C4 chemical changes Flashcards

1
Q

what happens when a metal and an oxygen react

A

they form a metal oxide

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2
Q

reactivity of metals is related to what

A

there tendency to create positive ions

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3
Q

what is the rule of displacement in metals

A

A more reactive metal can displace a less reactive metals from a compound

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4
Q

where are the most reactive metals on the reactivity scale

A

the top

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5
Q

what metals can be extracted from their compound by reduction

A

metals that are less reactive than carbon

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6
Q

give the equation of an oxidised sodium (Na)

A

Na -> Na+ + e-

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7
Q

if sodium +1 ion is reduced give the equation

A

Na+ + e- -> Na

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8
Q

what is produced when an acid reacts with a metal

A

salt + hydrogen

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9
Q

what is a redox reaction

A

a reaction between acid and metal where one substance is reduced and one is oxidised

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10
Q

what is produced in a neutralisation reaction

A

salt and water

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11
Q

what is made when acid reacts with metal carbonate

A

salt and water and carbon dioxide

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12
Q

what does soluble mean

A

can dissolve

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13
Q

what is titration

A

an experiment used to determine the amount of an acid or alkali to become neutral

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14
Q

describe how to do a titration experiment

A
  1. Fill burette with 100cm acid with the meniscus’ base on the 100cm3 line
  2. Use 25cm3 pipette to add 25cm3 of alkali into a conical flask, drawing alkali into the pipette using a pipette filler
  3. Add a few drops of a suitable indicator to the conical flask (eg: phenolphthalein which is pink when alkaline and colourless when acidic)
  4. Add acid from burette to alkali until end-point is reached (as shown by indicator)
  5. The titre (volume of acid needed to exactly neutralise the acid) is the difference between the first (100cm3) and second readings on the burette
  6. Repeat the experiment to gain more precise results
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15
Q

how do you work out the concentration of an acid

A
  1. Convert volumes into dm3
  2. Work out the moles of acid
    moles = volume x concentration
  3. Work out mole ratio from equation
  4. Work out concentration
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16
Q

how many cm3 are there in 1 dm3

A

1dm3= 1000cm3

17
Q

what happens to strong acids in aqueous solution

A

they are completely ionised forming H+ ions

18
Q

what happens to weak acids in aqueous solutions

A

partially ionised forming H+ ions

19
Q

what happens as the PH decreases by 1

A

hydrogen concentration increases by 10

20
Q

what is electrolysis

A

passing current through a molten substance so the solution can be broken down into elements

21
Q

what is an electrolyte

A

the substance being broken down by electrolysis

22
Q

what metals are extracted using electrolysis (molten)

A

those that are more reactive than carbon

23
Q

what do aqueous solutions create at the cathode (negative electrode)

A

hydrogen unless the metal is
less reactive than hydrogen this is because more reactive ions want to stay within the solution

24
Q

what is produced at the anode (positive electrode)

A

At the positive electrode, if OH- and halide ions (Cl-, Br-, I-) are present, then one of the halide ions will be produced. If no halide is present, oxygen is formed.

25
Q

What ions do alkalis form in aqueous solutions?

A

OH- ions