GCSE Chemistry: Water Public

GCSE Chemistry: Water

Niamh Ryan
Course by Niamh Ryan, updated more than 1 year ago Contributors

Description

This course covers Topic C3.2: Water which is examined on Paper 3 of the GCSE AQA Chemistry Course. The water that comes from our taps can be soft or hard. There are a number of processes that water undergoes before it reaches our houses. This course discusses these treatments as well as experiments with distillation that you can reproduce.

Module Information

Description

This course covers Topic C3.2 : Water which is examined on Paper 3 of the GCSE AQA Chemistry Course. The Course will cover hard & soft water, treatment & techniques and distillation. A quiz appears at the end to refresh your memory.

Description

Water is one of the essential components for life. We are used to see it flowing from the tap. There are a number of capture and treatment processes that water may go through before it reaches our homes.

Description

Use these flashcards to help memorise some of the key terms and concepts involved with water treatment. Solute, sedimentation, desalination and filtration are some of the terms covered in this section.

Description

Distillation is a process that separates water from something that has been dissolved within it. The process relies on the differing boiling points of a given substance. If the water has boiled away, then only the solute remains.

Description

Hard water is water which contains dissolved magnesium and calcium ions. You can recognise soft water by its ability to easily mix a lather with soap. Both hard and soft water have advantages and disadvantages. There are methods to treat hard water.

Description

Study these flashcards to learn the differences between hard and soft water as well as treatment methods and effects of prolonged use of each.

Description

Take this quiz to refresh what you have learned within this course. There are a range of question types including multiple choice, fill in the blank and more. Test your knowledge of water and water treatment.
Show full summary Hide full summary