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Jack oxley
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Cards (31)
Things that can increase the rate of a reaction
Increase
surface area
for solids
Increase
concentration
for solutions
Increase
pressure
for gases
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Things that can increase the rate of a reaction
Increase
temperature
Use a
catalyst
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Calculating rate of reaction from a graph
1. Draw a
tangent
2. Find the
gradient
of the tangent
3. Gradient = change in
y
/ change in
x
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Le Chatelier's principle
If a system at
equilibrium
is subjected to a
change
, the system will adjust to counteract the change
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Increasing
concentration
or
pressure
Favours the reaction that makes the fewest moles (
forward
reaction)
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Increasing temperature
Favours the
endothermic
reaction
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Hydrocarbons
Organic molecules that only contain
carbon
and
hydrogen
atoms
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Alkanes
Hydrocarbons
with only single
covalent
bonds between carbon atoms
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Alkenes
Hydrocarbons
with a
double
covalent bond between carbon atoms
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Fractional distillation of crude oil
1.
Heated
at the
bottom
2.
Vaporized
into
gas
3. Recondense at different
heights
due to different
boiling points
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Complete combustion
Hydrocarbon
reacts with
oxygen
to make water and carbon dioxide
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Incomplete combustion
Hydrocarbon reacts with less
oxygen
to make carbon monoxide or
carbon
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Test for
alkenes
Turns
bromine water
from orange to
colourless
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Reaction of water with an alkane
Makes an
alcohol
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Oxidation
of an
alcohol
Produces a
carboxylic acid
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Cracking of an alkane
1. Requires high temperature (550°C for
catalytic
, 800°C for
steam
)
2. Produces a shorter
alkane
and an
alkene
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Making an
ester
Reaction of a
carboxylic acid
and an
alcohol
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Monomers for
condensation polymerisation
Two different
monomers
with
functional groups
on both sides
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Polymers from amino acids, glucose, and beta-glucose
Polypeptides (proteins),
starch
,
cellulose
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Calculating RF value in chromatography
Ratio of
distance
moved by substance to
distance
moved by mobile phase
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Flame test colours for metals
Lithium
- crimson
Sodium
- yellow
Potassium
- lilac
Calcium
- orange-red
Copper
- green
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Testing for metal ions in solution
1. Add
sodium hydroxide
2. Observe
colour precipitate
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Testing for carbonates, halides, and sulfates
1. Carbonates - react with
acid
to produce
CO2
2. Halides - add
silver nitrate
and
nitric acid
, form coloured precipitates
3. Sulfates - add
barium chloride
and hydrochloric acid, form
white precipitate
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Tests for gases
Hydrogen
- squeaky pop with lit splint
Oxygen
- relights glowing splint
Carbon dioxide
- turns limewater cloudy
Chlorine
- bleaches blue litmus paper
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Atmospheric pollutants and issues
Carbon monoxide
- poisonous
Sulfur dioxide
- acid rain
Nitrogen oxides
- respiratory problems
Carbon particulates
- health issues
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Making potable water from fresh and salt water
1. Fresh water -
filter
,
sterilize
2. Salt water - desalinate using
distillation
or
reverse osmosis
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Traditional and new methods of obtaining pure metals from ores
Traditional -
electrolysis
,
displacement
reactions
New -
phytomining
,
bioleaching
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Corrosion of iron, copper, and aluminium
Iron
- forms iron
oxide
(rust)
Copper
- forms copper
oxide
Aluminium
- forms
aluminium oxide
Can be reduced by using a
sacrificial
metal (
galvanizing
)
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Why alloys are stronger than pure metals
Different sized atoms
disrupt
the lattice structure, making it harder for
layers
to slide past each other
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Optimal conditions for making ammonia using the Haber process
Temperature
of
450°C
Pressure
of
200 atmospheres
High temperature increases rate but favours
reverse
reaction, high pressure favours
forward
reaction
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Chemicals used to make NPK fertilizers
Nitrogen
-
ammonia
Phosphate
- treated
phosphate
rock
Potassium
- potassium chloride,
potassium sulfate
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