When 1.00 g of a white solid A is strongly heated, you obtain another white solid, B,

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When 1.00 g of a white solid A is strongly heated, you obtain another white solid, B, and a gas. An experiment is carried out on the gas, showing that it exerts a pressure of 209 mm Hg in a 450-mL flask at 25°C. Bubbling the gas into a solution of Ca(OH)2 gives another white solid, C. If the white solid B is added to water, the resulting solution turns red litmus paper blue. Addition of aqueous HCl to the solution of B and evaporation of the resulting solution to dryness yield 1.055 g of a white solid D. When D is placed in a Bunsen burner flame, it colors the flame green. Finally, if the aqueous solution of B is treated with sulfuric acid, a white precipitate, E, forms. Identify the lettered compounds in the reaction scheme.Cengage Learning/Charles D. Winters

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Chemistry And Chemical Reactivity

ISBN: 9780357001172

10th Edition

Authors: John C. Kotz, Paul M. Treichel, John Townsend, David Treichel

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