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Converting the equation to non standard state |
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| Nov5-12, 11:32 PM | #1 |
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Converting the equation to non standard state
Here's my problem: I know this formula http://carlschroedl.com/chem/ib_extended_essay.pdf (pg 18) is an extended form of Faraday's law of electrolysis which is m= (Q/F)(M/z) where m is the mass liberated in grams, Q is the total electric charge passing through, F is Faraday's constant, M is molar mass of the subtance, z is the valency of the ions. The part of the long equation I don't know is the Q part of Faraday's law. I plan to do experiements at various temperatures and pressures, so I need a formula for the Q part of the equation that has pressure and temperature variables. If it helps I plan to use nickel electrodes with 5 cm x 1 cm dimensions at room temperature. Please help. I'm so utterly confused. Can the rewritten equation be an image please? You don't need to explain the indivual parts of that Q part; I understand that; I just don't know how to add a temperature and pressure variable to it.
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| Nov6-12, 02:00 AM | #2 |
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Sorry, but nobody is going to browse the multipage document to guess which formula you mean, if you were not even willing to give us a page number. You can use LaTeX to enter this formula here, see http://www.physicsforums.com/showpos...17&postcount=3.
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| Nov6-12, 09:06 AM | #3 |
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fixed
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