Assertion : Compressibility factor for hydrogen varies with pressure with positive slope at all pressures.
Reason : Even at low pressures, repulsive forces dominate hydrogen gas.
If both assertion and reason are true and reason is the correct explanation of assertion.
If both assertion and reason are true but reason is not the correct explanation of assertion.
If assertion is true but reason is false.
If both assertion and reason are false.
The reagent commonly used to determine hardness of water titrimetrically is
oxalic acid
disodium salt of EDTA
sodium citrate
sodium thiosulphate
Assertion : Increasing pressure on pure water decreases its freezing point.
Reason : Density of water is minimum at 273 K.
If both assertion and reason are true and the reason is the correct explanation of the assertion.
If both assertion and reason are true and the reason is not the correct explanation of the assertion.
If assertion is true but reason is false.
If both assertion and reason are false.
Assertion : The micelle formed by sodium stearate in water has - COO- groups at the surface.
Reason : Surface tension of water is reduced by the addition of stearate.
If both assertion and reason are true and the reason is the correct explanation of the assertion.
If both assertion and reason are true and the reason is not the correct explanation of the assertion.
If assertion is true but reason is false.
If both assertion and reason are false.
When H2O2 is shaken with an acidified solution of K2Cr2O7 in the presence of ether, the ethereal layer turns blue due to the formation of:
Cr2O3
CrO42-
Cr2(SO4)3
CrO5
The order of decreasing ease of abstraction of hydrogen atoms in the following molecule
Ha > Hb > Hc
Ha > Hc > Hb
Hb > Ha > Hc
Hc > Hb > Ha
In the hydrolysis of an organic chloride in presence of large excess of water
RCl + H2O → ROH + HCl
molecularity and order of reaction both are 2
molecularity is 2 but order of reaction is 1
molecularity is 1 but order of reaction is 2
molecularity is 1 but order of reaction is also 1
Ortho and para hydrogens have
Identical chemical properties but different physical properties
Identical physical and chemical properties
Identical physical properties but different chemical properties
Different chemical and physical properties
A.
Identical chemical properties but different physical properties
Ortho and para hydrogens, the allotropic forms of hydrogen that differ in the direction of spining of proton, have same chemical properties but different physical properties.