Chemistry - Chemistry of the atmosphere

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GCSE Chemistry (Chemical changes) Karteikarten am Chemistry - Chemistry of the atmosphere, erstellt von Somto Ibeme am 02/04/2018.
Somto Ibeme
Karteikarten von Somto Ibeme, aktualisiert more than 1 year ago
Somto Ibeme
Erstellt von Somto Ibeme vor mehr als 6 Jahre
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Frage Antworten
What did the early atmosphere contain? water and gases that came from volcanoes (ammonia, methane, carbon dioxide)
How old is the Earth? roughly 4.5 billion years old
What is in the atmosphere today? nitrogen (78%), oxygen (21%) and carbon dioxide, noble gases (argon) and water vapour)
How did the oxygen levels start to rise? cyanobacteria = bacteria that photosynthesise using carbon dioxide and water which were present, produce oxygen
What type of radiation does the sun emit that is absorbed by the Earth? short wave radiation (ultra violet rays from sun)
What major gases contribute to the greenhouse effect? carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxides
How is methane produced? food production = cows and paddy fields waste - landfills, rubbish break down to form carbon dioxide and methane
What is the type of radiation that warms the surface of the Earth? long wave radiation (infared radiation, bounces back and forth, trapped by greenhouse gases)
How is carbon dioxide produced? industrialisation (using up resources) larger population - greater demand for transport/electricity (need fossil fuels) deforestation
How are rocks like limestone and chalk formed? shellfishes contain calcium carbonate when they die, they're compressed + produce limestone (store of CO2) (precipitation of the compounds in oceans)
How were oceans formed? water vapour from volcanoes cooling + condensing
How was nitrogen formed? ammonia from volcanoes react with oxygen bacteria in soil act on nitrogen-containing compounds, decomposition, released into atmosphere
How are sedimentary rocks formed? dead organic matter + rock particles buried and compressed over millions of years
What is carbon footprint? measure of amount of carbon dioxide + other greenhouse gases released over life cycle of something
How do greenhouse gases help support life on Earth? regulates Earth's overall temperature, keeps temperature steady
How do greenhouse gases help keep the Earth warm? They trap the waves from the sun and reradiate it backwards and forwards in the form of long wave radiation, cannot escape
What does corrosion mean? chemical reaction between metal and its surroundings, natural process
What is galvanising? a block of more reactive metal is placed next to/on top of the metal that you don't want to corrode so moisture + oxygen react with the block instead
Advantages of galvanising: cheaper, long lasting
The most common ores are metals bonded to ... oxygen (copper oxide)
What is bioleaching? bacteria absorbing metal compounds, break bonds, energy efficient
What is phytomining? plant takes up quantities of copper and stores it, harvested and burned - ash contains copper compounds need to use electrolysis produces CO2
What is a natural resource? a resource that forms without human input (rubber,wood)
What is sustainable development? approach to development that takes account of needs of present society without damaging lives of future generations
What is potable water? water that is safe to drink, is not completely pure, still has dissolved substances
What are the effects of carbon monoxide? binds to haemoglobin more readily than oxygen, stops transport of oxygen, poisioning
What are the effects of sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides? dissolve in rain water + make acid rain, kills plants, acidify lakes, damage to aquatic life
What are the effects of soot particulates? global dimming, if inhaled stick to lungs + cause breathing problems
What are four potential effects of global warming? sea levels rising,melting of ice caps, coastal erosion, loss of habitats for animals in low lying areas
What are sterilising agents used for purifying water? chlorine,ultra violet light, ozone
What is desalination? removal of salts and minerals from a target substance
Describe the process of desalination by distillation: seawater is boiled, the water vapour is cooled + condensed to form pure water - leaving the salt behind
Describe the process of desalination by sedimentation: screening (take out solids (plastic bags)) sedimentation (water put in settlement tank, dense solids sink to bottom, called sludge) leftover called effluent aerobic digestion (air pumped through encourage bacteria to break down organic matter) treated, doesn't contaminate fresh water
How to reduce use of resources? reduce (reduces energy used to produce item), reuse (no processing required) and recycling (uses less energy than what is required to extract resources to produce)
What are composites made up of? a binder, binding together fibres/ fragments of other material, which is called the reinforcement (concrete = matrix, gravel = reinforcement)
What are ceramics? non metallic solids, high melting points, not made from carbon based compounds (glass)
Potable water in UK: rainwater collected in lakes/rivers, filtered (remove solid) + sterilised (kill harmful bacteria)
What happens to waste product (sludge) after sedimentation? broken down by bacteria (anaerobic digestion) produce methane gas - use for fuel
What happens to waste water after sedimentation? treated + put back into sea/oceans, can put back in to drinking water system, cheaper
LD poly(ethene): heating ethene at 200C, high pressure - bags + bottles
HD poly(ethene) low temp + pressure w/ catalyst - water tanks + drain pipes
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