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zakruti.com » Knowledge, science, education » Crash Course
Precipitation Reactions: Crash Course Chemistry #9

Precipitation Reactions: Crash Course Chemistry #9

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Rating: 4.0; Vote: 1
A lot of ionic compounds dissolve in water, dissociating into individual ions. But when two ions find each other that form an insoluble compound, they suddenly fall out of solution in what's called a precipitation reaction. In this episode of Crash Course Chemistry, we learn about precipitation, precipitates, anions, cations, and how to describe and discuss ionic reactions. Pssst. we made flashcards to help you review the content in this episode! Find them on the free Crash Course App!
Date: 2022-04-04

Comments and reviews: 8


I need HELP! I have a lab coming up in 4 days. Objective: to determine the specific unknowns present in 5 different unknown solutions: an acid, a base, a chloride salt, a nitrate salt and a sodium salt. What do I add to make a ppt? I-ve done this before and everything I added just dissolved. HELP!
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I think they portrayed cations as an electrical cat because cations are positive anyways. I think they used Anne Hathaway catwomen because her name is Ann like in Anion and maybe she might have negative feelings when she first met batman aka Bruce Wayne. This is just my guess.
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I'm really enjoying Chemistry. It's great to review chemistry, a) to refresh my neural pathways, and b) to make sure I catch all the new stuff that got discovered since I last took inorganic chemistry. in 199. 5? I think?
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Is anyone else absolutely living for the adorable little element drawings that are put up when he talks about each element? Just me? Okay.
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On one slide, you have the precipitation reaction labeled as a redox reaction, and you have a lower case O in the nitrate ion.
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i hate you. you are not funny and neither are donald trump jokes. go back to your mom's basement and play animal crossing
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Hey! I take colloidal silver! (It's great too, and it doesn't turn you blue unless you're drinking upwards of 5L a day) LOL!
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9: 44 -one NaCl for every mol of Ag- but Ag in the first part of equation isn't attached also to NO3? don't their masses count?
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