Chemistry, asked by Tabish283, 10 months ago

If a certain oxide of nitrogen weighing 0.11 gm gives 56ml of nitrogen and another oxide of nitrogen weighing 0.15 gm gives the same volume of nitrogen both at stp

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Answered by s1536viibpawankumar1
3

Answer:

If a certain oxide of nitrogen weighing 0.11g gives 56 ml of nitrogen and another oxide of nitrogen weighing 0.15 g gives the same volume of nitrogen (both at STP), show that these results support the law of multiple proportions. Loss of weight = 0.11-0.07 = 0.04gm (It is the amount of oxygen)--1.

Explanation:

If a certain oxide of nitrogen weighing 0.11g gives 56 ml of nitrogen and another oxide of nitrogen weighing 0.15 g gives the same volume of nitrogen (both at STP), show that these results support the law of multiple proportions. Loss of weight = 0.11-0.07 = 0.04gm (It is the amount of oxygen)--1.

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