Chemistry Revision Notes
Chemistry Revision Notes
Chemistry Revision Notes
Revision Notes
TMSS
CHEMISTRY
States of Matter
Diffusion, osmosis and Brownian motion demonstrates that matter is made up of particles
Particles in a solid cannot move freely because the forces of attraction are very strong
Brownian motion is demonstrated when pollen grains are moving randomly is water
Osmosis is demonstrated with the movement of water molecules across a cell membrane into a concentrated
glucose solution
The difference between an atom and an ion is an atom contains equal numbers of protons and electrons whereas
an ion contains unequal numbers of protons and electrons
Metallic bonding occurs when cations are held together by a sea of mobile electrons
Ionic bonding formation results from the donation of electrons from a metal to a non-metal to achieve stability
The element used to determine the atomic mass of other elements is Carbon-12
Sodium chloride has a boiling point of 1465oC. It does not conduct electricity in the solid state but conducts
electricity in the aqueous state
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A substance with a giant covalent structure is diamond (also graphite)
Sodium chloride has a high melting point because the ions are bound by strong electrostatic force
Ionic substances have high melting points and are good conductors of electricity in the liquid state
Covalent compounds usually have low melting and boiling point and are usually insoluble in water
FeCl2 and FeCl3 are two chlorides of iron. The following statements are true for these chlorides. (a) The oxidation
state of iron is different in the two chlorides, (b) the percentage of iron by mass in the two chlorides are different
and (c) the colours of the aqueous solutions of the two chlorides are different.
Copper (II) carbonate is insoluble in water, it give off a gas when added to dilute acids and it gives off a gas when
heated.
Graphite can be used as a lubricant because of weak attractions between the hexagonal layers of carbon atoms.
Allotropes are solid forms of a given element with different physical properties
The following are arranged in order of increasing particle size solutions, colloids, suspensions
A mixture of copper (II) oxide and copper (II) sulphate is best separated by shaking with excess water and then
filtering
A substance with boiling point of 60oC is miscible with a substance of boiling point 80oC. They can best be
separated by fractional distillation
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The Periodic Table and Trends
Sulphur and oxygen are in the same group of the periodic table because they have the same number of electrons in
their outer shell.
On descending group VII of the periodic table, the density of the elements increases and the melting point of the
elements increases.
The solubility of product and the rate of reaction will be the difference seen between barium and calcium when
these two metals from group 2 react with water.
Al2O3 (aluminium oxide) is amphoteric. It reacts with both acids and bases.
H2SO4 and (COOH)2 would require more than one mole of NaOH for complete neutralisation.
Calcium carbonate reacts with an acid, releasing a gas (carbon dioxide) which turns lime water milky.
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Point Q represents the neutralisation point of an acid and base.
is a neutralisation reaction.
CaO may be used to counteract the effects of acid rain on the soil.
Limestone treated with acid to gives effervescence and a gas which turns limewater milky
Salt preparation
Adding dilute sulphuric acid to copper (II) chloride would be the LEAST suitable method to prepare copper (II)
sulphate
Ammonia may be produced in the laboratory by heating a mixture of ammonium chloride and calcium hydroxide
Copper (II) nitrate produces a blue precipitate with aqueous sodium hydroxide solution
Barium sulphate and silver chloride may be prepared by precipitation (i.e. by mixing and filtering).
Lead sulphate and Barium sulphate are insoluble salts. Calcium sulphate is slightly soluble
The mass of ‘1 mole of an element’ refers to the quantity of an element which contains 6.0x1023 atoms.
Ions which are not changed in a reaction are called spectators ions
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Oxidation is the loss of electrons
Calcium ion has an oxidation number of +2 because the calcium atom has two electrons in its outermost shell
Potassium dichromate (VI) turns green when treated with sulphur dioxide
Sulphuric acid electrolyte causes the bulb to glow the brightest in a circuit because it completely dissociates in
water
In the electrolysis of aqueous copper (II) sulphate solution using copper electrodes, the anode decreases in mass
Sodium chloride when added to pure water significantly increases the water’s conductivity.
When a concentrated solution of sodium chloride is electrolysed using carbon electrodes, chlorine is liberated at
the anode.
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Rates of Reactions
This graph represents the reaction of calcium carbonate reacted with excess
hydrochloric acid.
Increasing the temperature usually increases the rate of the catalytic decomposition of hydrogen peroxide.
If 5.0g of powdered zinc were used instead of 5.0g of granulated zinc in a reaction with hydrochloric acid, the rate
of hydrogen gas produced would increase because of the greater surface area of powdered zinc.
A catalyst increases the rate of a reaction because it provides an alternative route of lower activation energy.
Increasing the temperature of the reaction, reducing the size of particles, increasing the concentration of reactants
are ways to increase the rate of a reaction.
The rate of a reaction does not depend on the energy change associated with the reaction.
Chemical Energetics
Organic Chemistry
Cracking is the process of breaking down large molecules into smaller alkene and alkane molecules
CH3(CH2)3OH is an alcohol.
C2H4 is an alkene.
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The homologous series have members with the same functional group, the same general formula, and similar
chemical properties.
A polyamide is formed by a condensation reaction between a molecule containing at least one –COOH group and
another containing at least one –NH2 group.
The bond between the two carbon atoms in ethene (C2H4) is a double bond.
Saponification involves the boiling of a fat or oil with aqueous sodium hydroxide (caustic soda). Saponification
makes soap.
CH3COOH (ethanoic acid) reacts with sodium carbonate to produce a gas (i.e. carbon dioxide) which turns lime
water milky.
Alkenes react with KMnO4/H= changing its colour from purple to colourless. They also undergo addition reactions.
Bromine solution/water test can be used to distinguish between an alkane and alkene.
During the manufacture of ethanol by fermentation, the gas evolved (carbon dioxide) turns lime water cloudy.
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Metals and the Reactivity Series
Copper (Cu) does not react with an acid to produce hydrogen gas.
Iron appears between copper and aluminium in the reactivity series and it is an important component in
haemoglobin.
FeCl2 and FeCl3 are two chlorides of iron. The colours if the aqueous solutions of the two chlorines are different
and the percentage of iron by mass in the two chlorides are different.
Zinc will react more vigorously with dilute acid than copper, iron and lead because it is higher up in the reactivity
series.
The extraction of aluminium is done by the electrolysis of its molten oxide (Alumina, Al2O3).
Air, iron ore, coke and limestone are ALL the raw materials used in the extraction of iron.
are produced when carbon monoxide reacts with iron (III) oxide.
A displacement reaction occurs when zinc metal is added to copper sulphate solution.
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Qualitative Analysis
When copper (II) carbonate is heated alone in a test tube. A gas (carbon dioxide) is evolved which forms a white
precipitate with aqueous calcium hydroxide (lime water) and a black residue is formed (copper oxide)
When EXCESS aqueous ammonia is added to a solution of copper (II) sulphate and the mixture is shaken, a deep
blue solution is observed.
Ammonia gas is identified by placing moist red litmus paper in a jar of the gas.
H2O ( water) will give a positive test with the dry cobalt chloride paper.
Chlorine is a greenish yellow gas which bleaches moist red litmus paper.
Aluminium oxide, carbon dioxide and nitrogen dioxide are all acidic oxides