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| New Member HSC: 2010 Gender: Undisclosed
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29 Oct 2009, 7:37 PM ![]() | A cry of HHEELLpppppp from the deeeppp pit of falling behind in class cos of a VIRUS! You can hide this advertisement by registering. describe the relationship between commercial prices of common elements, actual abundances and relative costs of production...help anyone? its preliminary chem XD, p.s. not to do with yield, thats a seperate dot pt...>_< cheers ppl |
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4 Nov 2009, 6:52 PM ![]() | Re: A cry of HHEELLpppppp from the deeeppp pit of falling behind in class cos of a VI Well if the element is less abundant (i.e. Harder to find) then its commercial price would be quite high, if the element is very abundant then its commercial cost would be low because its easier to obtain. Hope i helped! |
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| Exalted Member HSC: 2009 Gender: Male
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Yesterday, 11:57 PM ![]() ![]() ![]() | Re: A cry of HHEELLpppppp from the deeeppp pit of falling behind in class cos of a VI Quote:
if an element is found in an ore and needs extracting, depending on the extraction costs, then different elements will cost less or larger amounts. also depending on demand will determine its cost aluminium is kinda abundant, like 7% of the earths crust, it requires a large amount of energy for it to be extracted out of its ore and it is also in high demand, therefore increasing price. an element that may be as rare as 1% in the earths crust, but may be cheaper than the aluminium because it could be cheaper to extract and it may also not be in demand.
__________________ Phys chem MX2---- not unfortunately i dropped it and did 2u instead, now i'm ashamed ='( std english business studies | |
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