Chemistry
Chemistry
Chemistry
A They have the same solubility in water at room temperature B C The have the same boiling point They have the same number of atoms in one molecule
D They have the same rate of diffusion at room temperature and pressure
2. Which of the following correctly describes the particles in dilute sugar solution at room temperature? Sugar molecules A B C D Widely separated, moving at random Widely separated, moving at random Widely separated, not moving Close together, moving at random Water molecules Close together, moving at random Close together, not moving Widely separated, moving at random Widely separated, Moving at random
3. The table shows the melting and boiling points of four pure substances. At room temperature, which substance is a liquid and rapidly evaporates if left exposed to air? Substance Melting points/oC A B C D -100 -7 -6 44 Boiling points/oC -35 58 225 280
4. An element X has two isotopes, which may be represented as 238X and 235X How does238X differ from235X A It has 3 more protons and 3 more electrons B C It has 3 more protons, but no more electrons It has 3 more neutrons and 3 more electrons.
5. Which graph shows the number of electrons in the outer shell of an atom, plotted against the proton number for the first ten elements in the periodic table?
D Sodium chloride
9. What is the ratio if the volume of 2g of hydrogen to the volume of 16g of methane, both volumes at r.t.p
A 1 to 1 B C 1 to 2 1 to 8
D 2 to 1
10. One mole of an organic compound is completely burnt in oxygen. Which compound produces exactly three mole of water?
D Propene
11. The reaction between hydrochloric acid and calcium carbonate is shown. Which volume of 1.0mol/dm3 of hydrochloric acid is needed to react completely with 1.0g of calcium carbonate? A 10cm3 B C 20cm3 100cm3
D 200cm3
12. The diagram shows the electrolysis of aqueous copper(II) sulphate using copper electrodes.
Which graph show how the mass of the cathode changes during elcetolysis?
A Chloride ions gain electrons at the cathode B C Chloride ions lose electrons at the anode Lead(II) ions lose electrons at the cathode
D Sodium hydroxide
15. The results of tests on compound X are shown. test Add bromine water Add aqueous sodium carbonate result Turn colourless Carbon dioxide formed
What is compound X?
A When it burns easily in air and oxygen B C When it contains carbon and hydrogen When it has the general formula CnH2n-1
A H2SO4 + 2NaOH Na2SO4 +2H2O B C H2SO4 + BaCl2 BaSO4 + 2HCl H2SO4 +CuO CuSO4+ H2O
D H2SO4 + Mg MgSO4 + H2
18. A sample of air is slowly passed through aqueous sodium hydroxide and then over heated copper. Which gases are removed by this process?
A Carbon dioxide and water vapour B C Carbon dioxide and oxygen Nitrogen and oxygen
A Ethanoic acid and oxygen. B C Ethanol and carbon dioxide Ethanol and oxygen
1. The following is a list of formulae of organic compounds. CH3COOH C2H5 C2H5OH C3H6 C7H14
Which of the above formulae fit the following description? a) A compound which dissolves in water to form an acidic solution
2. Two naturally occurring ores of copper are cuprite, Cu2O and tenorite, CuO a) Give the oxidation state of copper in each ore.
b) Copper can be extracted from tenorite by heating the ore with powdered carbon. i. Write an equation for this reaction
ii. Explain, in terms of electrons, why the copper in tenorite has been reduced.
c) A sample of one of the ores was analysed and found to contain 4.48g copper and 1.12g oxygen Calculate the empirical formula for the copper oxide in the ore and deduce the name of the ore.
Formula K+ O2-
Number of protons
Number of neutrons
Number of electrons
In a sample of 100 atoms of potassium, there are 94 atoms of 39K and 6 atoms of 41K a) Explain why these two forms of potassium are isotopes
b) Find the total mass of the 100 atoms of potassium. Hence find the average mass of one atom
4.
In separate experiments, powdered samples of metal X and metal Y reacted with solutions of nickel(II) sulphate and of iron(II)sulphate. The following table shows how the colours of the solutions changed. Nickel(II) sulphate Metal X Metal Y Solution goes from green to colourless Solution goes from green to colourless Iron(II) sulphate Solution stays pale green Solution goes from pale green to colourless
a) Predict the order of reactivity for the four metals, X, Y, nickel and iron Most reactive
Least reactive
b) Metal Y was placed in aqueous copper(II) sulphate. i. What colour change was seen?
c) Write ionic equation, with state symbols, for the reaction between iron and aqueous nickel(II) sulphate.
less dense than water soft melts below 100oC occurs naturally as its chloride, formula MCL the oxide of M reacts with water to form a soluble hydroxide
b) Suggest how metal M can be extracted from its compounds. Explain your reasoning.
c) Outline a method to prepare crystals of MCL, starting with the carbonate, M2CO3
d) 6.72g of MCL contains 1.42g of chlorine. Calculate the number of moles of chlorine atoms in the sample, and hence suggest a value for the relative atomic mass of M.