Science Chemistry Paper 1

Cards (98)

  • What topics are covered in AQA GCC chemistry paper 1?
    Topics 1 to 5: atoms, bonding, quantitative chemistry, and chemical and energy changes
  • What is a compound?
    A compound is a substance that contains two or more different types of atoms chemically bonded together
  • What is the chemical formula for water?
    H<sub>2</sub>O
  • How many hydrogen atoms are in one molecule of water?
    There are two hydrogen atoms in one molecule of water
  • What happens to atoms during a chemical reaction?
    Atoms change what they're bonded to and how they're bonded through chemical reactions
  • What is a word equation?
    A word equation represents a chemical reaction using the names of the reactants and products
  • Why must chemical equations be balanced?
    Because atoms are not created or destroyed in a chemical reaction, the same number of each type of atom must be present on both sides
  • What is the first step in balancing a chemical equation?
    Start balancing atoms that are only in compounds
  • How do you balance hydrogen atoms in a chemical equation?
    By placing a coefficient in front of the compound containing hydrogen to multiply the number of hydrogen atoms
  • What is a mixture?
    A mixture is any combination of different types of elements and compounds that aren't chemically bonded together
  • Give an example of a mixture.
    Air, which is a mixture of oxygen, nitrogen, and more
  • What is filtration used for?
    Filtration is used to separate large insoluble particles from a liquid
  • What is crystallization?
    Crystallization is a process that leaves a solute behind after evaporating the solvent from a solution
  • How does distillation work?
    Distillation involves heating a solution to create gas, which is then cooled to condense back into a liquid
  • What is fractional distillation?
    Fractional distillation separates different liquids in a mixture based on their boiling points
  • What are the three main states of matter?
    Solid, liquid, and gas
  • How do particles behave in a solid state?
    Particles vibrate around fixed positions in a solid
  • What happens to particles when a substance melts or evaporates?
    Energy is supplied to overcome the electrostatic forces of attraction between the particles
  • What do state symbols indicate in chemical equations?
    State symbols indicate the physical state of substances: (s) for solid, (l) for liquid, (g) for gas, and (aq) for aqueous
  • Who proposed the plum pudding model of the atom?
    JJ Thompson proposed the plum pudding model of the atom
  • What did Ernest Rutherford discover about the atom?
    He discovered that the positive charge is concentrated in a small nucleus
  • What did Niels Bohr contribute to atomic theory?
    Niels Bohr discovered that electrons exist in shells or orbitals around the nucleus
  • What are protons and neutrons collectively called?
    Protons and neutrons are collectively called nucleons
  • What is the charge of a proton?
    The charge of a proton is +1
  • What is the charge of a neutron?
    The charge of a neutron is 0
  • What is the charge of an electron?
    The charge of an electron is -1
  • What does the atomic number represent?
    The atomic number represents the number of protons in the nucleus
  • What is an ion?
    An ion is an atom that has gained or lost electrons
  • What does the mass number represent?
    The mass number represents the total number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus
  • What are isotopes?
    Isotopes are atoms of the same element with different numbers of neutrons
  • What is relative atomic mass (RAM)?
    Relative atomic mass is the weighted average mass of an element's isotopes
  • How is the average relative atomic mass calculated?
    By adding the total masses of all isotopes and dividing by the total number of atoms
  • What is the significance of Dmitri Mendeleev's periodic table?
    Mendeleev grouped elements based on their properties, predicting gaps for undiscovered elements
  • How are electrons arranged in an atom?
    Electrons are arranged in shells around the nucleus
  • What is the maximum number of electrons in the first four shells?
    The maximum number of electrons is 2 in the first shell, 8 in the second and third shells, and 2 in the fourth shell
  • What are the properties of metals?
    Metals are good conductors of electricity and heat, and they lose electrons to form positive ions
  • What are the properties of nonmetals?
    Nonmetals gain electrons to form negative ions and are generally poor conductors of electricity
  • What are alkali metals?
    Alkali metals are in group one and have one electron in their outer shell
  • How does reactivity change in alkali metals as you go down the group?
    Reactivity increases as you go down the group due to weaker electrostatic attraction
  • What are halogens?
    Halogens are in group seven and have seven electrons in their outer shell