This question was asked in an assignment in my college. So we've been taught how to distinguish functional groups by IR and nothing much.
So I request someone to please explain the answer in detail.
I think that this question has great potential for a canonical answer (read: me regurgitating my notes) if it is broadened to "How can one tell if a vibrational mode is IR- or Raman-active?"
It is just a shame that it is so homework-ish right now.
I don't blame OP for it, he does not seem to have the prerequisite knowledge to determine how vibrational spectra work
We already discussed the rose bengal question in great detail.
I feel that this is really the same thing, just at a lower level, one can expect OP to search on Google (and searching for this will of course yield a lot of information) but I think it is not fair to expect them to self-study molecular symmetry if they are in high school.
and without knowledge of symmetry, most of the hits are presumably incomprehensible
I am glad that it has not been closed yet.
user116211
@orthocresol So, if you think it would be beneficial to have a canonical post on the topic, why not propose it at the meta? I'm sure the community would approve it; and then the the post can be created. It would help in the future.
Physics - Stack Exchange is not a problem solving or review service. If you have a question about a specific problem, narrow it down to the specific concept that is giving you trouble, show effort to address the issue yourself, and ask about that. If the question can be answered by a quick Google search, it's off topic.
The homework policy is a constant source of confusion for new (and sometimes established) users.
We see this confusion, for example, when users respond to closures based on the homework policy by defending their post with "This is not a homework problem", or similar.
Some users have even been con...
Abstract: Analyzing the data from the last replace-the-homework-policy question was inconclusive. So back to the drawing board, or really back to our starting point: what kinds of questions do we really want to see closed? In particular, what are better ways to characterize our actual reasons for...
Metaboric acid is the name for a family of inorganic compounds formed by the dehydration of boric acid. Metaboric acids are colourless solids with the empirical formula HBO2. There are three forms of metaboric acid, all are white solids. One form of metaboric acid is molecule, and the other forms are polymers.
== Preparation ==
Heating of boric acid at 80-100 °C releases water to give orthorhombic metaboric acid: 3 B(OH)3 → (BOH)3O3 + 3 H2O
This form is molecular, consisting of discrete trimers. This molecule has C3h symmetry and forms a sheet-like structure, similar to that of boric acid itself...
Lithium pyroborate ($\ce{Li2B4O7}$) is the salt of lithium ($\ce{Li}$) and pyroboric acid ($\ce{H2B4O7}$).
Nomenclature
The prefix ortho- designates an acid with the maximum number of hydroxyl ($\ce{OH}$) groups. For boron ($\ce{B}$), orthoboric acid is $\ce{H3BO3}$ (also written as $\ce{B(OH...
Lithium pyroborate ($\ce{Li2B4O7}$) is the salt of lithium ($\ce{Li}$) and pyroboric acid ($\ce{H2B4O7}$).
Nomenclature
The prefix ortho- designates an acid with the maximum number of hydroxyl ($\ce{OH}$) groups [reference]. For boron ($\ce{B}$), orthoboric acid is $\ce{H3BO3}$ (also written ...
@orthocresol Actually, no, I refuse to claim knowledge on boranes, except for the 2-electron-3-centre bond in B2H6. And yeah, I should have included dialkylborohydrides in the list above xD
What is the structure of $\ce{N2O3}$
My attempt: $$O=N-O-N=O$$
Also in my structure atoms are getting octet. Then still it is not correct. Can I know where I am going wrong?
What is the correct structure?
Well if you really want peer pressure that bad, right a BS answer to some random post and then get three people on the chat to downvote it and then delete it immediately
Lithium pyroborate ($\ce{Li2B4O7}$) is the salt of lithium ($\ce{Li}$) and pyroboric acid ($\ce{H2B4O7}$).
Nomenclature
The prefix ortho- designates an acid with the maximum number of hydroxyl ($\ce{OH}$) groups [reference]. For boron ($\ce{B}$), orthoboric acid is $\ce{H3BO3}$ (also written ...
> The development of electrospray ionization for the analysis of biological macromolecules[4] was rewarded with the attribution of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry to John Bennett Fenn in 2002. (cool)
If I'm describing an electrospray ionization unit, do I say "electrospray needle voltage is 4000 V" or "electrospray capillary tube voltage is 4000 V"?
or is it "emitter" or "tip"?
In Russian, it is "Voltage at the spraying capillary", but that might be different in English
A centrifugal evaporator is a device used in chemical and biochemical laboratories for the efficient and gentle evaporation of solvents from many samples at the same time, and samples contained in microtitre plates. If only one sample required evaporation then a rotary evaporator is most often used. The most advanced modern centrifugal evaporators not only concentrate many samples at the same time, they eliminate solvent bumping and can handle solvents with boiling points of up to 220 °C. This is more than adequate for the modern high throughput laboratory.
== Design ==
A centrifugal evaporator...
> We invented the centrifugual vacuum concentrator and decades after this breakthrough innovation, scientists around the world continue to use Thermo Scientific Savant SpeedVac concentrators to remove solvents from their samples.
@Rubisco That's PDF formatting. I'm too tired to write a poem about vacuum evaporators now
> If solvents remove from your samples you wish, Say, some bicarbonate from your Petri dish, Take our concentrator, don't ever be shy [compose the rest]
Hey. I'm working through a pre-lab in my manual right now. In the procedures, I'm told that I'll need to "gently shake the jar or stir it with a spatula before weighing," and "be prepared to explain to your instructor why this step is important." I don't recall anything from the lectures or the book about why that might be important. Unfortunately, my Googling skills are not powerful enough to solve this one :/ ...anyone have any ideas?
...also, I'm not really used to this SE site...would the above be a good question to post on the main site?
...to clarify; the above is an excerpt from the lab manual instructions for an experiment called "Separation of Mixture," where the mixture involved is NH4Cl + SiO2 + NaCl. The step I quoted from is referring to the mixture of all three items, before they're weighed on an analytical balance before we start separating things.
@Shokhet Likely the first thing prior to the separation of the three compounds is to set up properly the experiment. Like getting the jar for the mixture, and the three components. The experiment does not ask you "to remove a layer of NH4Cl" that is on top of a layer of SiO2 (or NaCl).
Indeed, if the three components are well mixed with each other, you'll have grains of SiO2 side by side to crystals of NaCl and NH4Cl. Then it is up to chemical or/and physical methods divide the mixture again.
In tune of sequential questions like: Is SiO2 soluble in water (think about sand, often SiO2 is a major component of sand)? Hm, no. yet the two salts. So addition of water generates a slurry, once you filter the suspension, you get the SiO2 off ( -> filtercake); the salts stay in solution ( -> filtrate).
So what you're saying, @Buttonwood, is that it's not important to shake the mixture up before it's weighed, but the reason we need to shake it up at the beginning is to make sure that it's properly set up for the other parts of the experiment?
As an aside, I have to say I love the tags in the room description for the fun of it; the one I like best is the one that says welcome :D