5 mol L-1
1.0 x 10-8 mol L-1
1.0 x 10-7 mol L-1
BOH ⇌ B+ +OH-
Kb =\(\frac{[B^+][OH^-]}{[BOH]}\)
\(\therefore\) 1×10-12 = 0.01 [OH- ]2
(\(\because\) [OH- ]=[B+ ])
\(\therefore\) [OH- ]2 =10−14
\(\therefore\) [OH- ] =10−7
M \(\Rightarrow\) 1.0×10-7 mol L-1
Therefore, the correct option is (D): 1.0×10-7 mol L-1
The standard heat of formation, in kcal/mol, of $Ba^{2+}$ is:
Given: Standard heat of formation of SO₄²⁻(aq) = -216 kcal/mol, standard heat of crystallization of BaSO₄(s) = -4.5 kcal/mol, standard heat of formation of BaSO₄(s) = -349 kcal/mol.
A stream of superheated steam (2 MPa, 300°C) mixes with another stream of superheated steam (2 MPa, 400°C) through a steady-state adiabatic process. The flow rates of the streams are 3 kg/min and 2 kg/min, respectively. This mixture then expands in an adiabatic nozzle to a saturated mixture with quality of 0.77 and 1 kPa. Neglect the velocity at the nozzle entrance and the change in potential energies. The velocity at the nozzle exit (in m/s) is ......... (rounded off to two decimal places).
Use the following data:
At 2 MPa, 300 °C: Specific enthalpy of superheated steam = 3024.2 kJ/kg
At 2 MPa, 400 °C: Specific enthalpy of superheated steam = 3248.4 kJ/kg
At 1 kPa: Specific enthalpy of saturated water = 29.3 kJ/kg
At 1 kPa: Specific enthalpy of saturated vapour = 2513.7 kJ/kg
The current passing through the battery in the given circuit, is:
Three identical heat conducting rods are connected in series as shown in the figure. The rods on the sides have thermal conductivity 2K while that in the middle has thermal conductivity K. The left end of the combination is maintained at temperature 3T and the right end at T. The rods are thermally insulated from outside. In steady state, temperature at the left junction is \(T_1\) and that at the right junction is \(T_2\). The ratio \(T_1 / T_2\) is
Enthalpy Change refers to the difference between the heat content of the initial and final state of the reaction. Change in enthalpy can prove to be of great importance to find whether the reaction is exothermic or endothermic.
dH = dU + d(PV)
The above equation can be written in the terms of initial and final states of the system which is defined below:
UF – UI = qP –p(VF – VI)
Or qP = (UF + pVF) – (UI + pVI)
Enthalpy (H) can be written as H= U + PV. Putting the value in the above equation, we obtained:
qP = HF – HI = ∆H
Hence, change in enthalpy ∆H = qP, referred to as the heat consumed at a constant pressure by the system. At constant pressure, we can also write,
∆H = ∆U + p∆V
To specify the standard enthalpy of any reaction, it is calculated when all the components participating in the reaction i.e., the reactants and the products are in their standard form. Therefore the standard enthalpy of reaction is the enthalpy change that occurs in a system when a matter is transformed by a chemical reaction under standard conditions.