Haku
Member
- Joined
- Nov 12, 2004
- Messages
- 779
do i write one to you? or someone elsejm1234567890 said:your welcome to apply... just write a damn good application.
do i write one to you? or someone elsejm1234567890 said:your welcome to apply... just write a damn good application.
nah, too busy these days.cherryblossom said:jm don't you want to do it?
yes, sending to me is fine.nosadness said:do i write one to you? or someone else
Would nosadness increase his chances of gaining a modstick if he wrote his application in poetry form?jm1234567890 said:your welcome to apply... just write a damn good application.
White to brown with NaOH, my notes say.Dreamerish*~ said:What is the the colour of the precipitate iron (II) hydroxide? That is, when hydroxide ions are added to a solution of iron (II).
i remember it went brown for me, maybe they had higher concetrations? lower concetrations?Dreamerish*~ said:Thanks Casmira.
There's another thing I'm confused about.
What is the the colour of the precipitate iron (II) hydroxide? That is, when hydroxide ions are added to a solution of iron (II).
Some textbooks say white turning quickly to brown, but others - and my tutoring notes - say grey-green. I asked Nit and Mitochondria and they both said grey-green. This morning I emailed my new tutor and he said it's white turning to brown.
Does anyone remember specifically what colour iron (II) hydroxide was during their precipitation prac? I remember vaguely that everything turned out the way I expected it to, and I've always known iron (II) hydroxide to be grey-green.
Is that shipwrecks?nosadness said:i think for the white to brown its actually Iron(III)
not too sure on that...i think when u put that into NaOH solution it goes from white to brown.
anywayz, i am currently writing out an application form to jimo...hope i will pass!
Q: how does adding Chronium to steel (steel is iron with 1.5% carbon right?) make it more resistant to corrosion? also what does molybdemum do when added to steel?
yea its in shipwrecks.Dreamerish*~ said:Is that shipwrecks?
I don't mean to sound like a prick, but did you, by any chance, get that from me?nosadness said:anywayz Fe(OH)2 is like dirty green or grey-green thats what u guys call it.
wat u mean? i wrote that my self.Dreamerish*~ said:I don't mean to sound like a prick, but did you, by any chance, get that from me?
I was very unsure about this, because my sources contradict each other, however, I asked my tutor and he said iron (II) hydroxide is creamy white, quickly turning to brown. I think I'm going to go with that.
If you got it from somewhere else, where? This thing is really annoying me.
Yeah, I asked our Resident Chemist and Mitochondria (both of them know what they're talking about) and they told me that it's grey-green.nosadness said:wat u mean? i wrote that my self.
as the info state Iron(iii) the most commonly occuring iron ion is brown when mixed with NaOH, and iron(ii) is green. trust me. a friend is 2nd year uni does chemistry in advanced science and he looked it up too!
lol, ull prob get a 4th answer. i think u should stay with grey green for iron(ii)Dreamerish*~ said:Yeah, I asked our Resident Chemist and Mitochondria (both of them know what they're talking about) and they told me that it's grey-green.
Then I asked my tutor, who has been a chemist his whole life, and he said it's creamy white turning to brown, which is what CC says.
In desperation, I called the HSC helpline, which gave me a third answer - green turning to brown.
I'm going to school next week and finding out for myself. '-_-
EDIT: Oh but this is really specific. I want to know because I'm just too curious, but if you're panicking over it - don't. The main thing is to identify that there is a precipitate.
http://community.boredofstudies.org/showthread.php?p=1907109#post1907109nosadness said:lol, ull prob get a 4th answer. i think u should stay with grey green for iron(ii)
anywayz can anyone answer my question on steel?