Exam
Fourth Period Dietz
Rules
1. Choose ONE subtopic to work on. If more than one person wants the same
subtopic, they may or may not get to work on it together. It depends on
how large the subtopic is
2. Each person needs to contribute 5-10 QUALITY questions
3. All slides due November 21st(Friday), 2014- All who do not finish will be
kicked
4. All students have 2 slides, one for questions, 1 for answers
5. Good luck on exams!!
Subtopics
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
ii.
c.
Fission and Fusion
Balancing Equations
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
Molarity
Concentration
Atomic History
a. Dalton
b. Thompson
c.
Rutherford
d. Current
Periodic Table
a. Groups
b. Periods
c.
Dot/Configuration
d. Speeds
Bonds
a. Ionic
b. Covalent
c.
Metallic
Operational Definition- chemically identify
Observations, Inferences, predictions
Models
Metric System
a. Meter, liter, gram
b. Km, hm, dkm, sm, dm, cm, mm
Students Topics
Sejal Gandhi- Proof from labs(10)
Tanna Irvin- properties(ex,int,gen,spec)(10)
Evonne Iau- Molarity/Concentration(5 for each)
Vincy Chiou- Counting Atoms(5)
Nicholas Salomon- Nuclear Mathematics, Electron Dot, New
Elements(10)
Ashani Sharma- Periodic Table(speed, groups, etc.),
Observations/Inferences/Predictions (10)
Camryn Graham- Balancing Equations, Bonds(7)
Nikhil Viswanath-Balancing Equations(7)
Wyatt Johnson- Metric System/Atomic History(5 for each)
Alexia Cainion- Molarity/Concentration (5 for each)
Dhruv Narula- Alpha Decay, Beta Decay, Gamma Decay, Weak Force,
Strong Force, Electromagnetic force, Fission, Fusion(7)
Passy Mason- Atomic History(5)
Samantha Humphrey- Balancing Equations(7)
1.
2.
3.
How did we prove from lab the law of conservation of mass for dissolving?
When a chemical reaction occurs, how come the mass remains the same?
What are two ways we proved that gas is matter?
In the copper compounds lab, what was the significance of the coating on the nails and color
change?
How did we prove that all the copper cmpds contained similar atoms? How were they different?
How did we know that the yellow substance A contained particles other than Iodine?
What did the nuts and bolts show us?
How do we test for left-over atoms? Is it possible to have more than one left-over?
If you added HCl to 3 substances that you know have the same particles, and only 1 reacted, what
do you know about the other 2?
When doing single replacement reactions, what is needed to know where the chemicals came
from?
Properties---Answers
Properties that cannot be changed
D.
a. special
Properties used to differentiate
A.
b. extrinsic
Properties that can be changed
B.
c. general
Properties that all matter has in common C.
d. intrinsic
An example of this is mass
C.
Physical vs. Chemical Change
Burning wood is a chemical change.
Smashing a potato is a physical
Melting sugar is a physical change.
Chewing pizza is a physical change.
Iron rusting is a chemical change
TRUNCATE
1.
If I have 537 grams of B(HCO3)3 that I add to a liter of water, what is the molarity?
2.
If I have the same thing as #1 but I add it to 65 ml of water, what is the standard concentration?
3.
A solution of KMnO4 is found to be 2.7M. If added to a liter of water, how many grams were used to make the
solid?
4.
5.
6.
X and Y combine in a 4:5 ratio. If you had 24X and 53Y, give a balanced equation.
7.
8.
? + ? 9C8H13 + 88C
9.
How many more H atoms would be needed to use up all the C atoms?
10. How many grams of solid would you need to add to one liter of water to make a 0.68M solution of NaHCO 3?
Concentration/Molarity Answers
1.
2.6M
2.
537/65= (8.2g/1ml)100=
8.2 g/ml
3.
426.6 grams
4.
2.7(a mole)=
5.
6.
7.
1= x/310, 310/1000=
8.
9.
1.62 x 1024
9.72 x 1024
24X + 53Y 6X4Y5 + 23Y
0.31 g/ml
160C + 117H
88/8= 11C8H13=
Observation
Inference
Prediction
Observation
Prediction
Inference
Camryns Answers
1. If you have 60 atoms of a cation and 48 atoms of an anion that combine
x:y in a 5:8 ratio. Balance the equations 6x5y8 + 30x
2. One compound is formed with covalent bonds and another is formed by
metallic bonds. Which has a better chance of conducting electricity?Why?
the compund with metallic bonds because it produces ions and electricity
flows through ions and covalent bonds dont produce ions
3. 4HCl+ Na(OH)+Ga(OH)3 4HOH + NaCl + GaCl3
4. PbS2 + Mg3P2
5. Describe all of the different types of bonds
6. Give an example of each bond and explain why it is that type of bond
7. Li(HCO3) + HCl
1) BeF2 + MgO
2) CaPo + MgI2
3) HCl + NaOH
4) Ga(NO3)3 + FrF
5) Ca(CO3)2 + H2O
6) NaNe + CaCl
7.
8.
9.
10.
TRUNCATE
TO THE
Alexia Cainion- Molarity/Concentration (5 for each)
NEAREST
1. If there are 6.2 moles of PbNO3, how many grams are in the molar solution? HUNDREDT
2. If we have 928 grams of Na2SO4, what is the molarity?
H
3. What is the concentration of the solution in #2 if it is added to 1L of water?
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
1. 6.2=g/269
10. c=654/100
g=1667.8 grams
c=654
1. m=928/142
grams/100mL
m=6.53 moles
1. c=928/4
c=232 grams/mL
1. 3.8(6.02 x 10^23)
=2.28 x 10^24
1. 24(3.8)(6.02 x 10^23)
=5.49 x !0^25
1. c=256/35
c=731 grams/100mL
1. m=352/82
m=4.29 grams/mL
8. c=789/4
c=197.25 grams/mL
9. c=658/86
c=7.65 grams/mL
CaBr2+ NaCl
AlCl3+ CaO
Ca(NO3)2 + KBr
BaCl2 + Ga(NO3)3
Li2S + KBr
CuSO4 + NaNO3
CCl4 + Na2O
CaSO4 + CCl4
K3P + CaBr2
2) Cu + HCl results in what products? - none. 2 HCl are needed for a reaction because H is diatomic and Cl has a 1- charge.
3) Tanna heats up a beaker of a substance, and purple gas forms. What is the substance? -iodine (as far as we know)
b. Pure or impure? Is it a mixture, comp, etc?
-we don't know. In all forms of I, it is possible for it to react.
4) Evonne adds a substance to chlorine water. It turns blue! What is the substance?
- it is not necessarily a Cu compound. CW splits compounds, and only Cu comps turn solution blue.
5) Why do substances with a carbine group (CO3) create CO2 when added to acid?
-it is a ratio. this ratio exists because the group is not bonded together like usual compounds.
6) What did Zn create when added to HCl, and why?
- hydrogen gas because alkali metals + acid always have H2 in the products.
7) Why does heating up Iodine result in purple gas?
I has no liquid stage, so the purple gas is a result of sublimation. Think of dry ice.