Preview Extract
1.12 Why do physical properties play a role in chemistry if they do not involve any chemical
changes?
Physical properties can be used to identify substances in qualitative and quantitative
analysis and can provide a wide range of useful information.
1.13 Physical properties may change because of a chemical change. For example, the color of
an egg โwhiteโ changes from clear to white because of a chemical change when it is cooked.
What is another common situation in which a chemical change also leads to a physical change?
The โrustingโ of iron is a chemical change. A chemical reaction changes the metal to a new
compound. The rust formed is a brittle, orange-red compound with very different
properties than iron.
1.14 Which part of the description of a compound or element refers to its physical properties
and which to its chemical properties?
(a) Calcium carbonate is a white solid with a density of 2.71 g/cm3. It reacts readily with an acid
to produce gaseous carbon dioxide.
(b) Gray powdered zinc metal reacts with purple iodine to give a white compound.
(a) The first sentence describes physical properties; the second sentence describes a
chemical property.
(b) The sentence generally describes a chemical property, however the stated colors are
physical properties.
Observations and Models
1.15 We used the example of a football game to emphasize the nature of observations.
Describe another example where deciding how to โcountโ subjects of interest could affect the
observation.
The number of cities located in a state depends on how a city is defined. We would need to
specify what population size is makes a city. Our results would vary depending on that
size.
1.16 Complete the following statement: Data that have a small random error but otherwise fall
in a narrow range are (a) accurate, (b) precise, or (c) neither.
These data could be precise but not necessarily accurate.
1.17 Complete the following statement: Data that have a large systematic error are (a)
accurate, (b) precise, (c) neither.
(b) Precise. Data that have large systematic error may still be precise. Accuracy is how
close our data is to the actual value. Large systematic error means the data will not be
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close to the actual value but they will be off by about the same amount. Precision is the
repeatability of your data. Precise data will agree closely but may not be close to the true
value.
1.18 Two golfers are practicing shots around a putting green. Each golfer takes 20 shots.
Golfer 1 has 7 shots within 1 meter of the hole, and the other 13 shots are scattered around the
green. Golfer 2 has 17 shots go into a small sand trap near the green and three just on the green
near the trap. Which golfer is more precise? Which is more accurate?
Golfer 2 is more precise because his efforts are grouped more tightly about a central point
(mean) even if itโs not the intended spot. Golfer 1 is more accurate as there are more shots
very close to the accepted โvalueโ (the hole).
1.19 Use your own words to explain the difference between deductive and inductive
reasoning.
In deductive reasoning, facts are considered and conclusions are drawn from this
information. In inductive reasoning, you first infer what seems to be accurate or true, and
then find ways to determine if later observations fit the inferred conclusion.
1.20 Suppose you are waiting at a corner for a bus. Three different routes pass this particular
corner. You see busses pass by from the two routes you are not interested in taking. When you
say to yourself, โMy bus must be next,โ what type of reasoning (deductive or inductive) are you
using? Explain your answer.
Deductive reasoning is being applied in this case. The first two buses represent pieces of
information that are processed and lead to the conclusion that the โdesiredโ bus must be
next.
1.21 When a scientist looks at an experiment and then predicts the results of other related
experiments, which type of reasoning is she using? Explain your answer.
This is inductive reasoning. Inductive reasoning is the reverse of deductive. A scientist
makes predictions and then tries to prove the prediction by later observations. Deductive
reasoning involves starting with facts and then drawing conclusions from those.
1.22
What is the difference between a hypothesis and a question?
A hypothesis is a statement related to observation(s). The hypothesis is either accepted or
rejected based upon experimentation. A question is simply posed.
1.23 Should the words theory and model be used interchangeably in the context of science?
Defend your answer using web information.
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The word โtheoryโ implies something more advanced and supported than a model. When a
model makes predictions and all observations are consistent with these observations, then
the model may be described as a theory.
1.24
What is a law of nature? Are all scientific laws examples of laws of nature?
A law of nature is an irrefutable, self-evident fact. Not all scientific laws are examples of
laws of nature.
Numbers and Measurements
1.25 Describe a miscommunication that can arise because units are not included as part of the
information.
Discussing the time of day and omitting PM or AM. If you are supposed to meet someone
at 9:00 but they didnโt say in the evening or in the morning, the meeting might not occur.
Another example might be negotiating a price while trying to buy something.
1.26
What is the difference between a qualitative and a quantitative measurement?
A quantitative measurement provides information as to how much analyte is present. A
qualitative measurement answers the question, โis the analyte present?โ
1.27 Identify which of the following units are base units in the SI system: grams, meters,
joules, liters, and amperes.
Meters and amperes are base units. The other base units are: kilograms, seconds, kelvins,
moles, and candelas. Therefore grams are not a base unit. Joules and liters are both
derived units.
1.28
What is a โderivedโ unit?
A derived unit is a unit that is made up of two or more base units.
1.29 Rank the following prefixes in order of increasing size of the number they represent:
centiโ, gigaโ, nanoโ, and kiloโ.
In order of smallest to largest: nanoโ (10โ9), centiโ (10โ2), kiloโ (103), gigaโ (109).
1.30 The largest computers now include disk storage space measured in petabytes. How many
bytes are in a petabyte? (Recall that in computer terminology, the prefix is only โcloseโ to the
value it designates in the metric system.)
1 petabyte = 1,000,000,000,000,000 bytes
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1.31 Historically, some unit differences reflected the belief that the quantity measured was
different when it was later revealed to be a single entity. Use the web to look up the origins of
the energy units erg and calorie, and describe how they represent an example of this type of
historical development.
The erg was an energy unit associated with work done, while the calorie was an energy unit
associated with heat. At the time scientists thought heat and work were different things โ
instead of forms of energy used in different ways.
1.32 Use the web to determine how the Btu was initially established. For the engineering
applications where this unit is still used today, why is it a sensible unit?
The amount of energy required to raise one pound of liquid water 1 degree Fahrenheit at
its maximum density (occurs at 39.1 ๏ฐF). It is sensible because of the associated
temperature change that can be sensed or measured.
1.33
How many micrograms are equal to one gram?
The prefix microโ represents the power 10โ6. One microgram (๏ญg) is therefore equal to
1
gram. There are one million micrograms in one gram.
1, 000, 000
1.34
Convert the value 0.120 ppb into ppm.
1.20 ๏ด 10โ4 ppm
1.35 How was the Fahrenheit temperature scale calibrated? Describe how this calibration
process reflects measurement errors that were evident when the temperature scale was devised.
The upper temperature, 100 degrees, was set by body temperature. The lower temperature
was determined by the coldest temperature that could be achieved by adding salt to water
and set at 0 degrees. This shows limitations of the measurement in that the accepted
temperature of a human body is 98.6 oF (although this can vary from individual).
1.36 Superconductors are materials that have no resistance to the flow of electricity, and they
hold great promise in many engineering applications. But to date, superconductivity has only
been observed under cryogenic conditions. As of 2016, the highest temperature at which
superconductivity has been observed is 203 K. Convert this temperature to both ๏ฐC and ๏ฐF.
๏ฐC = 203 K โ 273.15 = โ70๏ฐC; ๏ฐ F ๏ฝ
1.37
9
๏จ ๏ญ70.15๏ฐC ๏ฉ ๏ซ 32 ๏ฝ ๏ญ94๏ฐ F
5
Express each of the following temperatures in kelvins:
(a) โ10. oC
(b) 0.00 oC
kelvins = โ10. oC + 273 = 263 K
kelvins = 0.00 oC + 273.15 = 273.15 K
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(c) 280. oC
(d) 1.4 ร 103 oC
kelvins = 280 oC + 273 = 553 K
kelvins = 1400 oC + 273 = 1700 K
To convert from the Celsius scale to kelvins, we add 273. The unit size is the same, making
this conversion easier. Note: we do not write the degree symbol with kelvins.
1.38
Express (a) 275๏ฐC in K, (b) 25.55 K in ๏ฐC, (c) โ47.0๏ฐC in ๏ฐF, and (d) 100.0๏ฐF in K
(a) 548 K, (b) โ247.60ยฐC, (c) โ52.6๏ฐF, (d) 310.9 K
1.39
Express each of the following numbers in scientific notation:
(a) 62.13
(b) 0.000414
(c) 0.0000051
(d) 871,000,000
(e) 9100
6.213 ร 101
4.14 ร 10โ4
5.1 ร 10โ6
8.71 ร 108
9.1 ร 103
Scientific notation expresses a number factoring out all powers of ten and writing a
number between 1 and 10 multiplied by some power of 10. It makes writing very small or
very large numbers much easier.
1.40 How many significant figures are there in each of the following? (a) 0.136 m, (b)
0.0001050 g, (c) 2.700 ๏ด 10โ3 nm, (d) 6 ๏ด 10โ4 L, (e) 56003 cm3
(a) three, (b) four (c) four, (d) one, (e) five
1.41
How many significant figures are present in these measured quantities?
(a) 1374 kg
(b) 0.00348 s
(c) 5.619 mm
(d) 2.475 ร 10 โ3 cm
(e) 33.1 mL
4 significant figures
3 significant figures (leading zeros only locate decimal point)
4 significant figures
4 significant figures
3 significant figures
1.42 Perform these calculations and express the result with the proper number of significant
figures.
(a) (4.850 g โ 2.34 g)/1.3 mL
(b) V = ๏ฐr3, where r = 4.112 cm
(c) (4.66 ๏ด 10โ3) ๏ด 4.666
(d) 0.003400/65.2
(a) 1.9 g/mL, (b) 218.4 cm3, (c) 2.17 ๏ด 10โ2, (d) 5.21 ๏ด 10โ5
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1.43 Calculate the following to the correct number of significant figures. Assume that all
these numbers are measurements.
(a) x = 17.2 + 65.18 โ 2.4 = 80.0 (round to tenths place)
(b) x = 13.0217/17.10 = 0.7615 (round to four significant digits)
(c) x = (0.0061020)(2.0092)(1200.0) = 14.712 (round to five significant digits)
(0.0034)2 ๏ซ 4(1.000)(6.3 ๏ด 10๏ญ4 )
= 0.029 (The 2 and the 4 in the quadratic
( 2)(1.000)
formula are exact numbers, so they do not limit the significant figures in the result.)
(d) x = 0.0034 +
In addition and subtraction, the number that has a doubtful digit in the largest decimal
place determines the number of significant digits retained.
When multiplying and dividing, the number of significant digits retained is determined by
whichever factor has the fewest significant digits.
1.44 In an attempt to determine the velocity of a person on a bicycle, an observer uses a
stopwatch and times the length of time it takes to cover 25 โsquaresโ on a sidewalk. The bicycle
takes 4.82 seconds to travel this far. A measurement of one of the squares shows that it is 1.13 m
long. What velocity, in m/s, should the observer report?
5.86 m/s
1.45 A student finds that the mass of an object is 4.131 g and its volume is 7.1 mL. What
density should be reported in g/mL?
Density is the ratio of mass per unit volume.
mass
4.131 g
density =
=
= 0.58 g/mL (rounded to two significant digits)
volume 7.1 mL
1.46 Measurements indicate that 23.6% of the residents of a city with a population of 531,314
are college graduates. Considering significant figures, how many college graduates are estimated
to reside in this city?
1.25 ๏ด 105
1.47 A student weighs 10 quarters and finds their total mass is 56.63 grams. What should she
report as the average mass of a quarter based on her data?
The average mass of a quarter would be found by dividing the total mass by ten quarters.
Average mass of a quarter =
56.63 g
= 5.663 g
10 quarters
The answer should retain all four significant digits because the ten quarters is an exact
number.
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1.48 A rock is placed on a balance and its mass is determined to be 12.1 g. When the rock is
then placed in a graduated cylinder that originally contains 11.3 mL of water, the new volume is
roughly 17 mL. How should the density of the rock be reported?
2 g/mL
Problem Solving in Chemistry and Engineering
1.49 A package of eight apples has a mass of 1.00 kg. What is the average mass of one apple
in grams?
1.00 kg = 1.00 ร 103 g
The average mass of an apple would be found by dividing the total mass by eight apples.
1.00 ๏ด 103 g
Average mass of an apple =
= 1.25 ร 102 g per apple
8 apples
The answer should retain three significant digits because the eight apples is an exact
number.
1.50 If a 1.00-kg bag containing eight apples costs $1.48, how much does one apple cost?
What mass of apples costs $1.00?
(a) $0.185 per apple
(b) 0.676 kg
1.51
A person measures 173 cm in height. What is this height in meters? feet and inches?
173 cm ร
1m
= 1.73 m
100 cm
173 cm ร
1 in
= 68.1 inches
2.54 cm
68.1 inches – 5 feet (60 inches) = 8.1 inches
The height is 1.73 m or 5 feet 8.1 inches
1.52 The distance between two atoms in a molecule is 148 pm. What is this distance in
meters?
1.48 ๏ด 10โ10 m
1.53
Carry out the following unit conversions:
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(a) 3.47 ร 10โ6 g to ๏ญg
3.47 ร 10โ6 g ร
1 ๏ด 106 ๏ญ g
= 3.47 ๏ญg
1g
(b) 2.73 ร 10โ4 L to mL
2.73 ร 10โ4 L ร
1000 mL
= 2.73 ร 10โ1 mL
1L
10-9 s
725 ns ร
= 7.25 ร 10โ7 s
1 ns
1 km
= 1.3 ร 10โ3 km
1.3 m ร
1000 m
(c) 725 ns to s
(d) 1.3 m to km
1.54 Carry out each of the following conversions: (a) 25.5 m to km, (b) 36.3 km to m, (c) 487
kg to g, (d) 1.32 L to mL, (e) 55.9 dL to L, (f ) 6251 L to cm3
(a) 2.55 ๏ด 10โ2 km
(b) 3.63 ๏ด 104 m
(c) 4.87 ๏ด 105 g
(d) 1.32 ๏ด 103 mL
(e) 5.59 L
(f) 6.251 ๏ด 106 cm3
1.55
Convert 22.3 mL to
(a) liters
(b) in
1L
= 0.0223 L
1000 mL
(1 in)3
1 cm 3
22.3 mL ร
ร
= 13.524 g/L6 in3
(2.54 cm)3
1 mL
3
(c) quarts
1.56
km)
22.3 mL ร
22.3 mL ร
1L
1.057 qt
ร
= 0.0236 qt
1000 mL
1L
If a vehicle is traveling 92 m/s what is its velocity in miles per hour? (0.62 miles = 1.00
92 m
60 s
60 min 1 km 0.62 mi
๏ฝ
๏ฝ
๏ฝ 3
๏ฝ
๏ 210
s
1 min
1h
1 km
10 m
1.57 A load of asphalt weighs 254 lbs and occupies a volume of 220.0 L. What is the density
of this asphalt in g/L?
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Density is the ratio of mass per unit volume. The mass = 254 lbs ร
density =
454 g
= 1.15 ร 105 g
1 lb
1.15 ๏ด 105 g
mass
=
= 524 g/L
220.0 L
volume
(The answer is rounded to 3 significant figures)
1.58
One square mile contains exactly 640 acres. How many square meters are in one acre?
4 ๏ด 103 m
1.59 A sample of crude oil has a density of 0.87 g/mL. What volume in liters does a 3.6-kg
sample of this oil occupy?
Mass = 3.6 kg = 3600 g
Density is the ratio of mass per unit volume, density =
Rearranging,
1.60
volume =
mass
.
volume
mass
3600 g
=
= 4100 mL or 4.1 L
density 0.87 g
mL
Mercury has a density of 13.6 g/mL. What is the mass of 4.72 L of mercury?
6.42 ๏ด 104 g
1.61 The area of the 48 contiguous states is 3.02 ร 106 mi2. Assume that these states are
completely flat (no mountains and no valleys). What volume of water, in liters, would cover
these states with a rainfall of two inches?
The volume of water would be the area of the contiguous states multiplied by the depth of
water.
Area:
(1.609 km)2
(1000 m)2
(100 cm)2
3.02 ร 10 mi ร
ร
ร
= 7.82 ร 1016 cm2
(1 mi)2
(1 km)2
(1 m)2
6
2
Depth:
2.54 cm
2 in ร
= 5.08 cm
1 in
Volume:
7.82 ร 1016 cm2 ร 5.08 cm = 3.97 ร 1017 cm3 ร
1L
= 3.97 ร 1014 L
3
1000 cm
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1.62 The dimensions of aluminum foil in a box for sale in supermarkets are yards by 12
inches. The mass of the foil is 0.83 kg. If its density is 2.70 g/cm3, then what is the thickness of
the foil in inches?
Area: 66.66667 yards ร
Volume: 830 g ร
Thickness:
3 feet
12 inches
ร
ร 12 inches wide = 28,800 inches
1 yard
1 foot
1 cm 3
(1 in)3
ร
= 18.76 in3
2.7 g
(2.54 cm)3
Volume
= 6.5 ร 10โ4 inches
Area
1.63 Titanium is used in airplane bodies because it is strong and light. It has a density of 4.55
g/cm3. If a cylinder of titanium is 7.75 cm long and has a mass of 153.2 g, calculate the diameter
of the cylinder. (V = ๏ฐr2h, where V is the volume of the cylinder, r is its radius, and h is the
height.)
mass
153.2 g
Using the density, the volume can be calculated: volume =
=
= 33.7 cm3
4.55 g
density
cm 3
The radius may now be calculated by using the height of the cylinder and the formula for
its volume:
r=
V/ฯh =
(33.7 cm 3 ) / (3.1416) (7.75 cm) = 1.176 cm
Finally, the diameter is two ร r = 2 ร 1.176 cm = 2.35 cm
1.64 Wire is often sold in pound spools according to the wire gauge number. That number
refers to the diameter of the wire. How many meters are in a 10-lb. spool of 12-gauge aluminum
wire? A 12-gauge wire has a diameter of 0.0808 in. and aluminum has a density of 2.70 g/cm3.
(V = ๏ฐr2๏ฌ)
510 m
1.65 An industrial engineer is designing a process to manufacture bullets. The mass of each
bullet must be within 0.25 % of 150 grains. What range of bullet masses, in mg, will meet this
tolerance? 1 gr = 64.79891 mg
First, calculate 0.25% of 150 grains. (Recall percentage is parts per 100 parts.)
0.25
ร 150 gr = 0.375 gr
100
Next, calculate this mass in milligrams:
64.79891 mg
0.375 gr ร
= 24.3 mg
1 gr
The bullets must be manufactured with a tolerance of ยฑ 24.3 mg
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Next, convert bullet mass to mg:
64.79891 mg
150 gr ร
= 9720 mg ๏ป 9700 mg (two significant figures)
1 gr
Each bullet should have a mass of 9700 mg. (Calculation gives a range of 9696โ9744 mg,
but the data given have just two significant figures, and therefore both ends of the range
round to 9700 mg.
Note: It is extremely important that bullets be manufactured with tight tolerances in mass
and shape to produce precise shooting results.
1.66 An engineer is working with archeologists to create a realistic Roman village in a
museum. The plan for a balance in a marketplace calls for 100 granite stones, each weighing 10
denarium. (The denarium was a Roman unit of mass: 1 denarium = 3.396 g). The manufacturing
process for making the stones will remove 20% of the material. If the granite to be used has a
density of 2.75 g/cm3, what is the minimum volume of granite that the engineer should order?
1.5 ๏ด 103 cm3 (Recall the question is asking for a minimum volume to order, not just the
mathematical answer to the calculation.)
1.67 On average, Earthโs crust contains about 8.1% aluminum by mass. If a standard 12-ounce
soft drink can contains approximately 15.0 g of aluminum, how many cans could be made from
one ton of the Earthโs crust?
There are 2000 pounds in one ton.
First, calculate the mass of aluminum in one ton of the Earthโs crust. (Recall percentage is
parts per 100 parts.)
8.1 lbs Al
454 g
ร
= 73548 g of aluminum. Next, divide by the mass of
100 lbs Earth
1 lb
one can to find the number of cans that could be made.
2000 lbs Earth ร
73548 g Al รท 15.0 g Al per can = 4.9 ร 103 cans (rounded to two significant figures)
1.68 As computer processor speeds increase, it is necessary for engineers to increase the
number of circuit elements packed into a given area. Individual circuit elements are often
connected using very small copper โwiresโ deposited directly onto the surface of the chip. In
some current generation processors, these copper interconnects are about 32 nm wide. What
mass of copper would be in a 1-mm length of such an interconnect, assuming a square cross
section. The density of copper is 8.96 g/cm3.
9.2 pg
1.69 The โWestern Stoneโ in Jerusalem is one of the largest stone building blocks ever to have
been used. It has a mass of 517 metric tons, and measures 13.6 m long, 3.00 m high and 3.30 m
wide. What is the density of this rock in g/cm3? (1 metric ton = 1000 kg)
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