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CHEMISTRY PAPER 1
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Cards (22)
Law of
conservation
of
mass
No atoms are lost or made during a chemical reaction so the
mass
of the products =
mass
of the reactants
Balanced
chemical equation
The numbers of
atoms
of each element involved are the
same
on both sides of the equation
Relative formula mass
(
Mr
)
Sum of the
relative atomic
masses of the atoms in the
numbers
shown in the formula
In a balanced chemical equation, the sum of
Mr
of reactants in quantities shown = sum of
Mr
of products in quantities shown
If a reaction appears to involve a
change
in
mass
Check to see if this is due to a reactant or a product as a
gas
and its
mass
has not been taken into account
When a metal reacts with
oxygen
, the
mass
of the metal oxide product is greater than the mass of the metal
Whenever a
measurement
is made there is always some
uncertainty
about the result obtained
Estimations
of uncertainty
Be prepared to make estimations of uncertainty when making chemical measurements
Mole
The unit used to measure
chemical
amounts
The
mass
of one
mole
of a substance in grams is numerically equal to its relative formula mass
One
mole
of a substance contains the same number of the stated particles, atoms, molecules or ions as
one
mole of any other substance
Converting between moles and grams
Use the triangle or the equation:
mass
= moles x
molar mass
The number of atoms, molecules or ions in a mole of a given substance is the
Avogadro
constant:
6.02
x 10^23 per mole
Balanced
symbol equation
Can be interpreted in terms of
moles
The total
moles
of one element must be the
same
on both sides of the equation
Balancing
numbers in a symbol equation
Convert the masses in
grams
to amounts in
moles
b. Convert the numbers of
moles
to
simple whole number ratios
Limiting reactant
The reactant that is used up / not in excess (since it
limits
the amount of products)
If a limiting reactant is used, the amount of product produced is
restricted
to the amount of the excess reactant that reacts with the
limiting
one
Concentration
of a solution
Measured in
mass
per given
volume
of solution e.g. grams per dm^3 (g/dm^3)
Calculating mass of solute in a given volume of a known
concentration
Use
mass
= conc x
vol
A
smaller volume or larger mass of solute
Gives a
higher
concentration
A
larger
volume or
smaller
mass of solute
Gives a
lower
concentration