Chemistry
Chemistry
Chemistry
There are several important reasons for doing AP Chemistry homework over the summer:
• To review basic concepts you learned when you took first-year chemistry
AP chemistry covers a lot of concepts at a fast pace. We need to get started right away and not
waste time going over things you already know. This assignment is meant to be a review. We
will spend the first few weeks of the year going into some of the assigned chapters in more
depth and so, if you have some questions while you are doing the summer assignment, you will
have a chance to ask.
Please pick up a textbook from me before you leave for the summer. If I have already left for
the summer, the textbooks will be in the guidance office. Then complete both the math and
chemistry assignments that are attached. The assignment will be collected on the first day of
class and will constitute your first homework grade. If you have any questions or trouble
completing any of the problems, don’t hesitate to email me at jeffrey.thomas@rtsd.org. I will
be on vacation at various times during the summer but I will get back to you as soon as
possible. Forming study groups to complete these assignments is encouraged.
Supply the answers in the blanks. No calculators please! The multiple choice section
of the AP exam does not allow calculators and you need the practice doing
mental math without one.
9. (2.6 x10 −8 )
= __________________________
(0.52 x10 − 9 )
=
(1.5x10 − 4 )
21. If a megabuck is one million dollars and a kilobuck is one thousand dollars, how many kilobucks is
342 dollars?
22. A ten cm candle is being burned at both ends. One end burns at the rate of one cm per hour; the
other end burns at one-half cm per hour. How far from the center of the candle will the burning
ends meet?
23. A wooden cube three cm on edge is placed inside a cube box that is six cm on edge. How much free
space is in the box?
Complete the following list of chemistry problems. They cover concepts you learned in first
year chemistry. If you get stuck, feel free to read through the appropriate section of your
textbook. Show all work on this copy.
d. The growth of plants depends on the sun’s energy in a process called photosynthesis.
b. F i. Mg
c. P j. U
d. Cu k. Al
e. As l. Si
f. Zn m. Ne
g. Cl
5. Give the chemical symbols for the following elements:
a. potassium
b. tin
c. chromium
d. boron
e. barium
f. plutonium
g. sulfur
h. argon
i. mercury
b. water
c. gold
d. sugar
b. helium gas
e. milk shake
f. air in a bottle
g. concrete
8. Name the SI base units that are important in chemistry. Give the SI units for expressing the
following:
a. length
b. volume
c. mass
d. time
e. energy
f. temperature
b. kilo
c. deci
d. centi
e. milli
f. micro
g. nano
h. pico
10. What units do chemists usually use for liquids and solids? For gas density? Explain the differences.
11. Bromine is a reddish-brown liquid. Calculate the density of bromine (in g/mL) if 586 g of the
substance occupies 188 mL.
12. a. Normally the human body can endure a temperature of 105OF for only short periods of time
without permanent damage to the brain or other vital organs. What is this temperature in OC?
b. Ethylene glycol is a liquid organic compound that is used as an antifreeze in car radiators. It
freezes at -11.5OC. Calculate the freezing point temperature in degrees Fahrenheit.
c. The temperature on the surface of the sun is about 6300OC. What is this temperature in degrees
Fahrenheit?
d. The ignition temperature of paper is 451OF. What is the temperature in degrees Celsius?
15. What is the number of significant figures in each of the following measurements?
a. 4867 mi
b. 56 mL
c. 60,104 ton
d. 2900 g
e. 40.2 g/cm3
16. Carry out the following calculations as if they were calculations of experimental results, and express
each answer in the correct units with the correct number of significant figures.
a. 5.6792 m + 0.6 m + 4.33 m
b. 3.70 g – 2.9133 g
c. 4.51 cm x 3.6666 cm
17. Carry out the following conversions (you must use conversion factors):
a. 22.6 m to dm
b. 25.4 mg to kg
c. 556 mL to L
18. The average speed of helium at 25OC is 1255 m/s. Convert this speed to miles per hour (mph) using
conversion factors.
19. Describe the contributions of the following scientists to our knowledge of atomic structure:
a. JJ Thomson
b. RA Millikan
c. Ernest Rutherford
d. James Chadwick
20. Describe the experimental basis for believing that the nucleus occupies a very small fraction of the
volume of the atom.
21. Indicate the number of protons, neutrons, and electrons in each of the following species:
a. 157N
33
b. 16S
63
c. 29Cu
84
d. 38Sr
130
e. 56Ba
186
f. 74W
202
g. 80Hg
c. halogens
d. noble gases
23. Elements whose name ends with –ium are usually metals. Sodium is one example. Identify a
nonmetal whose name ends with –ium.
24. Explain why the chemical formula HCl can represent two different chemical systems.
25. Name the following compounds:
a. KClO
b. Ag2CO3
c. HNO2
d. KMnO4
e. CsClO3
f. KNH4SO4
g. FeO
h. Fe2O3
i. TiCl4
j. NaH
k. Li3N
l. Na2O
m. Na2O2
b. potassium sulfide
d. magnesium phosphate
g. iodine heptafluoride
h. ammonium sulfate
i. silver perchlorate
j. boron trichloride
27. Write the formulas for the following compounds:
a. copper (I) cyanide
b. strontium chlorite
c. perbromic acid
d. hydroiodic acid
h. tetraphosphorous decasulfide
k. selenium hexafluoride
28. Write the formula of the common ion derived from each of the following:
a. Li
b. S
c. I
d. N
e. Al
f. Cs
g. Mg
29. Fill in the blanks in the following table:
Magnesium bicarbonate
SrCl2
Fe3+ NO2-
SnBr4
Co2+ PO43-
Hg22+ I-
Cu2CO3
Lithium nitride
Al3+ S2-
30. Complete the following nuclear equations and identify X in each case:
a. 2612Mg + 11p → 42α + X
59 2 60
b. 27Co + 1H → 27Co + X
235 1 94 139
c. 92U + 0n → 36Kr + 56Ba + 3X
53 4 1
d. 24Cr + 2α → 0n + X
20 20
e. 8O → 9F + X
a. 232 α
Th → ______ → ______ →
β β 228
Th
α β α
235 227
b. U → ______ → ______ → Ac
α 233
β α
c. ______ → Pa → ______ → ______
32. How many moles of cobalt (Co) atoms are there in 6.00 x 109 cobalt atoms?
33. How many moles of calcium (Ca) atoms are in 77.4 g of calcium?
b. SO3
c. C6H6
d. NaI
e. K2SO4
f. Ca3(PO4)2
36. How many molecules of ethane (C2H6) are present in 0.334 g of C2H6?
37. What are the empirical formulas of the compounds with the following compositions?
a. 40.1% C, 6.6% H, 53.3% O
38. The anticaking agent added to Morton salt is calcium silicate, CaSiO3. This compound can absorb up
to 2.5 times its mass of water and still remain a free flowing powder. Calculate the percent
composition of CaSiO3
39. The empirical formula of a compound is CH. If the molar mass of this compound is about 78 g, what
is the molecular formula?
b. CO + O2 → CO2
c. H2 + Br2 → HBr
d. K + H2O → KOH + H2
e. Mg + O2 → MgO
f. O3 → O 2
41. Ammonia is a principal nitrogen fertilizer. It is prepared by the reaction between nitrogen and
hydrogen.
3 H2 (g) + N2 (g) → 2 NH3 (g)
In a particular reaction, 6.0 moles of NH3 were produced. How many moles of H2 and how many
moles of N2 were reacted to produce this amount of NH3?
42. When baking soda (sodium bicarbonate or sodium hydrogen carbonate, NaHCO3) is heated, it
releases carbon dioxide gas, which is responsible for the rising of dough in cookies, rolls and donuts.
a. Write the balanced equation for the decomposition of the compound (one of the products is
Na2CO3).
If a sample of 0.140 g of KCN is treated with excess HCl, calculate the amount of HCN formed, in
grams.
44. Fermentation is a complex chemical process of wine making in which glucose is converted into
ethanol and carbon dioxide:
Starting with 500.4 g of glucose, what is the maximum amount of ethanol in grams and in liters that
can be obtained by the process? (Density of ethanol is 0.789 g/mL)
45. Nitric oxide (NO) reacts with oxygen to form nitrogen dioxide (NO2), a dark brown gas.
b. Mn(OH)2
c. AgClO3
d. K2S
e. CaCO3
f. ZnSO4
g. Hg(NO3)2
h. HgSO4
i. NH4ClO4
47. Write the net ionic equations for the following reactions:
a. AgNO3 (aq) + Na2SO4 (aq) →
48. Give Arrhenius’s and Bronsted’s definitions of an acid and a base. Why are Bronsted’s definitions
more useful in describing acid-base properties?
49. Identify each of the following species as a Bronsted acid, base, or both:
a. HI
b. CH3COO-
c. H2PO4-
d. HSO4-
e. NH4+
f. ClO2-
50. Predict the outcomes of the reactions represented by the following equations by using the activity
series, and balance the equations:
a. Cu (s) + HCl (aq) →
51. How many moles of MgCl2 are present in 60.0 mL of 0.100 M MgCl2 solution?
52. How many grams of KOH are present in 35.0 mL of a 5.50 M solution?
55. Given that 6.9 moles of carbon monoxide gas are present in a container with volume 30.4 L, what is
the pressure of the gas (in atm) if the temperature is 62OC?
56. Methane, the principal component of natural gas, is used for heating and cooking. The combustion
process is:
If 15.0 moles of CH4 are reacted, what is the volume of CO2 in liters produced at 23.0OC and
0.985 atm?