C1 AQA (9-1) GCSE Revision

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GCSE (Paper 1) Chemistry GCSE Fichas sobre C1 AQA (9-1) GCSE Revision, creado por Oliver Faragher el 24/04/2018.
Oliver Faragher
Fichas por Oliver Faragher, actualizado hace más de 1 año
Oliver Faragher
Creado por Oliver Faragher hace alrededor de 6 años
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Resumen del Recurso

Pregunta Respuesta
What is an element? A substance that cannot be broken down chemically
How many elements are there? 115 (Textbook says around 100)
What is an exothermic and an endothermic reaction? Exothermic = A reaction that gives off heat Endothermic = A reaction that takes in heat
What does "ide" represent when at the end of a compound name? e.g Sodium ChlorIDE The two elements (sodium and chlorine) are joined together with no other elements involved
What does "ate" represent when at the end of a compound name? e.g Potassium Nitrate The compound has the two elements (potassium and nitrogen) joined together along with the third element of oxygen
What happens when two or more atoms join? They form a molecule
Balance the following equation Mg + O2 = MgO 2Mg + O2 = 2MgO2 (Add a two in front of the magnesium and product)
Why do we balance equations? To guarantee that it follows the law of conservation of mass
What are mixtures? Solutions containing two or more chemicals not chemically joined
What methods can we use to separate mixtures? Filtration, Crystallization, Simple distillation, fractional distillation and chromotography
What is fraction distillation used to separate? More than two liquids with different boiling points.
How does fractional distillation work? The mixture is heated and then the various different components evaporate and then condense again on tubes that become gradually cooler the further up you go
Fractional distillation diagram
What did the Greek philosopher theorize in 400BC He described materials being made of small particles called atoms which could not be divided
What did John Dalton suggest? He said that atoms were spherical shapes, like billiard balls, that could not be divided
What did J.J Thompson discover? He discovered the existence of electrons and proposed that negative electrons were embedded in a positively charged pudding shaped atom
What did Ernest Rutherford's team discover? Through the gold leaf experiments, where they sent a beam of alpha particles through a gold leaf, they discovered that the atom had a positively charged nucleus and they created the nuclear model
What did Niels Bohr discover? Niels Bohr create the Bohr model (GCSE one) and stated that electrons were placed on energy levels at set distances
What did James Chadwick discover? He discovered the existence of neutrons in the nucleus
What are the relative atomic masses of protons, neutrons and electrons? Proton = 1 Neutron = 1 1 Electron = ------ (0) 1836
What is the normal radius of atoms and how does this get bigger? The normal radius is 1nm It gets larger the further down the table you go (the more shells you get)
Which number is always bigger in an element, the relative mass or the atomic number? Relative mass
How do you calculate the number of protons OR electrons Use the atomic number
How do you calculate the number of neutrons? Subtract the atomic number from the atomic mass
What are the charges of protons and electrons? Proton = +1 Electron = -1
What is are isotopes? Atoms with different numbers of neutrons
What is the formula for relative abundance? Ar = (mass of first isotope x % of isotope) x (mass of second isotope x % of isotope) All are divided by 100
What do column numbers in the periodic table represent? Number of valence (outer shell) electrons
What do the row numbers represent in the periodic table? Number of shells
How many electrons can each shell hold (in order) 2, 8 , 8 , 2
What forms when you react group 1 and 7? A salt
What is the proper word for group 8 being non-reactive? Inert
What did Mendeleev do that previous table developers had not done? He arranged based on properties and he left gaps based on predictions for future elements
What are the main properties of metals? Lustrous, hard, high density, high strength, high melting/boiling point, good heat conductors, good electrical conductors
What are the main properties of non-metals? Dull, Soft/brittle, low density, low melting point/boiling point, poor-no thermal conduction, poor-no conductors of electricity
What happens when you react a metal and non-metal? The metal will lose electrons (becoming a positive ion) and the non-metal will gain electrons (becoming a negative ion)
What are outer electrons called? Valence Electrons
What makes an atom stable? A full outer shell
What happens if an atom has an unstable number of electrons (3/4/5)? It will share electrons with another element (any more than this and it gains electrons and any less and it loses)
How do boiling points change as you go down group 8? They decrease
What is the key property of any group 1 element? It is highly reactive with water
What gas do group 1 metals give off when they react with water? Hydrogen
What is an ion? An atom with and positive or negative charge (it has lost/gained electrons)
What happens to reactivity as you go down group 7? It decreases
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