IGCSE/GCSE/O & A Level/IB/University Student Forum
Qualification => Subject Doubts => GCE AS & A2 Level => Sciences => Topic started by: cashem'up on June 09, 2010, 02:16:16 pm
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10 At a total pressure of 1.0 atm, dinitrogen tetraoxide is 50 % dissociated at a temperature of 60
oC,
according to the following equation.
N2O4 2NO2
What is the value of the equilibrium constant, Kp, for this reaction at 60
oC?
A 1/3 atm B 2/3 atm C 4/3 atm D 2 atm
then answer is C but i am gettin D please explain
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oh yea i got stuck on this one too, so since its 50% i put 100 as the initial values
N2O4 = 2N02
INITIANL 100 0
EQUI 50 100
mol fractoin 50/150 100/150
= 1/3 2/3
then kp= (2/3) squared / (1/3) = 4/3 ;D
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oh yea i got stuck on this one too, so since its 50% i put 100 as the initial values
N2O4 = 2N02
INITIANL 100 0
EQUI 50 100
mol fractoin 50/150 100/150
= 1/3 2/3
then kp= (2/3) squared / (1/3) = 4/3 ;D
ofcourse i forgot to square stupid!!! Thanks man ;)
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Why is the addition of concentrated sulphuric acid to solid potassium iodide unsuitable for the
preparation of hydrogen iodide?
1 Hydrogen iodide is not displaced by sulphuric acid.
2 Iodide ions are oxidised to iodine.
3 The product is contaminated by sulphur compounds.
hey guys in this question the ans is D only 1 but shouldnt it be C as 2 and 3 should be correct rite ??? ???
And another q
Which chlorine compound has bonding that can be described as ionic with some covalent
character?
A NaCl B MgCl2 C AlCl3 D SiCl4
the Ans is B but isnt Alcl3 the better choice or is it because they said SOME covalent character
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hey sorry for the first one i looked at the wrong ms but 2nd is still a doubt and one more doubt
In an experiment, 50.0 cm3 of a 0.10 mol dm–3 solution of a metallic salt reacted exactly with
25.0 cm3 of 0.10 mol dm–3 aqueous sodium sulphite.
The half-equation for oxidation of sulphite ion is shown below.
SO ? 2
3 (aq) + H2O(I) ? SO2?
4 (aq) + 2H+(aq) + 2e–
If the original oxidation number of the metal in the salt was +3, what would be the new oxidation
number of the metal?
A +1 B +2 C +4 D +5
Can someone please help and solve especially the great chemmaster thanx :-[
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hey sorry for the first one i looked at the wrong ms but 2nd is still a doubt and one more doubt
In an experiment, 50.0 cm3 of a 0.10 mol dm–3 solution of a metallic salt reacted exactly with
25.0 cm3 of 0.10 mol dm–3 aqueous sodium sulphite.
The half-equation for oxidation of sulphite ion is shown below.
SO ? 2
3 (aq) + H2O(I) ? SO2?
4 (aq) + 2H+(aq) + 2e–
If the original oxidation number of the metal in the salt was +3, what would be the new oxidation
number of the metal?
A +1 B +2 C +4 D +5
Can someone please help and solve especially the great chemmaster thanx :-[
hahaha yea i was pondering about your first question .
anyways i think your right with the word some it implys its MG because Al shows full covalent character this the acidic nature during hydrolysis.
hmm which question and which year is the 3rd question ?
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the answer is +2 and its either s07 or w07 chek it out most probably the 9th q
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oh god yet another sneaky one. look at the oxygen number next to the sulphr it goes from so3 to s04. in old chemistry oxidatoin means gain in oxygen so sulphur gained oxygen which means the metal must have been reduce. since 1 o was gain, 1 reduction must be made thus 3+ to 2+
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plz help me with these ques????
nov 09/variant12
Q9,20,22,27,40(plz tell me the logic behind the ans)
ppr is attachd..thankzz
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plz help me with these ques????
nov 09/variant12
Q9,20,22,27,40(plz tell me the logic behind the ans)
ppr is attachd..thankzz
9) in this particular question they make it confusing by putting the dissociation part. but if you look carefully PCL 5 forms PCL 3 and cl2. thus bond breaking which is always endothermic. the idea of the dissociation is that higher tempreture more energy provided more breaking bonds.
its phyrimidal because P is essentiall P4 but this is Pcl3 which means there is a lone electron and thus pushes the structure down wards forming the pyrimidal structure.
20)well in this case it says sis so the two r mus be on the same side. its 5 double bonds because in the ring it self there can only be 4 double bonds since the carbon on 1 point will have a hydrogen as well as be connected to the aliphatic chain . so it indicates there is 1 other doubhle bond in the aliphatic part fo total 5 bonds
22) well its not a and b since both does not form alchahol . d will make ketone which what you dont want. since any form of oxidation will effect at least 1 oh group . so 3 would be the most logicat one. you first polymerise it so you break the double bond then you hydrolyse it which changes the halogenoalkane to alchahol.
27) ive answered this is one of the more recent threads. could you look ther eplease ;D im very lazy to type it again ahahah
40)i have no exact explanation for this , the only thing i can dedue is well you wont form 1 mol from 1 mol. your adding more stuff so , it has to increase so if 1 is gone it can only be 2 or 3
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@ CHEMMASTER6000
thankx alot for de explanation bt cn u plz explain Q9???(u hav explaind Q8 by mistake,i didnt ask for it :))
thankz alot :)
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The diagram represents the reaction pathway for the following reaction.
W(g) + X(g) ? Y(g) + Z(g)
energy
W + X
Y + Z
reaction pathway
What statement can be made about the reverse reaction, Y(g) + Z(g) ? W(g) + X(g)?
A It will have a larger activation energy and a positive ?H.
B It will have a larger activation energy and a negative ?H.
C It will have a smaller activation energy and a positive ?H.
D It will have a smaller activation energy and a negative ?H.
NOW this is w08 q9 and ans is B please explain
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o/n 2008 q 2
what does NaOH remove exactly?
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majune 2005 question 1 nd 2.??