Forwarded from Pw Ultimate Crash Course
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Forwarded from Pw Ultimate Crash Course
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Forwarded from Yakeen 4.0 Lectures
Stem modifications:
Trick ๐ -
Food & suits of runners, stolen by ten thousand cunning people.
Food (tuber, rhizome, corm, bulb)
Sucker
Offset
Runner
Stolon
Tendril
Thorn
Cladode
Phylloclade
โโMUST SHARE WITH FRIENDS โโ
Trick ๐ -
Food & suits of runners, stolen by ten thousand cunning people.
Food (tuber, rhizome, corm, bulb)
Sucker
Offset
Runner
Stolon
Tendril
Thorn
Cladode
Phylloclade
โโMUST SHARE WITH FRIENDS โโ
๐โป๏ธAtoms & Moleculesโป๏ธ๐
Around 500 BC, an Indian Philosopher Maharishi Kanad, first time postulated the concept of indivisible part of matter and named it โpramanu.โ
In 1808, John Dalton used the term โatomโ and postulated the atomic theory to the study of matter.
๐ Daltonโs Atomic Theory
โAccording to Daltonโs atomic theory, all matter, whether an element, a compound or a mixture is composed of small particles called atoms.
โAccording to Daltonโs atomic theory, all matters, whether they are elements, compounds, or mixtures, are composed of small particles known as atoms.
๐ Salient features of Daltonโs Atomic Theory
โAll matter is made of very miniscule particles known as atoms.
โAtom is an indivisible particle, which cannot be created or destroyed through chemical reaction.
โAll atoms of an element are identical in mass and chemical properties whereas, atoms of different elements have different masses and chemical properties.
โTo form a compound, atoms are combined in the ratio of small whole numbers.
โIn a given compound, the relative number and kinds of atoms are constant.
๐ Atomic Mass
โThe mass of an atom of a chemical element; it is expressed in atomic mass units (symbol is u).
โThe atomic mass is roughly equivalent to the number of protons and neutrons present in the atom.
โOne atomic mass unit is a mass unit equal to the exactly one-twelfth (1/12th) the mass of one atom of carbon-12 and the relative atomic masses of all elements have been calculated with respect to an atom of carbon-12.
๐ Molecule
โThe smallest particle of an element or a compound, which is capable to exist independently and shows all the properties of the respective substance.
โA molecule, normally, is a group of two or more atoms which are chemically bonded together.
โAtoms of the same element or of different elements can join (with chemical bond) together to form molecules.
โThe number of atoms that constitute a molecule is known as its atomicity.
๐ Ion
โA charged particle is known as ion; it could be either negative charge or positive charge.
โThe positively charged ion is known as a โcationโ.
โThe negatively charged ion is known as an โanion.โ
๐ Chemical Formulae
โA chemical formula of a compound demonstrations its constituent elements and the number of atoms of each combining element.
โThe chemical formula of a compound is the symbolic representation of its Composition.
โThe combining capacity of an element is known as its โvalency.โ
๐ Molecular Mass
โThe molecular mass of a substance is calculated by taking the sum of the atomic masses of all the atoms in a molecule of respective substance. For example, the molecular mass of water is calculated as โ
โAtomic mass of hydrogen = 1u
โAtomic mass of oxygen = 16 u
โThe water contains two atoms of hydrogen and one atom of oxygen.
โMolecular Mass of Water is = 2 ร 1+ 1ร16 = 18 u (u is the symbol of molecular mass).
๐ Formula Unit Mass
The formula unit mass of a substance is calculated by taking the sum of the atomic masses of all atoms in a formula unit of a compound.
๐ Avogadro Constant or Avogadro Number
โAvogadro was an Italian scientist who had given the concept of Avogadro Number (also known as Avogadro Constant).
โThe number of particles (atoms, molecules, or ions) present in 1 mole of any substance is fixed, and its value always calculated as 6.022 ร 1023.
โIn 1896, Wilhelm Ostwald had introduced the concept of โmole;โ however, mole unit was accepted to provide a simple way of reporting a large number in 1967.
๐ Law of Conservation of Mass
During a chemical reaction, sum of the masses of the reactants and products remains unchanged, which is known as the โLaw of Conservation of Mass.โ
๐ Law of Definite Proportions
In a pure chemical compound, its elements are always present in a definite proportion by mass, which is known as the โLaw of Definite Proportions.โ
โโMUST SHARE WITH FRIENDS โโ
Around 500 BC, an Indian Philosopher Maharishi Kanad, first time postulated the concept of indivisible part of matter and named it โpramanu.โ
In 1808, John Dalton used the term โatomโ and postulated the atomic theory to the study of matter.
๐ Daltonโs Atomic Theory
โAccording to Daltonโs atomic theory, all matter, whether an element, a compound or a mixture is composed of small particles called atoms.
โAccording to Daltonโs atomic theory, all matters, whether they are elements, compounds, or mixtures, are composed of small particles known as atoms.
๐ Salient features of Daltonโs Atomic Theory
โAll matter is made of very miniscule particles known as atoms.
โAtom is an indivisible particle, which cannot be created or destroyed through chemical reaction.
โAll atoms of an element are identical in mass and chemical properties whereas, atoms of different elements have different masses and chemical properties.
โTo form a compound, atoms are combined in the ratio of small whole numbers.
โIn a given compound, the relative number and kinds of atoms are constant.
๐ Atomic Mass
โThe mass of an atom of a chemical element; it is expressed in atomic mass units (symbol is u).
โThe atomic mass is roughly equivalent to the number of protons and neutrons present in the atom.
โOne atomic mass unit is a mass unit equal to the exactly one-twelfth (1/12th) the mass of one atom of carbon-12 and the relative atomic masses of all elements have been calculated with respect to an atom of carbon-12.
๐ Molecule
โThe smallest particle of an element or a compound, which is capable to exist independently and shows all the properties of the respective substance.
โA molecule, normally, is a group of two or more atoms which are chemically bonded together.
โAtoms of the same element or of different elements can join (with chemical bond) together to form molecules.
โThe number of atoms that constitute a molecule is known as its atomicity.
๐ Ion
โA charged particle is known as ion; it could be either negative charge or positive charge.
โThe positively charged ion is known as a โcationโ.
โThe negatively charged ion is known as an โanion.โ
๐ Chemical Formulae
โA chemical formula of a compound demonstrations its constituent elements and the number of atoms of each combining element.
โThe chemical formula of a compound is the symbolic representation of its Composition.
โThe combining capacity of an element is known as its โvalency.โ
๐ Molecular Mass
โThe molecular mass of a substance is calculated by taking the sum of the atomic masses of all the atoms in a molecule of respective substance. For example, the molecular mass of water is calculated as โ
โAtomic mass of hydrogen = 1u
โAtomic mass of oxygen = 16 u
โThe water contains two atoms of hydrogen and one atom of oxygen.
โMolecular Mass of Water is = 2 ร 1+ 1ร16 = 18 u (u is the symbol of molecular mass).
๐ Formula Unit Mass
The formula unit mass of a substance is calculated by taking the sum of the atomic masses of all atoms in a formula unit of a compound.
๐ Avogadro Constant or Avogadro Number
โAvogadro was an Italian scientist who had given the concept of Avogadro Number (also known as Avogadro Constant).
โThe number of particles (atoms, molecules, or ions) present in 1 mole of any substance is fixed, and its value always calculated as 6.022 ร 1023.
โIn 1896, Wilhelm Ostwald had introduced the concept of โmole;โ however, mole unit was accepted to provide a simple way of reporting a large number in 1967.
๐ Law of Conservation of Mass
During a chemical reaction, sum of the masses of the reactants and products remains unchanged, which is known as the โLaw of Conservation of Mass.โ
๐ Law of Definite Proportions
In a pure chemical compound, its elements are always present in a definite proportion by mass, which is known as the โLaw of Definite Proportions.โ
โโMUST SHARE WITH FRIENDS โโ
Forwarded from Yakeen 4.0 Lectures
โจ๏ธ๐ขClassification of solids as ionic, metallic, molecular, network (covalent) or amorphous.
(i) Tetra phosphdecoxide(P4O10) โ Molecular
(ii) Ammonium phosphate(NH4)3PO4 โ ionic
(iii) SiC โ Network (Covalent)
(iv) I2 โ molecular
(v) P4 โ Molecular
(vi) Plastic โ amorphous
(vii) Graphite โ Network (Covalent)
(viii) Brass โ metallic
(ix) Rb โ metallic
(x) LiBR โ ionic
(xi) Si โ Network (Covalent)
(i) Tetra phosphdecoxide(P4O10) โ Molecular
(ii) Ammonium phosphate(NH4)3PO4 โ ionic
(iii) SiC โ Network (Covalent)
(iv) I2 โ molecular
(v) P4 โ Molecular
(vi) Plastic โ amorphous
(vii) Graphite โ Network (Covalent)
(viii) Brass โ metallic
(ix) Rb โ metallic
(x) LiBR โ ionic
(xi) Si โ Network (Covalent)
๐ Important One Liners on Electric Charges ๐
------------------------------------------------------------------------
โซ๏ธ If an object is attracted by another charged body, the first object may be oppositely charged or not charged because we know both an uncharged object and an oppositely charged object are attracted by another charged object.
โซ๏ธ If an object is positively charged it loses some of its electrons. The mass of an electron is 9.11*10^-31 kg. So, if a positively charged body loses โnโ number of electrons, it mass decrease by the amount n*9.11E^-31kg.
โซ๏ธ Though gold is a costly metal it is used in electroscope because of the property malleability. This means very thin and light sheets can be formed from gold simply by hammering or rolling and hence the deflection of the light gold plates increases.
โซ๏ธ The divergence of the plates of the Gold-leaf oscilloscope depends only on the presence of a charge, not on the quality of charge i.e. positive or negative. So, if the charge changes from positive to negative and vice versa the degree of divergence of the plates remains the same.
โซ๏ธ The same charges repel each other. So, they try to maintain maximum distance from each other and hence they try to remain at the outer surface of an object. If the charge remains on the inner surface or throughout the body, they will repel each other with greater force.
โซ๏ธ The human body is a good conductor and hence the charge produced by friction flew through his body to the ground. We can tackle the problem simply by holding the brass rod with the help of some insulated holder.
โซ๏ธ If the apparatus is initially in contact with some positively charged body and then comes in contact with another โซ๏ธ charged body and if the divergence increases we can deduce that the second body is also positively charged. If the divergence decreases then the second body must be negatively charged.
โซ๏ธ According to electrostatic series, glass is situated above silk. So, if the glass is rubbed with silk, the positive charge on glass and negative charge on silk is produced. Similarly, we can predict what is the nature of charge if we rub two di-electric substances together.
โซ๏ธ 1 Coulomb means 3*10^9 Electro Static Unit of charge. Coulomb and ESU are two different units of charge and their conversion formula is necessary. Coulomb is the unit of charge in the SI system and esu is the unit of charge in the CGS system.
โซ๏ธ The two spheres are oppositely charged by the same amount. So if they come in contact, both of their charges are neutralized. So they become uncharged and donโt attract or repel each other.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
โซ๏ธ If an object is attracted by another charged body, the first object may be oppositely charged or not charged because we know both an uncharged object and an oppositely charged object are attracted by another charged object.
โซ๏ธ If an object is positively charged it loses some of its electrons. The mass of an electron is 9.11*10^-31 kg. So, if a positively charged body loses โnโ number of electrons, it mass decrease by the amount n*9.11E^-31kg.
โซ๏ธ Though gold is a costly metal it is used in electroscope because of the property malleability. This means very thin and light sheets can be formed from gold simply by hammering or rolling and hence the deflection of the light gold plates increases.
โซ๏ธ The divergence of the plates of the Gold-leaf oscilloscope depends only on the presence of a charge, not on the quality of charge i.e. positive or negative. So, if the charge changes from positive to negative and vice versa the degree of divergence of the plates remains the same.
โซ๏ธ The same charges repel each other. So, they try to maintain maximum distance from each other and hence they try to remain at the outer surface of an object. If the charge remains on the inner surface or throughout the body, they will repel each other with greater force.
โซ๏ธ The human body is a good conductor and hence the charge produced by friction flew through his body to the ground. We can tackle the problem simply by holding the brass rod with the help of some insulated holder.
โซ๏ธ If the apparatus is initially in contact with some positively charged body and then comes in contact with another โซ๏ธ charged body and if the divergence increases we can deduce that the second body is also positively charged. If the divergence decreases then the second body must be negatively charged.
โซ๏ธ According to electrostatic series, glass is situated above silk. So, if the glass is rubbed with silk, the positive charge on glass and negative charge on silk is produced. Similarly, we can predict what is the nature of charge if we rub two di-electric substances together.
โซ๏ธ 1 Coulomb means 3*10^9 Electro Static Unit of charge. Coulomb and ESU are two different units of charge and their conversion formula is necessary. Coulomb is the unit of charge in the SI system and esu is the unit of charge in the CGS system.
โซ๏ธ The two spheres are oppositely charged by the same amount. So if they come in contact, both of their charges are neutralized. So they become uncharged and donโt attract or repel each other.
๐Some Important Increasing Order ๐:
๐ 1. Bond Angle :
(i) CH4 , C2H4 , C2H2
(ii) H2O, NH3 , CH4 , CO2
(iii) H2O, NH3 , CH4 , BH3
(iv) NO2โ, NO2 , NO2+
(v) H2Se, H2S, H2O
(vi) AsH3 , PH3 , NH3
(vii) PF3 , PCl3 , PBr3 , PI3
(viii) NF3 , NCl3
(ix) NF3 , NH3 , NCl3
(x) OF2 , OH2 , Cl2O
๐ 2. Melting Point :
(i) Cs, Rb, K, Na, Li
(ii) Mg, Ba, Sr, Ca, Be
(iii) CaI2 , CaBr2 , CaCl2 , CaF2
(iv) BeCl2 , MgCl2 , CaCl2 , SrCl2 , BaCl2
(v) NaI, NaBr, NaCl, NaF
(vi) CsCl, RbCl, KCl, NaCl
(vii) AlCl3 , MgCl2 , NaCl
๐ 3.Boiling Point :
(i) PH3 , AsH3 , NH3 , SbH3
(ii) H2S, H2Se, H2O
(iii) HCl, HBr, HI, HF
(iv) NH3 , HF, H2O
(v) He, Ne, Ar, Kr
(vi) H2O, D2O
(vii) H2 , Cl2 , Br2
๐ 4.Dipole moments :
(i) CCl4 , CHCl3 , CH2Cl2 ,CH3Cl
(ii) NF3 , NH3 , H2O, HF
(iii) Cis-chloropropene, Trans-chloropropene
(iv) p, m, o-dichlorobenzene
(v) CH3I, CH3Br, CH3F, CH3Cl
(vi) NH3 , SO2 , H2O, HF
(vii) H2S, H2O
(viii) HI, HBr, HCl, HF
(ix) PH3 , ASH3 , SbH3 , NH3
(x) H2O, H2O2
๐ 1. Bond Angle :
(i) CH4 , C2H4 , C2H2
(ii) H2O, NH3 , CH4 , CO2
(iii) H2O, NH3 , CH4 , BH3
(iv) NO2โ, NO2 , NO2+
(v) H2Se, H2S, H2O
(vi) AsH3 , PH3 , NH3
(vii) PF3 , PCl3 , PBr3 , PI3
(viii) NF3 , NCl3
(ix) NF3 , NH3 , NCl3
(x) OF2 , OH2 , Cl2O
๐ 2. Melting Point :
(i) Cs, Rb, K, Na, Li
(ii) Mg, Ba, Sr, Ca, Be
(iii) CaI2 , CaBr2 , CaCl2 , CaF2
(iv) BeCl2 , MgCl2 , CaCl2 , SrCl2 , BaCl2
(v) NaI, NaBr, NaCl, NaF
(vi) CsCl, RbCl, KCl, NaCl
(vii) AlCl3 , MgCl2 , NaCl
๐ 3.Boiling Point :
(i) PH3 , AsH3 , NH3 , SbH3
(ii) H2S, H2Se, H2O
(iii) HCl, HBr, HI, HF
(iv) NH3 , HF, H2O
(v) He, Ne, Ar, Kr
(vi) H2O, D2O
(vii) H2 , Cl2 , Br2
๐ 4.Dipole moments :
(i) CCl4 , CHCl3 , CH2Cl2 ,CH3Cl
(ii) NF3 , NH3 , H2O, HF
(iii) Cis-chloropropene, Trans-chloropropene
(iv) p, m, o-dichlorobenzene
(v) CH3I, CH3Br, CH3F, CH3Cl
(vi) NH3 , SO2 , H2O, HF
(vii) H2S, H2O
(viii) HI, HBr, HCl, HF
(ix) PH3 , ASH3 , SbH3 , NH3
(x) H2O, H2O2
๐ฅ๐ฅ Thermodynamics๐ฅ๐ฅ
โขโโโโโโโโโโโโ
,๐ฅBasic Terminology๐ฅ
โญSystem-
Part of the universe under investigation.
โญOpen System-
A system which can exchange both energy and matter with its surroundings.
โญClosed System-
A system which permits passage of energy but not mass, across its boundary.
โญIsolated system-
A system which can neither exchange energy nor matter with its surrounding.
โญSurroundings-
Part of the universe other than system, which can interact with it.
โญBoundary-
Anything which separates system from surrounding.
โญState variables-
The variables which are required to be defined in order to define state of any system i.e. pressure, volume, mass, temperature, surface area, etc.
โญState Functions-
Property of system which depend only on the state of the system and not on the path. Example: Pressure, volume, temperature, internal energy, enthalpy, entropy etc.
โญIntensive properties-
Properties of a system which do not depend on mass of the system i.e. temperature, pressure, density, concentration,
โญExtensive properties-
Properties of a system which depend on mass of the system i.e. volume, energy, enthalpy, entropy etc.
โญProcess-
Path along which state of a system changes.
โญIsothermal process-
Process which takes place at constant temperature
โญIsobaric process-
Process which takes place at constant pressure
โญIsochoric process-
Process which takes place at constant volume.
โญAdiabatic process-
Process during which transfer of heat cannot take place between system and surrounding.
โญCyclic process-
Process in which system comes back to its initial state after undergoing series of changes.
โญReversible process-
Process during which the system always departs infinitesimally from the state of equilibrium i.e. its direction can be reversed at any moment.
โญIrriversible Process-
This type of process is fast and gets completed in a single step. This process cannot be reversed. All the natural processes are of this type.
โขโโโโโโโโโโโโ
,๐ฅBasic Terminology๐ฅ
โญSystem-
Part of the universe under investigation.
โญOpen System-
A system which can exchange both energy and matter with its surroundings.
โญClosed System-
A system which permits passage of energy but not mass, across its boundary.
โญIsolated system-
A system which can neither exchange energy nor matter with its surrounding.
โญSurroundings-
Part of the universe other than system, which can interact with it.
โญBoundary-
Anything which separates system from surrounding.
โญState variables-
The variables which are required to be defined in order to define state of any system i.e. pressure, volume, mass, temperature, surface area, etc.
โญState Functions-
Property of system which depend only on the state of the system and not on the path. Example: Pressure, volume, temperature, internal energy, enthalpy, entropy etc.
โญIntensive properties-
Properties of a system which do not depend on mass of the system i.e. temperature, pressure, density, concentration,
โญExtensive properties-
Properties of a system which depend on mass of the system i.e. volume, energy, enthalpy, entropy etc.
โญProcess-
Path along which state of a system changes.
โญIsothermal process-
Process which takes place at constant temperature
โญIsobaric process-
Process which takes place at constant pressure
โญIsochoric process-
Process which takes place at constant volume.
โญAdiabatic process-
Process during which transfer of heat cannot take place between system and surrounding.
โญCyclic process-
Process in which system comes back to its initial state after undergoing series of changes.
โญReversible process-
Process during which the system always departs infinitesimally from the state of equilibrium i.e. its direction can be reversed at any moment.
โญIrriversible Process-
This type of process is fast and gets completed in a single step. This process cannot be reversed. All the natural processes are of this type.
BIOTECH SHORT NOTES
Biotechnology essentially deals with industrial scale production of biopharmaceuticals and biologicals
. The applications of biotechnology include therapeutics, diagnostics, genetically modified crops for agriculture, processed food, bioremediation, waste treatment and energy production.
2. Biotechnology have the following three critical research areas:
(i) To provide the best catalyst in the form of improved organism, usually a microbe or pure enzyme.
(ii) To create optimal conditions through engineering for a catalyst to act.
(iii) Downstream processing technologies to purify the protein/organic compound.
Biotechnology essentially deals with industrial scale production of biopharmaceuticals and biologicals
. The applications of biotechnology include therapeutics, diagnostics, genetically modified crops for agriculture, processed food, bioremediation, waste treatment and energy production.
2. Biotechnology have the following three critical research areas:
(i) To provide the best catalyst in the form of improved organism, usually a microbe or pure enzyme.
(ii) To create optimal conditions through engineering for a catalyst to act.
(iii) Downstream processing technologies to purify the protein/organic compound.
๐ Important One Liners on Electric Charges ๐
------------------------------------------------------------------------
โซ๏ธ If an object is attracted by another charged body, the first object may be oppositely charged or not charged because we know both an uncharged object and an oppositely charged object are attracted by another charged object.
โซ๏ธ If an object is positively charged it loses some of its electrons. The mass of an electron is 9.11*10^-31 kg. So, if a positively charged body loses โnโ number of electrons, it mass decrease by the amount n*9.11E^-31kg.
โซ๏ธ Though gold is a costly metal it is used in electroscope because of the property malleability. This means very thin and light sheets can be formed from gold simply by hammering or rolling and hence the deflection of the light gold plates increases.
โซ๏ธ The divergence of the plates of the Gold-leaf oscilloscope depends only on the presence of a charge, not on the quality of charge i.e. positive or negative. So, if the charge changes from positive to negative and vice versa the degree of divergence of the plates remains the same.
โซ๏ธ The same charges repel each other. So, they try to maintain maximum distance from each other and hence they try to remain at the outer surface of an object. If the charge remains on the inner surface or throughout the body, they will repel each other with greater force.
โซ๏ธ The human body is a good conductor and hence the charge produced by friction flew through his body to the ground. We can tackle the problem simply by holding the brass rod with the help of some insulated holder.
โซ๏ธ If the apparatus is initially in contact with some positively charged body and then comes in contact with another โซ๏ธ charged body and if the divergence increases we can deduce that the second body is also positively charged. If the divergence decreases then the second body must be negatively charged.
โซ๏ธ According to electrostatic series, glass is situated above silk. So, if the glass is rubbed with silk, the positive charge on glass and negative charge on silk is produced. Similarly, we can predict what is the nature of charge if we rub two di-electric substances together.
โซ๏ธ 1 Coulomb means 3*10^9 Electro Static Unit of charge. Coulomb and ESU are two different units of charge and their conversion formula is necessary. Coulomb is the unit of charge in the SI system and esu is the unit of charge in the CGS system.
โซ๏ธ The two spheres are oppositely charged by the same amount. So if they come in contact, both of their charges are neutralized. So they become uncharged and donโt attract or repel each other.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
โซ๏ธ If an object is attracted by another charged body, the first object may be oppositely charged or not charged because we know both an uncharged object and an oppositely charged object are attracted by another charged object.
โซ๏ธ If an object is positively charged it loses some of its electrons. The mass of an electron is 9.11*10^-31 kg. So, if a positively charged body loses โnโ number of electrons, it mass decrease by the amount n*9.11E^-31kg.
โซ๏ธ Though gold is a costly metal it is used in electroscope because of the property malleability. This means very thin and light sheets can be formed from gold simply by hammering or rolling and hence the deflection of the light gold plates increases.
โซ๏ธ The divergence of the plates of the Gold-leaf oscilloscope depends only on the presence of a charge, not on the quality of charge i.e. positive or negative. So, if the charge changes from positive to negative and vice versa the degree of divergence of the plates remains the same.
โซ๏ธ The same charges repel each other. So, they try to maintain maximum distance from each other and hence they try to remain at the outer surface of an object. If the charge remains on the inner surface or throughout the body, they will repel each other with greater force.
โซ๏ธ The human body is a good conductor and hence the charge produced by friction flew through his body to the ground. We can tackle the problem simply by holding the brass rod with the help of some insulated holder.
โซ๏ธ If the apparatus is initially in contact with some positively charged body and then comes in contact with another โซ๏ธ charged body and if the divergence increases we can deduce that the second body is also positively charged. If the divergence decreases then the second body must be negatively charged.
โซ๏ธ According to electrostatic series, glass is situated above silk. So, if the glass is rubbed with silk, the positive charge on glass and negative charge on silk is produced. Similarly, we can predict what is the nature of charge if we rub two di-electric substances together.
โซ๏ธ 1 Coulomb means 3*10^9 Electro Static Unit of charge. Coulomb and ESU are two different units of charge and their conversion formula is necessary. Coulomb is the unit of charge in the SI system and esu is the unit of charge in the CGS system.
โซ๏ธ The two spheres are oppositely charged by the same amount. So if they come in contact, both of their charges are neutralized. So they become uncharged and donโt attract or repel each other.
Important Points of NCERT :
๐ Environmental protection act:- 1986
๐ Air Act:- 1981(amended in 1987)
๐ 1990:- Delhi ranked 4th out of 41 most polluted cities in the World.
๐ All buses run on CNG by- 2002
๐ Water Act:- 1974
๐ Chipko movement(Garhwal Himalayas):- 1974
๐ JFM(Joint Forest Management):- the 1980s
๐ Montreal Protocol (Canada):- 1987 (amended in 1989)
๐ The Earth Summit:- 1992 (Rio de Janeiro)
๐ World Summit:- 2002 (Johannesburg S.A)
๐ IUCN Red List (2004):- 784 species extinct in last 500 years.
๐ Joint Forest Management (JFM):- 1980's.
๐ 1st recombinant DNA:- 1972.
๐ 1st restriction endonuclease:- 1963.
๐ 1997:-An American company got patent rights on Basmati rice.
๐ 1990:- 4 year old girl got ADA deficiency
๐ Environmental protection act:- 1986
๐ Air Act:- 1981(amended in 1987)
๐ 1990:- Delhi ranked 4th out of 41 most polluted cities in the World.
๐ All buses run on CNG by- 2002
๐ Water Act:- 1974
๐ Chipko movement(Garhwal Himalayas):- 1974
๐ JFM(Joint Forest Management):- the 1980s
๐ Montreal Protocol (Canada):- 1987 (amended in 1989)
๐ The Earth Summit:- 1992 (Rio de Janeiro)
๐ World Summit:- 2002 (Johannesburg S.A)
๐ IUCN Red List (2004):- 784 species extinct in last 500 years.
๐ Joint Forest Management (JFM):- 1980's.
๐ 1st recombinant DNA:- 1972.
๐ 1st restriction endonuclease:- 1963.
๐ 1997:-An American company got patent rights on Basmati rice.
๐ 1990:- 4 year old girl got ADA deficiency
โ๏ธRevision Notes on Vectorsโ๏ธ
โโโโโโโโโโโโ
Some Basic Results of Vector Calculus:
1) Vectors in the same direction can be added by simply adding their magnitudes. But if the vectors to be added are in opposite directions, then their magnitudes are subtracted and not added.
2) Column vectors can be added by simply adding the values in each row.
3) You can find the magnitude of a vector in three dimensions by using the formula a2 = b2 + c2 + d2, where a is the magnitude of the vector, and b, c, and d are the components in each direction.
4) If l1a + m1b = l2a + m2b then l1 = l2 and m1 = m2
5) Collinear Vectors are also parallel vectors except that they lie on the same line.
6) When two vectors are parallel, the dot product of the vectors is 1 and their cross product is zero.
7)Two collinear vectors are always linearly dependent.
8) Two non-collinear non-zero vectors are always linearly independent
9) Three coplanar vectors are always linearly dependent.
10) Three non-coplanar non-zero vectors are always linearly independent
11) More than 3 vectors are always linearly dependent.
12) Three vectors are linearly dependent if they are coplanar that means any one of them can be represented as a linear combination of other two.
STAY UNMUTED ๐
โโโโโโโโโโโโ
Some Basic Results of Vector Calculus:
1) Vectors in the same direction can be added by simply adding their magnitudes. But if the vectors to be added are in opposite directions, then their magnitudes are subtracted and not added.
2) Column vectors can be added by simply adding the values in each row.
3) You can find the magnitude of a vector in three dimensions by using the formula a2 = b2 + c2 + d2, where a is the magnitude of the vector, and b, c, and d are the components in each direction.
4) If l1a + m1b = l2a + m2b then l1 = l2 and m1 = m2
5) Collinear Vectors are also parallel vectors except that they lie on the same line.
6) When two vectors are parallel, the dot product of the vectors is 1 and their cross product is zero.
7)Two collinear vectors are always linearly dependent.
8) Two non-collinear non-zero vectors are always linearly independent
9) Three coplanar vectors are always linearly dependent.
10) Three non-coplanar non-zero vectors are always linearly independent
11) More than 3 vectors are always linearly dependent.
12) Three vectors are linearly dependent if they are coplanar that means any one of them can be represented as a linear combination of other two.
STAY UNMUTED ๐
๐พ๐๐๐ฅ๐ฉ๐๐ง - ๐๐๐๐ง๐ค๐๐๐จ ๐๐ฃ ๐๐ช๐ข๐๐ฃ ๐ฌ๐๐ก๐๐๐ง๐โค๏ธ
1.curd also known as lactobacillus or lactic acid bacteria(LAB) with high nutritional quality by increasing vitamin B12.
2.large holes in Swiss cheese are due to production of a large amount of CO2 by bacteria named ๐ฅ๐ง๐ค๐ฅ๐๐ค๐ฃ๐๐๐๐๐ฉ๐๐ง๐๐ช๐ข ๐จ๐๐๐ง๐ข๐๐ฃ๐๐.
3.camemcert cheese(soft) - penicillium camemberti
4.Roquefort cheese( semi-hard) -penicillium Roqueforti
5.Baker's yeast- Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
6.'Toddy' prepared from sap of palms by fermentation.
7.yeast fermentation are
a) Beer- produced from hordeum vulgare and alcohal content is 3-6%
b) Wine - from grapes and alcohol amount is 10-20%
c) brands - distillation of wine and alcohol amount is 60-70%
d) Tum prodced from molasses of sugarcane and alcohol amount is 40%
8.penicillin was the first antibiotic by ๐ผ๐ก๐๐ญ๐๐ฃ๐๐๐ง ๐๐ก๐๐ข๐๐ฃ๐.
9. The bottle juice was cleared by ๐ฅ๐๐๐ฉ๐๐ฃ๐๐จ๐ ๐๐ฃ๐ ๐ฅ๐ง๐ค๐ฉ๐๐๐จ๐.
10. Streptokinase (by Bacterium streptococcus)- clot buster
11.Cyclosporin A ( by fungus trichiderma polysporum) - immunosuppressive agent
12.Statins (by yeast monascus purpureus) - blood cholesterol lowering agent.
13.๐ฝ๐๐ค๐ฅ๐๐จ๐ฉ๐๐๐๐๐- those biological agents that are used for control of weeds, insects,pathogens by viruses, bacteria, fungi, protozoa
14. ๐ฝ๐๐๐ช๐ก๐ค๐ซ๐๐ง๐ช๐จ๐๐จ used as biological agents are in the genus nucleopolyhedrovirus.
15. ๐ฝ๐๐ค๐๐๐ง๐ฉ๐๐ก๐๐ฏ๐๐ง๐จ- organisms that are enrich the nutrient quality of soil by bacteria, fungi, cyanobacteria.
16 .in ๐ฝ๐๐ค(๐๐ค๐๐๐ง) ๐๐๐จ - ๐ข๐๐ฉ๐๐๐ฃ๐(50-70%), ๐พ๐2(30-40%), ๐ฉ๐ง๐๐๐๐จ ๐ค๐ ๐๐ฎ๐๐ง๐ค๐๐๐ฃ, ๐ฃ๐๐ฉ๐ง๐ค๐๐๐ฃ, ๐๐ฎ๐๐ง๐ค๐๐๐ฃ ๐จ๐ช๐ก๐ฅ๐๐๐๐.
1.curd also known as lactobacillus or lactic acid bacteria(LAB) with high nutritional quality by increasing vitamin B12.
2.large holes in Swiss cheese are due to production of a large amount of CO2 by bacteria named ๐ฅ๐ง๐ค๐ฅ๐๐ค๐ฃ๐๐๐๐๐ฉ๐๐ง๐๐ช๐ข ๐จ๐๐๐ง๐ข๐๐ฃ๐๐.
3.camemcert cheese(soft) - penicillium camemberti
4.Roquefort cheese( semi-hard) -penicillium Roqueforti
5.Baker's yeast- Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
6.'Toddy' prepared from sap of palms by fermentation.
7.yeast fermentation are
a) Beer- produced from hordeum vulgare and alcohal content is 3-6%
b) Wine - from grapes and alcohol amount is 10-20%
c) brands - distillation of wine and alcohol amount is 60-70%
d) Tum prodced from molasses of sugarcane and alcohol amount is 40%
8.penicillin was the first antibiotic by ๐ผ๐ก๐๐ญ๐๐ฃ๐๐๐ง ๐๐ก๐๐ข๐๐ฃ๐.
9. The bottle juice was cleared by ๐ฅ๐๐๐ฉ๐๐ฃ๐๐จ๐ ๐๐ฃ๐ ๐ฅ๐ง๐ค๐ฉ๐๐๐จ๐.
10. Streptokinase (by Bacterium streptococcus)- clot buster
11.Cyclosporin A ( by fungus trichiderma polysporum) - immunosuppressive agent
12.Statins (by yeast monascus purpureus) - blood cholesterol lowering agent.
13.๐ฝ๐๐ค๐ฅ๐๐จ๐ฉ๐๐๐๐๐- those biological agents that are used for control of weeds, insects,pathogens by viruses, bacteria, fungi, protozoa
14. ๐ฝ๐๐๐ช๐ก๐ค๐ซ๐๐ง๐ช๐จ๐๐จ used as biological agents are in the genus nucleopolyhedrovirus.
15. ๐ฝ๐๐ค๐๐๐ง๐ฉ๐๐ก๐๐ฏ๐๐ง๐จ- organisms that are enrich the nutrient quality of soil by bacteria, fungi, cyanobacteria.
16 .in ๐ฝ๐๐ค(๐๐ค๐๐๐ง) ๐๐๐จ - ๐ข๐๐ฉ๐๐๐ฃ๐(50-70%), ๐พ๐2(30-40%), ๐ฉ๐ง๐๐๐๐จ ๐ค๐ ๐๐ฎ๐๐ง๐ค๐๐๐ฃ, ๐ฃ๐๐ฉ๐ง๐ค๐๐๐ฃ, ๐๐ฎ๐๐ง๐ค๐๐๐ฃ ๐จ๐ช๐ก๐ฅ๐๐๐๐.
NON-CHORDATES ENDED NOW CHORDATES HERE IS
๐พ๐๐ผ๐๐ ๐ผ๐๐๐๐๐ฝ๐๐ผ:-
The characteristics of the organisms present in class amphibia are as follows:
โThese can live both on land and in water.
โThey are ectothermic animals, found in a warm environment.
โTheir body is divided into head and trunk. The tail may or may not be present.
โThe skin is smooth and rough without any scales, but with glands that make it moist.
โThey have no paired fins. Unpaired fins might be present.
โThey have two pairs of limbs for locomotion.
โThey respire through the lungs and skin. Gills might be present externally in some adults.
โThe heart is three chambered.
โThe kidneys are mesonephric. The excretory material includes ammonia and urea.
โThey possess ten pairs of cranial nerves.
โThe lateral line is present during their development.
โThe sexes are separate and fertilization is usually external. However, in salamanders, the fertilization is internal.
โDevelopment is indirect with metamorphosis.
โBreeding occurs in water. The copulatory organs are absent in males.
Eg., Frogs, Salamanders
โโโโโโโโโโโโ
๐พ๐๐ผ๐๐ ๐ผ๐๐๐๐๐ฝ๐๐ผ:-
The characteristics of the organisms present in class amphibia are as follows:
โThese can live both on land and in water.
โThey are ectothermic animals, found in a warm environment.
โTheir body is divided into head and trunk. The tail may or may not be present.
โThe skin is smooth and rough without any scales, but with glands that make it moist.
โThey have no paired fins. Unpaired fins might be present.
โThey have two pairs of limbs for locomotion.
โThey respire through the lungs and skin. Gills might be present externally in some adults.
โThe heart is three chambered.
โThe kidneys are mesonephric. The excretory material includes ammonia and urea.
โThey possess ten pairs of cranial nerves.
โThe lateral line is present during their development.
โThe sexes are separate and fertilization is usually external. However, in salamanders, the fertilization is internal.
โDevelopment is indirect with metamorphosis.
โBreeding occurs in water. The copulatory organs are absent in males.
Eg., Frogs, Salamanders
โโโโโโโโโโโโ
๐ฐ Important Facts About Human Body ๐ฐ
=========================
๐ธ Largest and strongest Bone in the body:
โ Femur (thigh bone)
๐ธ Smallest Bone in the body
โ Stapes in ear
๐ธ Number of Cells in the body
โ 75 trillion
๐ธ Volume of Blood in the body
โ 6 litres (in 70 kg body)
๐ธ Number of Red Blood Cells(R.B.C.)
โ In male: 5 to 6 million/cubic mm
โ In female: 4 to 5 million/cubic mm
๐ธ Life span of Red Blood Cells(R.B.C.)
โ 100 to 120 days
๐ธ Life span of White Blood Cell(W.B.C.)
โ 3-4 days
๐ธ Normal White Blood Cell(W.B.C.) count
โ 5000-10000/cubic mm
๐ธ Time taken by R.B.C. to complete one cycle of circulation:
โ 20 seconds
๐ธ Other name of Red Blood Cell (R.B.C.):
โ Erythrocytes
๐ธ Largest White Blood Cells:
โ Monocytes
๐ธ Smallest White Blood Cells:
โ Lymphocyte
๐ธ Who discovered Blood Group:
โ Karl Landsteiner
๐ธ Blood Platelets count:
โ 150,000 - 400,000 platelets per micro litre
๐ธ Haemoglobin (Hb):
โ In male: 14-15 gm/100 c.c. of blood
โ In female: 11-14 gm/100 c.c. of blood
๐ธ Hb content in body:
โ 500-700 gm
๐ธ pH of Urine:
โ 6.5-8
๐ธ pH of Blood:
โ 7.36-7.41
๐ธ Volume of Semen:
โ 2-5 ml/ejaculation
๐ธ Pulse rate:
โ 72 per minute
๐ธ Thinnest Skin:
โ Eyelids
๐ธ Weight of Heart:
โ 200-300 gm
ใฐใฐใฐใฐใฐใฐใฐใฐใฐใฐใฐ
=========================
๐ธ Largest and strongest Bone in the body:
โ Femur (thigh bone)
๐ธ Smallest Bone in the body
โ Stapes in ear
๐ธ Number of Cells in the body
โ 75 trillion
๐ธ Volume of Blood in the body
โ 6 litres (in 70 kg body)
๐ธ Number of Red Blood Cells(R.B.C.)
โ In male: 5 to 6 million/cubic mm
โ In female: 4 to 5 million/cubic mm
๐ธ Life span of Red Blood Cells(R.B.C.)
โ 100 to 120 days
๐ธ Life span of White Blood Cell(W.B.C.)
โ 3-4 days
๐ธ Normal White Blood Cell(W.B.C.) count
โ 5000-10000/cubic mm
๐ธ Time taken by R.B.C. to complete one cycle of circulation:
โ 20 seconds
๐ธ Other name of Red Blood Cell (R.B.C.):
โ Erythrocytes
๐ธ Largest White Blood Cells:
โ Monocytes
๐ธ Smallest White Blood Cells:
โ Lymphocyte
๐ธ Who discovered Blood Group:
โ Karl Landsteiner
๐ธ Blood Platelets count:
โ 150,000 - 400,000 platelets per micro litre
๐ธ Haemoglobin (Hb):
โ In male: 14-15 gm/100 c.c. of blood
โ In female: 11-14 gm/100 c.c. of blood
๐ธ Hb content in body:
โ 500-700 gm
๐ธ pH of Urine:
โ 6.5-8
๐ธ pH of Blood:
โ 7.36-7.41
๐ธ Volume of Semen:
โ 2-5 ml/ejaculation
๐ธ Pulse rate:
โ 72 per minute
๐ธ Thinnest Skin:
โ Eyelids
๐ธ Weight of Heart:
โ 200-300 gm
ใฐใฐใฐใฐใฐใฐใฐใฐใฐใฐใฐ
Male Reproductive System
1. The elastic tissue which connects the cauda epididymis to the scrotal sac is
(a) Caput epididymis
(b) Scrotal ligament
(c) Gubernaculumโ
(d) Tendinous cord
2. By the contraction of the spermatic cord, the testis of man are not taken to the abdominal cavity due to this structure
(a) fat bodies and gubernaculum present over the testis
(b) attachment of testis by gubernaculum to the scrotal sac onlyโ
(c) narrowness of inguinal canal
(d) both (b) and (c)
3. The seminiferous tubules of the testis are lined by the germinal epithelium consisting of
(a) spermatids
(b) cells of Sertoliโ
(c) spermatogonium
(d) spermatocytes
4. These cells of the testes secrete testosterone
(a) Sertoli cells
(b) cells of germinal epithelium
(c) Cells of Leydig or interstitial cellsโ
(d) secondary spermatocytes
5. There is a connective tissue cord extending between the testis and abdominal wall known as
(a) mesenteric cord
(b) gubernaculum
(c) testis cord
(d) spermatic cordโ
6. Which of these is an accessory reproductive gland in male mammals
(a) Inguinal gland
(b) Prostate glandโ
(c) Mushroom-shaped gland
(d) Gastric gland
7. There are some special types of cells present in the seminiferous tubules known as Sertoli cells which are
(a) somatic cells
(b) germinal cells
(c) protective cellsโ
(d) reproductive cells
8. Seminiferous tubules develop central lumen after
(a) Old age
(b) Prepuberal time
(c) Birth
(d) Pubertyโ
9. Another name for Bulbourethral gland is
(a) Meibomian gland
(b) Prostate gland
(c) Perineal gland
(d) Cowperโs glandโ
10. In man, Cryptorchidism is the condition when
(a) testes do not descent into the scrotumโ
(b) there are two testes in each scrotum
(c) testis degenerates in the scrotum
(d) testis enlarges in the scrotum
1. The elastic tissue which connects the cauda epididymis to the scrotal sac is
(a) Caput epididymis
(b) Scrotal ligament
(c) Gubernaculumโ
(d) Tendinous cord
2. By the contraction of the spermatic cord, the testis of man are not taken to the abdominal cavity due to this structure
(a) fat bodies and gubernaculum present over the testis
(b) attachment of testis by gubernaculum to the scrotal sac onlyโ
(c) narrowness of inguinal canal
(d) both (b) and (c)
3. The seminiferous tubules of the testis are lined by the germinal epithelium consisting of
(a) spermatids
(b) cells of Sertoliโ
(c) spermatogonium
(d) spermatocytes
4. These cells of the testes secrete testosterone
(a) Sertoli cells
(b) cells of germinal epithelium
(c) Cells of Leydig or interstitial cellsโ
(d) secondary spermatocytes
5. There is a connective tissue cord extending between the testis and abdominal wall known as
(a) mesenteric cord
(b) gubernaculum
(c) testis cord
(d) spermatic cordโ
6. Which of these is an accessory reproductive gland in male mammals
(a) Inguinal gland
(b) Prostate glandโ
(c) Mushroom-shaped gland
(d) Gastric gland
7. There are some special types of cells present in the seminiferous tubules known as Sertoli cells which are
(a) somatic cells
(b) germinal cells
(c) protective cellsโ
(d) reproductive cells
8. Seminiferous tubules develop central lumen after
(a) Old age
(b) Prepuberal time
(c) Birth
(d) Pubertyโ
9. Another name for Bulbourethral gland is
(a) Meibomian gland
(b) Prostate gland
(c) Perineal gland
(d) Cowperโs glandโ
10. In man, Cryptorchidism is the condition when
(a) testes do not descent into the scrotumโ
(b) there are two testes in each scrotum
(c) testis degenerates in the scrotum
(d) testis enlarges in the scrotum
๐ฅIncreasings or Decreasing Order๐ฅ
๐ด 01. Melting point=
Li > Na > K > Rb > Cs
๐ด 02. Colour of the flame=
Li-Red, Na-Golden, K-Violet, Rb-Red, Cs-Blue, Ca-Brick red, Sr-Blood red, Ba-Apple green
๐ด 03. Stability of hydrides =
LiH > NaH > KH > RbH> CsH
๐ด 04. Basic nature of hydroxides=
LIOH < NaOH < KOH < RbOH < CsOH
๐ด 05. Hydration energy=
Li> Na > K> Rb > Cs
๐ด 06. Reducing character=
Li > Cs > Rb > K > Na
๐ด 07. Stability of +3 oxidation state=
B> Al > Ga > In > T1
๐ด 08. Stability of +1 oxidation state= Ga < In < TI
๐ด 09. Basic nature of the oxides and hydroxides=
B< Al< Ga < In < TI
๐ด 10. Relative strength of Lewis acid= BF3 < BCl3 < BBr3 < BI3
๐ด 11. Ionisation energy=
B> Al <Ga > In <TI
๐ด 12. Reactivity=
C<Si< Ge < Sn <Pb
๐ด 13. Metallic character=
C< Si < Ge < Sn < Pb
๐ด 14. Acidic character of the oxides=
Co2 > SiO2 > Ge02 > SnO2 > PbO2
๐ด 15. Reducing nature of hydrides=
CH4 < SiH4 < GeH4 < SnH4 < PbH4
๐ด 16. Thermal stability of tetrahalides=
CCl4> SiCl4> GeCl4> SnCl4 > PbCl4
๐ด 17. Oxidising character of M+4 species=
GeCl4 < SnCl4 < PbCl4
๐ด 18. Ease of hydrolysis of tetrahalides=
SiCl4 < GeCl4 < SnCl4 < PbCI4
๐ด 19. Acidic strength of trioxides=
N203 > P2O3 > As2O3
๐ด 20. Acidic strength of pentoxides=
N2O2 > P2O2> As202 > Sb2O2 > Biฬ202
๐ด 21. Acidic strength of oxides of nitrogen=
N2O < NO <N2O3 <N2O4 < N2O5
๐ด 22. Basic nature/ bond angle/ thermal stability and dipole moment of hydrides=
NH3 > PH3 > AsH3 > SbH3 > BiH3
๐ด 23. Stability of trihalides of nitrogen=
NF3 > NCl3 > NBr3
๐ด 24.Lewis base strength=
NF3 <NCl3 <NBr3 < NI3
๐ด 25. Ease of hydrolysis of trichlorides=
NCl3 > PCI3 > AsCl3 > SbCl3 > BiCl3
๐ด 26. Lewis acid strength of trihalides of P, As, and Sb=
PCl3 > ASCl3 > SbCl3
๐ด 27. Lewis acid strength among phosphorus trihalides
PF3 > PCl3 > PBr3 > PI3
๐ด 28. Melting and boiling point of hydrides=
H2O > H2Te > H2Se >H2S
๐ด 29. Volatility of hydrides=
H2O < H2Te < H2Se < H2S
๐ด 30. Reducing nature of hydrides=
H2S < H2Se < H2Te
๐ด 31. Covalent character of hydrides=
H2O < H2S < H2Se < H2Te
๐ด 32. The acidic character of oxides (elements in the same oxidation state)=
SO2 > SeO2 > TeO2 > PoO2
SO3 > SeO3 > TeO3
๐ด 33. Acidic character of oxide of a particular element (e.g. S)=
SO < SO2 < SO3
SO2 > TeO2 > SeO2 > PoO2
๐ด 34. Bond energy of halogens=
Cl2 > Br2 > F2 > I2
๐ด 35. Solubility of halogen in water =
F2 > Cl2 > Br2 > I2
๐ด 36. Oxidising power=
F2 > Cl2 > Br2 > I2
๐ด 37. Enthalpy of hydration of X ion=
F- > Cl- > Br- >I-
๐ด 38. Reactivity of halogens:=
F> Cl> Br > I
๐ด 39. Ionic character of M-X bond in halides
= M-F > M-Cl > MBr > M-I
๐ด 40. Reducing character of X ion:=
I- > Br- > Cl- > F-
๐ด 41. Acidic strength of halogen acids=
HI > HBr > HCI > HF
๐ด 42. Reducing property of hydrogen halides
= HF < HCL < HBr < HI
๐ด 43. Oxidising power of oxides of chlorine
= Cl2O > ClO2 > Cl206 > Cl2O7
๐ด 44. Decreasing ionic size=
02- > F- > Na+ > Mg2+
๐ด 45. Increasing acidic property=
Na2O3 < MgO < ZnO< P205
๐ด 46. Increasing bond length=
N2 <02 < F2 < CL2
๐ด 47. Increasing size=
Ca2+ < Cl- < S2-
๐ด 48. Increasing acid strength=
HClO < HClO2 < HClO3 < HClO4
๐ด 49. Increasing oxidation number of iodine=
HI< I2 <ICl <HIO4
๐ด 50. Increasing thermal stability=
HOCl < HOClO < HOClO2 < HOClO3
๐ด 01. Melting point=
Li > Na > K > Rb > Cs
๐ด 02. Colour of the flame=
Li-Red, Na-Golden, K-Violet, Rb-Red, Cs-Blue, Ca-Brick red, Sr-Blood red, Ba-Apple green
๐ด 03. Stability of hydrides =
LiH > NaH > KH > RbH> CsH
๐ด 04. Basic nature of hydroxides=
LIOH < NaOH < KOH < RbOH < CsOH
๐ด 05. Hydration energy=
Li> Na > K> Rb > Cs
๐ด 06. Reducing character=
Li > Cs > Rb > K > Na
๐ด 07. Stability of +3 oxidation state=
B> Al > Ga > In > T1
๐ด 08. Stability of +1 oxidation state= Ga < In < TI
๐ด 09. Basic nature of the oxides and hydroxides=
B< Al< Ga < In < TI
๐ด 10. Relative strength of Lewis acid= BF3 < BCl3 < BBr3 < BI3
๐ด 11. Ionisation energy=
B> Al <Ga > In <TI
๐ด 12. Reactivity=
C<Si< Ge < Sn <Pb
๐ด 13. Metallic character=
C< Si < Ge < Sn < Pb
๐ด 14. Acidic character of the oxides=
Co2 > SiO2 > Ge02 > SnO2 > PbO2
๐ด 15. Reducing nature of hydrides=
CH4 < SiH4 < GeH4 < SnH4 < PbH4
๐ด 16. Thermal stability of tetrahalides=
CCl4> SiCl4> GeCl4> SnCl4 > PbCl4
๐ด 17. Oxidising character of M+4 species=
GeCl4 < SnCl4 < PbCl4
๐ด 18. Ease of hydrolysis of tetrahalides=
SiCl4 < GeCl4 < SnCl4 < PbCI4
๐ด 19. Acidic strength of trioxides=
N203 > P2O3 > As2O3
๐ด 20. Acidic strength of pentoxides=
N2O2 > P2O2> As202 > Sb2O2 > Biฬ202
๐ด 21. Acidic strength of oxides of nitrogen=
N2O < NO <N2O3 <N2O4 < N2O5
๐ด 22. Basic nature/ bond angle/ thermal stability and dipole moment of hydrides=
NH3 > PH3 > AsH3 > SbH3 > BiH3
๐ด 23. Stability of trihalides of nitrogen=
NF3 > NCl3 > NBr3
๐ด 24.Lewis base strength=
NF3 <NCl3 <NBr3 < NI3
๐ด 25. Ease of hydrolysis of trichlorides=
NCl3 > PCI3 > AsCl3 > SbCl3 > BiCl3
๐ด 26. Lewis acid strength of trihalides of P, As, and Sb=
PCl3 > ASCl3 > SbCl3
๐ด 27. Lewis acid strength among phosphorus trihalides
PF3 > PCl3 > PBr3 > PI3
๐ด 28. Melting and boiling point of hydrides=
H2O > H2Te > H2Se >H2S
๐ด 29. Volatility of hydrides=
H2O < H2Te < H2Se < H2S
๐ด 30. Reducing nature of hydrides=
H2S < H2Se < H2Te
๐ด 31. Covalent character of hydrides=
H2O < H2S < H2Se < H2Te
๐ด 32. The acidic character of oxides (elements in the same oxidation state)=
SO2 > SeO2 > TeO2 > PoO2
SO3 > SeO3 > TeO3
๐ด 33. Acidic character of oxide of a particular element (e.g. S)=
SO < SO2 < SO3
SO2 > TeO2 > SeO2 > PoO2
๐ด 34. Bond energy of halogens=
Cl2 > Br2 > F2 > I2
๐ด 35. Solubility of halogen in water =
F2 > Cl2 > Br2 > I2
๐ด 36. Oxidising power=
F2 > Cl2 > Br2 > I2
๐ด 37. Enthalpy of hydration of X ion=
F- > Cl- > Br- >I-
๐ด 38. Reactivity of halogens:=
F> Cl> Br > I
๐ด 39. Ionic character of M-X bond in halides
= M-F > M-Cl > MBr > M-I
๐ด 40. Reducing character of X ion:=
I- > Br- > Cl- > F-
๐ด 41. Acidic strength of halogen acids=
HI > HBr > HCI > HF
๐ด 42. Reducing property of hydrogen halides
= HF < HCL < HBr < HI
๐ด 43. Oxidising power of oxides of chlorine
= Cl2O > ClO2 > Cl206 > Cl2O7
๐ด 44. Decreasing ionic size=
02- > F- > Na+ > Mg2+
๐ด 45. Increasing acidic property=
Na2O3 < MgO < ZnO< P205
๐ด 46. Increasing bond length=
N2 <02 < F2 < CL2
๐ด 47. Increasing size=
Ca2+ < Cl- < S2-
๐ด 48. Increasing acid strength=
HClO < HClO2 < HClO3 < HClO4
๐ด 49. Increasing oxidation number of iodine=
HI< I2 <ICl <HIO4
๐ด 50. Increasing thermal stability=
HOCl < HOClO < HOClO2 < HOClO3
Forwarded from Garima Goel Official
๐Some Important Increasing Order ๐:
๐ 1. Bond Angle :
(i) CH4 , C2H4 , C2H2
(ii) H2O, NH3 , CH4 , CO2
(iii) H2O, NH3 , CH4 , BH3
(iv) NO2โ, NO2 , NO2+
(v) H2Se, H2S, H2O
(vi) AsH3 , PH3 , NH3
(vii) PF3 , PCl3 , PBr3 , PI3
(viii) NF3 , NCl3
(ix) NF3 , NH3 , NCl3
(x) OF2 , OH2 , Cl2O
๐ 2. Melting Point :
(i) Cs, Rb, K, Na, Li
(ii) Mg, Ba, Sr, Ca, Be
(iii) CaI2 , CaBr2 , CaCl2 , CaF2
(iv) BeCl2 , MgCl2 , CaCl2 , SrCl2 , BaCl2
(v) NaI, NaBr, NaCl, NaF
(vi) CsCl, RbCl, KCl, NaCl
(vii) AlCl3 , MgCl2 , NaCl
๐ 3.Boiling Point :
(i) PH3 , AsH3 , NH3 , SbH3
(ii) H2S, H2Se, H2O
(iii) HCl, HBr, HI, HF
(iv) NH3 , HF, H2O
(v) He, Ne, Ar, Kr
(vi) H2O, D2O
(vii) H2 , Cl2 , Br2
๐ 4.Dipole moments :
(i) CCl4 , CHCl3 , CH2Cl2 ,CH3Cl
(ii) NF3 , NH3 , H2O, HF
(iii) Cis-chloropropene, Trans-chloropropene
(iv) p, m, o-dichlorobenzene
(v) CH3I, CH3Br, CH3F, CH3Cl
(vi) NH3 , SO2 , H2O, HF
(vii) H2S, H2O
(viii) HI, HBr, HCl, HF
(ix) PH3 , ASH3 , SbH3 , NH3
(x) H2O, H2O2
๐ 1. Bond Angle :
(i) CH4 , C2H4 , C2H2
(ii) H2O, NH3 , CH4 , CO2
(iii) H2O, NH3 , CH4 , BH3
(iv) NO2โ, NO2 , NO2+
(v) H2Se, H2S, H2O
(vi) AsH3 , PH3 , NH3
(vii) PF3 , PCl3 , PBr3 , PI3
(viii) NF3 , NCl3
(ix) NF3 , NH3 , NCl3
(x) OF2 , OH2 , Cl2O
๐ 2. Melting Point :
(i) Cs, Rb, K, Na, Li
(ii) Mg, Ba, Sr, Ca, Be
(iii) CaI2 , CaBr2 , CaCl2 , CaF2
(iv) BeCl2 , MgCl2 , CaCl2 , SrCl2 , BaCl2
(v) NaI, NaBr, NaCl, NaF
(vi) CsCl, RbCl, KCl, NaCl
(vii) AlCl3 , MgCl2 , NaCl
๐ 3.Boiling Point :
(i) PH3 , AsH3 , NH3 , SbH3
(ii) H2S, H2Se, H2O
(iii) HCl, HBr, HI, HF
(iv) NH3 , HF, H2O
(v) He, Ne, Ar, Kr
(vi) H2O, D2O
(vii) H2 , Cl2 , Br2
๐ 4.Dipole moments :
(i) CCl4 , CHCl3 , CH2Cl2 ,CH3Cl
(ii) NF3 , NH3 , H2O, HF
(iii) Cis-chloropropene, Trans-chloropropene
(iv) p, m, o-dichlorobenzene
(v) CH3I, CH3Br, CH3F, CH3Cl
(vi) NH3 , SO2 , H2O, HF
(vii) H2S, H2O
(viii) HI, HBr, HCl, HF
(ix) PH3 , ASH3 , SbH3 , NH3
(x) H2O, H2O2