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?
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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 |
|
How did you do?
Which piece of apparatus can be used to measure the volume of a liquid?
Choose your answer
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A neutralisation reaction occurs between ammonia and sulfuric acid.
How does the sulfuric acid act in this reaction?
As a proton donor
As an electron acceptor
As a proton acceptor
As a neutron donor
Choose your answer
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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)
i) Give the formula of each ion in magnesium nitrate.
......................................... and ......................................
(2)
ii) A student has a beaker containing dilute nitric acid. Describe a method that she could use to prepare a pure, dry sample of magnesium nitrate crystals from magnesium oxide.
(6)
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Magnesium nitrate crystals contain water of crystallisation with the formula Mg(NO3)2.6H2O
i) Show by calculation that the relative formula mass of Mg(NO3)2.6H2O is 256.
(1)
ii) Show that the maximum mass of Mg(NO3)2.6H2O that could be made from 0.050 mol of nitric acid is about 6 g.
(3)
iii) The actual mass of crystals that the student obtains is 4.8 g. Calculate the percentage yield of Mg(NO3)2.6H2O in this experiment.
(2)
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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?
aq, aq, s, aq
aq, aq, s, s
s, aq, aq, s
s, aq, s, aq
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A student investigates the neutralisation reaction between sodium hydroxide and nitric acid. This is her method.
pour 20 cm3 of sodium hydroxide solution into a polystyrene cup
record the temperature of the sodium hydroxide solution
add 5 cm3 of dilute nitric acid to the cup
stir the mixture and record the highest temperature reached
add further 5 cm3 portions of dilute nitric acid, recording the highest temperature reached each time, until a total of 40 cm3 of acid has been added
i) Give a word equation for this neutralisation reaction.
(1)
ii) Explain why a polystyrene cup is used rather than a beaker.
(2)
iii) Give a safety precaution that the student should take when using sodium hydroxide solution.
(1)
How did you do?
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 |
i) Plot the results on the grid. Draw a straight line of best fit through the first five points and another straight line of best fit through the last four points. Make sure that the two lines cross.
ii) The point where the lines cross shows
the volume of acid needed to exactly neutralise the alkali
the maximum temperature reached
Use your graph to determine these values.
volume of acid = ...................................................................... cm3 maximum temperature = ............................................... °C
[2]
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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?
Reason: to produce a greater amount of salt crystals
Step 3: filtration
Reason: to improve the colour intensity of the crystals
Step 3: crystallisation
Reason: to ensure all the acid reacts
Step 3: filtration
Reason: to increase the rate of reaction
Step 3: evaporation
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Which equation does not show the correct reaction of an acid?
copper oxide + hydrochloric acid → copper chloride + water
calcium carbonate + nitric acid → calcium nitrate + carbon dioxide
potassium hydroxide + sulfuric acid → potassium sulfate + water
zinc + sulfuric acid → zinc sulfate + hydrogen
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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?
It has a high melting point
It is insoluble in water
it is toxic
It is flammable
Choose your answer
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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.
How did you do?
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.
pour 5.0 cm3 of copper(II) chloride solution into a test tube
add 1.0 cm3 of silver nitrate solution to the test tube
allow the silver chloride precipitate to settle
measure the height of the precipitate
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 |
i) Plot the student’s results.
(2)
ii) Draw two straight lines of best fit, ignoring the anomalous result.
(1)
iii) Suggest a mistake the student made to cause the anomalous result.
(1)
iv) Give a reason why the last three heights are the same.
(1)
How did you do?
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.
i) Name a piece of apparatus suitable for measuring 25.0 cm3 of copper(II) chloride solution.
(1)
ii) Calculate the maximum mass, in grams, of silver chloride that could be produced.
[Mr of AgCl = 143.5]
(3)
maximum mass = ............................................................... g
iii) In an experiment using different solutions, the mass of silver chloride produced is 0.744 g.
The maximum mass of silver chloride that could be produced is 0.850 g. Calculate the percentage yield.
(2)
percentage yield = ............................................................... %
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