Chemistry quiz

Cards (31)

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