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Introduction to water- engineering chemistry

Around 72 % of an entire body is made up of water and 72 % are our organs all kinds of minerals the vitamins proteins etcetera water is a very important part of body if we do not have water our body will get dehydrated very easily and dehydration is something which leads to illness and sicknesses it leads to loss of energy very quickly. Water is used by living organisms such as human beings animals plants microbes insects etc. need water and where living systems are not involved for example machines for example water was used as a coolant before now we have other types of coolants for example we have air conditioners which help in cooling the computer machines etc but before that me used to put water and store the water at certain parts to make sure that a machine was cool.

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Plant Immunity

Notes from Year 3 Biochemistry lectures on Plant Immunity, covering Cell and molecular biology of plant-microbe interactions, focal immunity, surface immune recognition in plants, mechanisms of NLR-triggered plant immunity, effector-triggered susceptibility, and the molecular arms race between plants and pathogens.

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class 11 chemistry notes

Making effective short notes involves a systematic approach. Begin by skimming the material to identify key points and headings. Use abbreviations, symbols, and keywords to condense information. Organize notes using bullet points or numbered lists.

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Ionic Bonds Notes

These easy to use, color coded, notes contain all the essential information for ionic bonding

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Chemical Reaction and Equations

Full study notes for class 10th science chapter 1 chemistry reaction and Equations

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GCSE Chemistry Triple Award General Notes

Handwritten in joined up writing. Scanned into computer. GCSE level. Ionic and Covalent Bonding

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OCR 2024 GCSE Chemistry B (Twenty First Century Science) J258/01 Breadth in Chemistry (Foundation Tier) With Marking Scheme Merged

OCR 2024 GCSE Chemistry B (Twenty First Century Science) J258/01 Breadth in Chemistry (Foundation Tier) With Marking Scheme Merged CHEMISTRY B Oxford Cambridge and RSA Friday 17 May 2024 – Morning GCSE (9−1) Chemistry B (Twenty First Century Science) J258/01 Breadth in Chemistry (Foundation Tier) Time allowed: 1 hour 45 minutes You must have: F • a ruler (cm/mm) • the Data Sheet for GCSE (9–1) Chemistry B (inside this document) You can use: • an HB pencil • a scientific or graphical calculator * J 2 5 8 0 1 * Please write clearly in black ink. Do not write in the barcodes. Centre number First name(s) Last name INSTRUCTIONS Candidate number • Use black ink. You can use an HB pencil, but only for graphs and diagrams. • Write your answer to each question in the space provided. If you need extra space use the lined page at the end of this booklet. The question numbers must be clearly shown. • Answer all the questions. • Where appropriate, your answer should be supported with working. Marks might be given for using a correct method, even if your answer is wrong. INFORMATION • The total mark for this paper is 90. • The marks for each question are shown in brackets [ ]. • This document has 28 pages. ADVICE • Read each question carefully before you start your answer. 2 1 Fuels such as diesel and petrol are made from hydrocarbons. (a) (i) Hydrocarbons are made from carbon and one other element. What is the other element? Put a ring around the correct option. Chlorine Hydrogen Nitrogen Oxygen [1] (ii) What is the main source of hydrocarbons? ..................................................................................................................................................... [1] (b) Alkanes are hydrocarbons. Which compound is an alkane? Tick (✓) one box. Butanoic acid Ethanol Methane Propene [1] (c) Alkenes are also hydrocarbons. They can be used to make polymers. Which statements about polymers are true and which are false? Tick (✓) one box in each row. True False All polymers are made from alkenes. Polymers are long chain molecules. Polymers can be synthetic or naturally occurring.

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Chapter 3 - Water and Life

What are the special properties of water, and how do these properties allow it to be so important to living things?

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General Chemistry 2: Solutions

Solved Problems dealing with solutions (molarity ,molality,etc)

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Skills for the discovery of drugs

How to create different types of drugs with different possible and easy ways

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Perfume

This is all about perfumes (e,g the word perfume derives from the Latin "per fumum"... the essential oils, the fragrance pyramid,etc.) and it also includes some recipes on how to make one. Level - 3rd year to 4th year.

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Mechanism of a Reaction in Organic Chemistry

Understanding Mechanism of a Reaction in Organic Chemistry

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Year 1 Chemistry (Inorganic)

Notes for AQA AS level Chemistry inorganic module, includes: Periodicity Group 2 - The Alkali Metals Group 7 - The Halogens

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GCSE C3 L5 1 Word Equations

explains metal hydroxide + acids & metal carbonate + acid

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Solid State: Crystal Defects

It contains all the defects which come under solid state with suitable explanation for each.

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IEB 12 Grade physical science p-1

chemical bonding key concept for IB 12 Grade

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Electric Charges and Field

This the chapter electric Charges and Field. I hope this may helpful for you

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J. J. Thomson, Electrons and Isotopes

A detailed introduction to J. J. Thomson and the discovery of the electron, Isotopes and mass spectrometry. Also includes diagrams and details on his experiments with cathode rays.

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Blood coagulation

Blood coagulation is the process where blood forms a clot to stop bleeding. Platelets and clotting factors work together to create a fibrin mesh, stabilizing the clot and sealing the wound.

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Physical Chemistry practice questions

A large range of physical chemistry practice questions for 1st year chemistry related degrees

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Thyroid gland

Bsc zoology notes on thyroid gland Assam don bosco university

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The function of cell

Some notes of the function of cell

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Mole concept - Chemistry (short notes) class 11th

It is handwritten mole concept short notes , by which you can revise your whole chapter in minutes.

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ELISA test

Introduction to ELISA

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Class 10th Carbon and its Compound Long questions answers

This is long question of Carbon and its Compounds for practice.

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Equations and Units Cheat Sheet for Level 2 Core Chemistry

A cheat sheet of units and equations (basic) for Core Chemistry 2.2- Chemistry of Activated Systems and Radicals. Focuses on rate laws, Arrenhius, etc.

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Polarisation and electronegativity

Very details explanations

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Regulation of Glycolysis and its importance

It's very helpful

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Alkene Reaction With NBS (N-Bromosuccinimide)

Complete Guide on alkene reaction with NBS (N-Bromosuccinimide) with mechanism shown covering plenty of examples.

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ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY STUDY GUIDE

In this study material, you will be able to understand what is the “ ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY STUDY GUIDE.”

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SURREAL NOTES

Chemistry( Atomic structure, bonding and Main group Chemistry) study materials for and second year, question papers

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Solução Tampão

Solução Tampão. Material de química analítica da UNIVERSIDADE RURAL DA AMAZÔNIA.

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The digestive system

Btec Unit 8 Distinction assignment Digestive system

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chemistry AS level chapter 1

Includes notes and past year paper questions

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notes for pretty much the whole igcse syllabus

notes for yall in igcse. contains everything from states of matter to classification

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Electron Paramagnetic Resonance Spectroscopy

The application of EPR on several organic and inorganic samples. This 9 page report simplifies the understanding of EPR through a discussion of the theory and then applies it to several samples to give a more in-field discussion as to what results are shown.

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Matter, States of Matter and Mixtures

These notes define and provide examples of matter, states of matter and types of mixtures. This is from Temple University's Chem 1031 with Dr. Price.

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8.3 Qualitative Analysis

GCSE and A-level notes for 8.3 Qualitative analysis for module 3. OCR and AQA

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glycine,alanina and valine amino acid

-biochemistry -includes detail notes on first 3 amino acid -includes intro., biosynthesis, degradation, uses, important points of each 3 amino acid -covered imp. points in short -

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Enzyme Inhibition

Covers everything you need to know about enzyme inhibition in the new AQA Biology A Level syllabus!

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REM VS NREM

Sleep types, 20 differences, more than enough for mbbs.

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Organic Chemistry (exercise)

CH323

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Cheat cheats for Grade 11 final Physics Prep

These apply to all advanced pyhsics courses

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BTEC Applied Science Unit 3 - Assignment 1

Unit 3: Scientific Investigations – Assignment 1  Task 1    Decide on a topic around which to base your investigation.   Research your topic using a range of suitable sources  You then need to research the topic so that you are able to produce a suitable hypothesis and suggest a method.  You should compile the information you have collected and produce a list of the references you have used, using the Harvard referencing system.   You must use a wide range (at least 3) of sources and it is helpful to list them as you work through them.   Keep any methods you find as these will be useful later for P3 and D1.   It is essential that you choose an investigation which has variations of approach so that you can evaluate them.    This provides evidence for P2  Task 2    Draw a table of your research references showing the information from each concerning your chosen topic of investigation.   Analyse which ones are relevant to your work and which ones are not and discuss, giving reasons.    You can either do this as a written explanation or present your work to your tutor who will record a witness statement    This provides evidence for M1  EXAM BOARD IS PEARSON ALL ASSIGNMENTS I HAVE UPLOADED ARE DISTINCTION GRADED

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SIMPLE TO TOUGH NUMERICALS

NUMERICALS ON MOTION IN A PLANE... VECTORS, PROJECTILE MOTION, CIRCULAR MOTION

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