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Chemistry 8 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

Totally stumped on lab, anybody? Suppose that the volatile impurities in the crucible are not burned off while cleaning the crucible but are removed during the experiment. Is the reported mass percent of water in the hydrated salt too high or too low?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

I could really use some more info, but I will try to answer it as is... If you don't properly clean a crucible before weighing it, the mass that you record will be greater than the actual mass of the crucible. If that extra weight is lost during the course of an experiment and you reweigh the full crucible later, you will not account for some of the product generated; that is, your final mass of the full crucible minus the original mass of the crucible will generate a value lesser than the one that you SHOULD. So, for this experiment, I gather that you placed in a crucible some sort of hydrated salt and then heated it to remove the water. If, in addition to removing water, you also removed some sort of impurity from the crucible, it is going to appear that you have lost more water weight than you actually have. So, you will be reporting a mass percent of water that is too high.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

IF THE BURNING IF MAGNESIUM IS INCOMPLETE HOW WILL this procedural error affect the reported mass of : 1- MAGNESIUM in MAGNESIUM oxide 2- oxygen in MAGNESIUM oxide

OpenStudy (anonymous):

IF THE BURNING IF MAGNESIUM IS INCOMPLETE HOW WILL this procedural error affect the reported mass of : 1- MAGNESIUM in MAGNESIUM oxide 2- oxygen in MAGNESIUM oxide

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