Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Chemistry Pilot Experiment :: Papers
 Chemistry Pilot Experiment       Aim:       The aim was to become accustomed to working with the equipment and to     find optimum levels of hydrochloric acid and magnesium ribbon to     produce 60cm of hydrogen, a sensible amount to produce in the real     experiment. We also began to investigate the effect of temperature on     the rate and the result of the product (hydrogen). It also served to     discover any errors in the procedure which could affect the final     result and prevent us getting accurate results, thus allowing us to     eliminate these errors in the real experiment.       Diagram:       Method:       We attached a gas syringe via a plastic tube to a test tube and used a     clamp and stand to hold the gas syringe in place. Having poured 25cm     of hydrochloric acid (of strength 1M) into the test tube, we placed a     strip of magnesium ribbon (which length varied each time we repeated     the procedure) in the test tube and rapidly pushed a rubber bung into     the top of the test tube to avoid any gas (hydrogen) produced in the     reaction escaping. We then poured out the contents of the test tube     and repeated the procedure using the same amount of hydrochloric acid     but a different length of magnesium ribbon.       The next procedure we carried out involved changing another variable.     Having discovered what length of magnesium ribbon would produce 60cm     of hydrogen when allowed to react with 25cm of hydrochloric acid, we     then used this length of magnesium ribbon and the same amount of     hydrochloric but changed the temperature of the hydrochloric acid that     was allowed to react with the magnesium ribbon to see if this had any     effect on the reaction by previously heating the hydrochloric acid to     different temperatures using a Bunsen burner. We recorded the amount     of hydrogen produced every 15 seconds using a stopwatch.       Results:       This is a word equation for the reaction between magnesium and     hydrochloric acid:       magnesium+ hydrochloric acidà ¢Ã¢â¬  Ã¢â¬â¢ magnesium chloride+ hydrogen           Here is a table of the amounts of hydrogen produced when 25cm of    					    
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