Bonding, Structude and Properties of Matter Flashcards

1
Q

What are polymers?

A

Large molecules formed from many small molecules called monomers.

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2
Q

What is an alloy?

A

A mixture of a metal element with at least one other element, usually another metal.

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3
Q

?

A
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4
Q

Why is steel alloy much stronger than iron on its own?

A

Steel is a mixture of carbon and iron. The carbon atoms distort the regular lattice structure, meaning a greater force is required for the layers to slide over one another, making it harder.

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5
Q

What are fullerenes?

A

Hollow molecules of carbon.

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6
Q

What are carbon nanotubes?

A

Cylindrical fullerenes.

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7
Q

Why can fullerenes conduct electricity?

A

They contain delocalised electrons which can move through their structures.

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8
Q

What are potential uses of fullerenes?

A

Drug delivery
Anti-oxidants
Catalysts

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9
Q

Why is a mixture of carbon nanotubes and plastic used in wind turbine blades rather than plastic alone?

A

Carbon nanotubes are very strong and stiff. They can be used to reinforce the plastic as a composite material instead of carbon fibres. Composite materials are strong and flexible.

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10
Q

Why are metals good conductors of thermal energy?

A

When a metal is heated, energy is transferred to delocalised electrons. Theses are free to move through the structure of the metal transferring energy to atoms and other electrons.

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11
Q

Why do metals have high melting points?

A

Metals in the solid state have giant structures of atoms held together by metallic bonding. A lot of energy must be transferred to overcome this strong bonding.

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12
Q

Compare diamond and graphite.

A
  • Both contain covalent bonds.
  • Diamond contains 4 atoms bonded to each carbon atom whilst graphite has 3.
  • Graphite contains hexagonal rings of layers.
  • Graphite has weak forces between layers.
  • Graphite contains delocalised electrons.
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13
Q

Why does diamond have a very high melting point?

A

Its structure contains very many strong covalent bonds. A lot of energy is needed to break these bonds.

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14
Q

Why is graphite slippery?

A

There are only weak intermolecular forces between the layers of atoms in graphite which allow the layers to slide over each other easily.

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15
Q

Why is graphite very hard?

A

It has a giant covalent structure and its many strong covalent bonds resist forces that could distort the structure.

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16
Q

Why is graphite a good conductor of electricity?

A

One electron from each carbon atom becomes delocalise. These delocalised electrons are charged and are free to move.

17
Q

What is graphene?

A

A single layer of graphite.

18
Q

What are the properties of graphene?

A

Transparent
Flexible
Conducts electricity
Strong

19
Q

Why do Buckminsterfullerene be used in lubricants?

A

Its molecules are spherical and can roll around each other.

20
Q

What shape is buckminsterfullerene?

A

Spherical

21
Q

Why does propanone have a low boiling point?

A

Weak intermolecular forces.