Sodium hydrogen carbonate, NaHCO3, will decompose to sodium carbonate, Na2CO3, when heated. Decomposition formula is: 2NaHCO3(s) --> Na2CO3(s) + CO2(g) +H2O(g), when a 4.081g sample is heated containing both sodium hydrogen carbonate and sodium carbonate there was a mass loss of 0.636g. Find the percentage by mass of Na2CO3 in the original sample
I'm not 100% how to approach this question
So...mass loss is in the form of escaping gas. 0.636g gas has the same number of moles of CO2 and H2O, which have a combined molar mass of 44+18=62 g/mol. Therefore we have 0.636/62=0.01026 moles of CO2 and H2O forming.
By mole ratio, we have 0.02052 moles of NaHCO3. M(NaHCO3)=23+1+12+48=84g/mol, so the mass of sodium bicarbonate is 0.02052*84=1.723 grams of NaHCO3
This is 42.2% of the original sample so remaining 57.8% must have been from Na2CO3.
Someone check my working.
Let's say I have a blue solution
If i was trying to find the concentration of this solution using colorimetry I would set up several standard solutions, plot a calibration graph, etc. etc. but when i am shining a light into the blue solution, am i shining a blue light and detecting how much light is being transmitted through, or a complimentary light (e.g yellow) and seeing how much is being transmitted through?
On another note, is colorimetry specific colours or specific wavelengths, and if we are talking about those boxes with the RGB LED's, are those just referred to as colours or wavelengths?
A blue solution is something that reflects blue light but absorbs others. If you shone blue light onto the solution, you wouldn't have an absorbance. You would, as you've mentioned, shine a yellow light because the yellow light (green and red) is what is actually absorbed.