Removes shenanigans Flashcards

1
Q

atom

A

the smallest particle of a chemical element that can exist

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2
Q

molcule

A

a group of atoms bonded together, representing the smallest fundamental unit of a chemical compound that can take part in a chemical reaction.

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3
Q

element

A

something which consists of one type of atom only

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4
Q

compound

A

a substance made up of two or more different elements which are chemically bonded together

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5
Q

mixture

A

no chemical bond between particles

parts can be separated out only using physical methods

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6
Q

what is sublimation?

A

solid turns straight to a gas

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7
Q

experiment to see diffusion using potassium manganate

A

take a beaker of water and place some potassium manganate at the bottom, the purple colour slowly spreads out to fill the beaker

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8
Q

potassium manganate and dilution

A

if you were to add more water to the final purple solution, the potassium managante particles would spread even further apart and the solution would be less purple, this is dilution.

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9
Q

amonia and hyrogen chloride used to demonstrate diffusion

A

1) aqueos ammonia gives off ammonia gas, hcl gives off hydrogen chloride gas
2) when you set up an experiment with a test tube and two cotton things at the end, you’ll get a white ring of ammonium chloride forming in the glass tube
3) The NH3 gas diffuses from one end of the tube and the hcl gas diffuses from the other, when they meet, they react to form ammonium chloride
4) the ring forms nearest to the hcl as the particles of ammonia are smaller and lighter than the particles of hydrogen chloride, so they diffuse through the air more quickly

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10
Q

using bromine gas and air to demonstate diffusion

A

1) fill half a gas jar full of bromine gas, and the other half full of air. Separate these gases with a gas plate
2) when you remove the gas plate, you’ll see the brown bromine gas slowly diffusing through the air
3) the random motion of the particles means that the bromine will eventually diffuse right through the air

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11
Q

about bromine gas

A

it is brown and strongly smelling

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12
Q

filtration

A

used to separate an insoluble solid from a liquid

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13
Q

crystallisation

A

used to separate a soluble solid from a solution

1) pour the solution into an evaporating dish
2) slowly heat the solution, some of the solvent will evaporate and the solution will get more concentrated. Stop heating when crystals begin to form
3) Remove the dish from the heat and leave it in a warm place for the rest of the solvent to slowly evaporatte
4) finally, you must dry the product using a drying oven or a desiccator

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14
Q

separating rock salts (sand and salt)

A

1) grind up the rock salt with a pestle and mortar
2) dissolve in beaker and stir
3) filter through filter paper in a fuel
4) evaporate in an evaportaing dish

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15
Q

chromotography

A

used to separate dyes

1) draw a line near the bottom of a sheet of filter paper using a pencil as it won’t react with the solvent
2) add spots of different dyes to the line at regular intervals
3) loosely roll the sheet up and put it in a beaker of solvent such as water
4) make sure the dyes aren’t touching the solvent
5) place a lid on top of the container so the solvent doesn’t evaporate
6) the solvent seeps up the paper, the end result is a pattern of spots called a chromatogram

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16
Q

simple distillation

A

used to separate out a liquid from a solution

1) the solution s heated. The part of the solution that has the lowest bp evaporates
2) the vapour is then cooled, condenses (turns back into a liquid) and is collected
3) the rest of the solution is left behind in the flask

example- pure water from sea water

17
Q

disadvantages of simple distillation

A

you can only use it to separate things with very different boiling points

18
Q

why use distilled water

A

there are no impurities like ions that might interfere with experimental results

19
Q

fractional distillation

A

separate a mixture of liquids

1) put your mixture in a flask and stick a fractioning column on top, then heat it
2) the diff liquids will have diff boiling pints so will evaporate at diff temps
3) the liquid with the lowest bp evaporates first
4) liquids with higher boiling points may also start to evaporate, however the column is cooler at the top, so they will only get part the way up before condensing and running back down towards the flask
5) when the first liquid has been collected, you raise the temp until the next one reaches the top