Hopefully !!!!You will probably be fine. I doubt they are thinking that hard about real life application in HSC, otherwise half the stuff would be wrong lol
Hopefully !!!!You will probably be fine. I doubt they are thinking that hard about real life application in HSC, otherwise half the stuff would be wrong lol
Hmm the exam paper was uploaded by NESA 2 days after bio ended. So i think the wait won't be too long anyway.You reckon its possible for the paper to leak considering how the exam booklets are personalised? Ik it happened for bio
Is it?Same! I expressed it as positive though - thought molar heat of combustion is usually expressed positive as a convention?
Economics is also personalised but that was uploaded very quicklyYou reckon its possible for the paper to leak considering how the exam booklets are personalised? Ik it happened for bio
Doubt it only way to get it is if a teacher leaks it but I don't think any of them would freely release it to everyone because they probably get some backlash from NESA if they find outYou reckon its possible for the paper to leak considering how the exam booklets are personalised? Ik it happened for bio
Mhm, I believe so.Is it?
I thought delta h is always negativeMhm, I believe so.
It's a convention to express delta Hc as positive but I don't think it matters much.I thought delta h is always negative
Sometimes people write negative, sometimes not honestly doesn't matter. Why people sometimes tend to write molar heat of combustion as positive is because the definition states that it is the amount of heat released per mole of fuel burnt at 25 degrees Celsius and 1 atm. But I have also seen in other exams they have put -ve because it is exothermic. I wouldn't worry too muchIs it?
Ok thanks, because my teacher penalised me once for missing the negative so i was confusedSometimes people write negative, sometimes not honestly doesn't matter. Why people sometimes tend to write molar heat of combustion as positive is because the definition states that it is the amount of heat released per mole of fuel burnt at 25 degrees Celsius and 1 atm. But I have also seen in other exams they have put -ve because it is exothermic. I wouldn't worry too much
I talked about the conductometric curve (since it's called a conductometric titration).Guys for the question that asked for an explanation of the titration curve, the one with the conductometric graph already given, did you guys talk about the above conductometric graph or the actual titration curve like me? I think im wrong
Edit: and also, you dont need to get a raw mark over 90 to get band 6???
I think it meant the conductometric curve. Seems random to just ask to explain the pH titration curve. Also, the conductometric curve is also a titration curve as the titration is called conductometric titrationGuys for the question that asked for an explanation of the titration curve, the one with the conductometric graph already given, did you guys talk about the above conductometric graph or the actual titration curve like me? I think im wrong
Edit: and also, you dont need to get a raw mark over 90 to get band 6???
That’s aligned, we mean rawGuys for the question that asked for an explanation of the titration curve, the one with the conductometric graph already given, did you guys talk about the above conductometric graph or the actual titration curve like me? I think im wrong
Edit: and also, you dont need to get a raw mark over 90 to get band 6???
like ideally you would talk about both, like defining why the conductometric titration occurs (due to moving mobile charges etc) and explain why it's the shape it is (like u have ions in solution at first making good conductivity, then reduces due to neutralisation of hydronium and hydroxide, then goes up due to excess h+ and cl-)Guys for the question that asked for an explanation of the titration curve, the one with the conductometric graph already given, did you guys talk about the above conductometric graph or the actual titration curve like me? I think im wrong
Edit: and also, you dont need to get a raw mark over 90 to get band 6???
Cl- doesnt contribute much tho, its less mobile and a lot heavierlike ideally you would talk about both, like defining why the conductometric titration occurs (due to moving mobile charges etc) and explain why it's the shape it is (like u have ions in solution at first making good conductivity, then reduces due to neutralisation of hydronium and hydroxide, then goes up due to excess h+ and cl-)