A neutralisation reaction occurs between ammonia and sulfuric acid.
How does the ammonia act in this reaction?
☐ | A | As a proton donor | |
☐ | B | As an electron acceptor | |
☐ | C | As a proton acceptor | |
☐ | D | As a neutron donor |
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A neutralisation reaction occurs between ammonia and sulfuric acid.
How does the ammonia act in this reaction?
☐ | A | As a proton donor | |
☐ | B | As an electron acceptor | |
☐ | C | As a proton acceptor | |
☐ | D | As a neutron donor |
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The chemical equation for the preparation of lead(II) sulfate is written below.
Pb(NO3)2 (___) + Na2SO4 (___) → PbSO4 (___) + 2NaNO3 (___)
What are the state symbols for each substance in this reaction?
☐ | A | aq, aq, s, aq | |
☐ | B | aq, aq, s, s | |
☐ | C | s, aq, aq, s | |
☐ | D | s, aq, s, aq |
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A student making copper sulfate crystals used the method below.
Unreacted copper carbonate was left over as it had been added in excess.
What is the reason for adding it in excess and what would step 3 be of this method?
☐ | A | Reason: to produce a greater amount of salt crystals | Step 3: filtration | |
☐ | B | Reason: to improve the colour intensity of the crystals | Step 3: crystallisation | |
☐ | C | Reason: to ensure all the acid reacts | Step 3: filtration | |
☐ | D | Reason: to increase the rate of reaction | Step 3: evaporation |
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The diagram shows some pieces of apparatus.
Complete the table by giving the name of each piece of apparatus.
Letter | Name |
A | |
B | |
C | |
D |
Which piece of apparatus can be used to measure the volume of a liquid?
☐ | A | ||
☐ | B | ||
☐ | C | ||
☐ | D |
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Sulfuric acid can be used to make a soluble salt when reacted with a base.
All acids contain the same ion.
What is the formula of this ion?
☐ | A | H+ | |
☐ | B | OH- | |
☐ | C | S2- | |
☐ | D | Na+ |
Sulfuric acid reacts with copper(II) oxide to form a salt.
What is the name of the salt formed?
☐ | A | Copper(II) chloride | |
☐ | B | Copper(II) nitrate | |
☐ | C | Copper(II) sulfate | |
☐ | D | Copper(II) citrate |
The steps below show the method the student carried out to make the salt using the reactants in part b).
The steps shown are not in the correct order.
step J | Leave the solution to cool |
step K | Filter the mixture and transfer the filtrate to an evaporating basin |
step L | Add copper(II) oxide in excess |
step M | Heat the acid |
step N | Evaporate the water until crystals appear |
Write the steps in the correct order.
Some have been completed for you.
first step | last step | ||||||||
M | J |
Explain why the copper(II) oxide was added in excess to the sulfuric acid.
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A student makes some magnesium nitrate crystals from magnesium oxide and dilute nitric acid.
The equation for the reaction is
MgO (s) + 2HNO3 (aq) → Mg(NO3)2 (aq) + H2O (l)
......................................... and ......................................
(2)
(6)
Magnesium nitrate crystals contain water of crystallisation with the formula Mg(NO3)2.6H2O
(1)
(3)
(2)
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A student investigates the neutralisation reaction between sodium hydroxide and nitric acid.
This is her method.
(1)
(2)
(1)
The table shows the student’s results.
Total volume of acid in cm3 | 0 | 5 | 10 | 15 | 20 | 25 | 30 | 35 | 40 |
Temperature of reaction mixture in °C |
20.5 | 22.5 | 24.4 | 26.4 | 28.5 | 28.3 | 27.5 | 26.7 | 26.0 |
volume of acid = ...................................................................... cm3
maximum temperature = ............................................... °C
(2)
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Solutions of silver nitrate and potassium chloride react together to make the insoluble salt, silver chloride.
A student uses this method to prepare a sample of silver chloride.
Step 1 add 25 cm3 of silver nitrate solution to a conical flask
Step 2 add potassium chloride solution to the flask
Step 3 filter off the silver chloride
What term is used for this reaction?
☐ | A | neutralisation | |
☐ | B | precipitation | |
☐ | C | redox | |
☐ | D | thermal decomposition |
Give two more steps that will produce a pure, dry sample of silver chloride.
Step 4 ........................................................................................................
Step 5 ........................................................................................................
Acidified silver nitrate solution is used to test for chloride ions.
Give a reason why hydrochloric acid is not used to acidify silver nitrate solution.
The chemical equation for the reaction between solutions of silver nitrate and potassium chloride is
AgNO3(aq) + KCl(aq) → AgCl(s) + KNO3(aq)
A student adds an excess of potassium chloride solution to 25.0 cm3 of 0.100 mol/dm3 silver nitrate solution
Calculate the maximum mass of silver chloride, in grams, that can be produced.
[Mr of AgCl = 143.5]
mass = .............................................................. g
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Which equation does not show the correct reaction of an acid?
☐ | A | copper oxide + hydrochloric acid → copper chloride + water | |
☐ | B | calcium carbonate + nitric acid → calcium nitrate + carbon dioxide | |
☐ | C | potassium hydroxide + sulfuric acid → potassium sulfate + water | |
☐ | D | zinc + sulfuric acid → zinc sulfate + hydrogen |
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A student wants to prepare sodium chloride crystals from sodium hydroxide solution and dilute hydrochloric acid.
He does a titration to find the volume of dilute hydrochloric acid needed to neutralise the sodium hydroxide solution.
This is his method.
Name a suitable piece of apparatus that the student should use to measure 25.0 cm3 of sodium hydroxide solution.
The student finds that 21.50 cm3 of hydrochloric acid is needed to neutralise 25.0 cm3 of sodium hydroxide solution.
The student needs 21.50 cm3 of hydrochloric acid to neutralise 25.0 cm3 of sodium hydroxide solution of concentration 0.800 mol / dm3.
The equation for the reaction is
NaOH + HCl → NaCl + H2O
Calculate the concentration, in mol / dm3, of the hydrochloric acid.
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A student was preparing the insoluble salt lead(II) sulfate from solutions of lead(II) nitrate and potassium sulfate.
Why could the student not use lead(II) carbonate to prepare this salt?
☐ | A | It has a high melting point | |
☐ | B | It is insoluble in water | |
☐ | C | it is toxic | |
☐ | D | It is flammable |
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This question is about salts.
Soluble salts can be prepared by the reaction between a metal oxide and an acid.
The equation for this type of reaction is:
metal oxide + acid → salt + water
A student is given 50 cm3 of dilute sulfuric acid and a bottle of solid copper(II) carbonate.
x = ..............................................
(3)
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This question is about the insoluble salt silver chloride (AgCl).
Silver chloride can be made by the reaction between copper(II) chloride and silver nitrate.
Describe how a student could prepare a pure, dry sample of silver chloride starting with copper(II) chloride solution and silver nitrate solution.
A student investigates the quantity of silver chloride produced when different volumes of silver nitrate solution are added to copper(II) chloride solution.
This is the student’s method.
The student repeats the method using different volumes of silver nitrate solution.
The table shows the student’s results.
Volume of silver nitrate added in cm3 |
Height of precipitate in cm |
0.0 | 0.0 |
1.0 | 0.5 |
2.0 | 1.0 |
3.0 | 1.2 |
4.0 | 2.0 |
5.0 | 2.5 |
6.0 | 3.0 |
7.0 | 3.0 |
8.0 | 3.0 |
(2)
(1)
(1)
(1)
The equation for the reaction between copper(II) chloride and silver nitrate is
CuCl2 (aq) + 2AgNO3 (aq) → 2AgCl (s) + Cu(NO3)2 (aq)
A student measures 25.0 cm3 of 0.500 mol / dm3 copper(II) chloride solution and reacts it with silver nitrate solution.
(1)
(3)
maximum mass = ............................................................... g
(2)
percentage yield = ............................................................... %
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This question is about some Group 2 elements and their compounds.
Calcium reacts with water to produce calcium hydroxide and hydrogen gas.
When magnesium nitrate is heated, magnesium oxide, nitrogen dioxide and oxygen form.
The equation for the reaction is
☐ | A | addition |
☐ | B | combustion |
☐ | C | decomposition |
☐ | D | neutralisation |
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The hydroxides of the Group I metals are soluble in water. Most other metal hydroxides are insoluble in water.
Crystals of lithium chloride can be prepared from lithium hydroxide by titration.
25.0 cm3 of aqueous lithium hydroxide is pipetted into the conical flask.
A few drops of an indicator are added. Dilute hydrochloric acid is added slowly to the alkali until the indicator just changes colour. The volume of acid needed to neutralise the lithium hydroxide is noted.
A neutral solution of lithium chloride, which still contains the indicator, is left. Describe how you could obtain a neutral solution of lithium chloride which does not contain an indicator.
The reaction between hydrochloric acid with lithium hydroxide solution is an example of a neutralisation reaction.
Write the ionic equation, including state symbols, for neutralisation.
Explain why a pipette is used to measure the lithium hydroxide solution but a burette is used to measure the hydrochloric acid.
The concentration of the hydrochloric acid was 2.20 mol / dm3. The volume of acid needed to neutralise the 25.0 cm3 of lithium hydroxide was 20.0 cm3. Calculate the concentration of the aqueous lithium hydroxide.
LiOH + HCl → LiCl + H2O
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An insoluble solid and dilute nitric acid can react to produce soluble salts.
Copper, copper carbonate and copper oxide are insoluble solids.
Which of these insoluble solids can be used to make a copper salt by reacting the solid with dilute nitric acid?
☐ | A | Copper and copper oxide only | |
☐ | B | Copper and copper carbonate only | |
☐ | C | Copper carbonate, copper and copper oxide | |
☐ | D | Copper carbonate and copper oxide only |
A student made crystals of magnesium nitrate using nitric acid and magnesium oxide.
Write a balanced symbol equation for the reaction.
The method the student used to make magnesium nitrate crystals is below.
a. | Add nitric acid to a beaker |
b. | Warm the nitric acid |
c. | Add magnesium oxide to the beaker using a spatula |
d. | Stir the mixture |
e. | Repeat steps c and d until some magnesium oxide remains in the beaker |
f. | Filter the mixture |
g. | Heat the filtrate to evaporate some solution until crystals start to form |
h. | Leave the solution to finish crystallising |
Explain why each of the following steps were carried out:
Step b: ...........................................................................................................
Step e: ...........................................................................................................
Step f: ...........................................................................................................
A different student used magnesium carbonate and nitric acid to make magnesium nitrate.
They wanted to make 11 g of magnesium nitrate.
The equation for the reaction is:
MgCO3 + 2HNO3 → Mg(NO3)2 + H2O + CO2
Calculate the mass of magnesium carbonate the student should react with dilute nitric acid to make 11.0 g of magnesium nitrate.
(Ar: H= 1; C = 12; O = 16; N = 14; Mg = 24)
The percentage yield of magnesium nitrate was 76.3%.
Calculate the mass of magnesium nitrate the student actually produced.
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