q2 is C. Volume of gas after burning...use mole ratios, it was burned with 50cm3 of oxygen but only 30 reacted so 20 remains. It forms 10 of CO2 and 20 of SO2, total is therefore 50. After addition if NaOH which is alkaline, the acidic gases, CO2 and SO2 will react leaving behind only the 20cm3 of O2
q10 D. you should know that Kc and Kp are not affected by concentration or pressure changes or by catalyst! a catalyst will only reduce the time at which equilibrium is reached, increasing concentration of O2 will also reduce the time in which equilibrium is reached but it will be reached at the same Kp values as before. same with increasing pressure. Temperature will however affect the Kp value since the forward reaction is exothermic, if you increase the temp, the extra energy will favour the backward reaction and vice versa.
q15 C, RCl will break down heterolytically forming the carbacation and the chloride ion which has a full octet, which bonds with AlCl3 with a dative bond to Al since Al has an incomplete octed of electrons
q24 C, the reaction takes place in two parts, the first part is slow meaning it has a high activation energy, then the second part is fast showing it has a low activation energy. Look at the reaction pathway of C, it shows this, the first "bump" is high then the second "bump" is lower
q30 C, Find the theoretical mass of ester that should be obtained. 30 grams of ethanol is 5/6 moles and 30 grams of ethanoic acid is 0.5 mole so ethanol is in excess. therefore Use moles of ethanoic acid for calculations. 0.5 moles of ester are formed, which is 44 grams of ester. 22g were however formed so yield is (22/44)*100 =50%
q39. B. so a possible termination step in this reaction is when two propyl free radicals form one hexane molecule. possible products are therefore hexane (C6H14) or some of its isomers can form, one and two can be formed but three cannot because of the position of the methyl branch.
q40 B. it is soluble in water because hydrogen bonds can form between water and the OH groups of the molecule. It has a carbon-carbon double bond so it can de colourise bromine water but it cannot react with fehling's reagent since it is a ketone not a aldehyde.