C1.1: How has the Earth's atmosphere changed over time, and why?
Description
GCSE Chemistry (C1 - Air and Water) Mind Map on C1.1: How has the Earth's atmosphere changed over time, and why?, created by Aalia Rizvi on 05/11/2016.
C1.1: How has the Earth's atmosphere
changed over time, and why?
A: What types of substance are found in the
atmosphere?
The atmosphere forms a layer
around the planet, and is
essential to life. There would be
no oxygen to breathe and the
temperature would be too cold
for life without the atmosphere
The atmosphere is a mixture
of elements and compounds,
and is around 100km thick,
but 75% of it's mass is in the
first 11km
The air is made of mostly the
elements nitrogen and oxygen
It also contains compounds, water
vapour and carbon dioxide.
Oxygen is found in the atmosphere as a
gas
Key
Words:
Element: Made of one type of
atom
Compound: Made from two or
more elements that are chemically
combined
Mixture: Different elements
which are not chemically
combined
Atmosphere: A layer of a mixture of gases
around the planet
Molecule: A group of atoms which
are chemically combined
H2O can be found in
a liquid state (water),
a gas state (water
vapour) and a solid
state (ice)
H2O evaporates and
moves to the
atmosphere
H2O in the form of water
vapour, condenses and falls as
rain
These are physical changes
When coal burns, the carbon atoms
chemically mix with the oxygen atoms
in the air, and forms carbon dioxide,
which then enters the atmosphere
This is a chemical change
B: What determines the state of a substance on Earth?
Key Words:
Sublimation: When a substance turns
from a solid into a gas, without
becoming a liquid in between
Melting Point: The
temperature at which a solid
substance turns into a liquid
Boiling Point: The
temperature at which a
liquid substance turns
into a gas
Carbon dioxide can be a solid
on Mars, when the
temperature plummets so
low that the gas freezes
The melting point and the
boiling point can determine
the state of a substance at
a given temperature
Question: The melting point of methane
is -182C, and it's boiling point is -162C.
What is the state of methane at -180C?
Below the
melting point,
the substance
is solid
In-between the melting
point and the boiling
point, the substance is a
liquid
Above the boiling point, the
substance is a gas
ANSWER: Methane is a liquid at
-180C
Substances have different boiling points
because the particles in the substance have
a different force of attraction to each other
than other substances
When a liquid is heated, the
particles move faster because
they have more energy, soon they
gain enough energy to overcome
the forces of attraction between
the particles and can move
further apart, which changes the
substance into a gas
Water molecules are very strongly
attracted to each other, which
makes the boiling point much
higher than other substances of
the same size.
Water is a liquid when most other
substances are in the gas state, without
the strong attraction between water
molecules, it all would have evaporated
and Earth would not be suitable for life
C: How did the atmosphere form?
The early Earth had an atmosphere
which mainly consisted of CO2 and
water vapour, with smaller amounts of
other gases. These probably came from
the volcanic eruptions. And if the planet
had stayed that way, it would be as
unsuitable for life as Venus
Then temperatures began to cool, and
water vapour condensed to form the
oceans and the seas
Scientists believe that oxygen levels
increased about 2.3 billion years ago,
however, new evidence suggests that
oxygen was first released by
photosynthesising bacteria
This oxygen was thought to have
reacted with other substances
before it entered the atmosphere,
then plants developed and released
larger amounts of oxygen
There was a large decrease in
CO2 levels, which is explained by
the carbon cycle.
CO2 was removed from the
atmosphere and dissolved into the
oceans, as there was an increase in
plant life, more CO2 was taken to
photosynthesise with, and when those
plants died, they locked carbon in the
ground and formed fossil fuels which
are used today
However, the burning of those fossil
fuels today is adding the CO2 back into
the atmosphere
Key Words:
Carbon Cycle: The natural
processes which recycle carbon
through the living and
non-living parts of the
ecosystem
Peer Review: Scientists who are experts in
their field evaluate another scientist's work
before and after publication
All new research needs to be
peer-reviewed before publication to make
sure the work is valid, original and
significant to the scientific community
The work can then be published, and
should inspire new/further research to
be made in the fields
D: How do human activities affect the atmosphere?
Gas is released into the atmosphere
when a car is driven, or a light is turned
on. they are released by the car/power
station where the electricity is
generated. They are released because
the fossil fuels which are burnt, react
with the oxygen in the air, and create air
pollutants
Key Words:
Air Pollutant: Harmful
substances which are released
into the atmosphere
Oxidation: Reactions
where oxygen is gained
by a reactant
Combustion: An oxidation
reaction where energy/light is
released
Hydrocarbons: Compounds
of hydrogen and carbon
only
Particulates: Tiny part of a solid
Incomplete Combustion: When there is
an insufficient amount of oxygen to
produce CO2 whilst burning
Most power stations are
fuelled by coal or natural gas.
When coal combusts CO2 is
released and enters the
atmosphere
Natural gas, petrol, diesel
and oil are made of
hydrocarbon molecules
When burnt, these produce CO2
and water vapour which are
released into the atmosphere
If coal/natural gas are burnt with
insufficient oxygen (incomplete
combustion), they produce CO and
unburnt particles of carbon
(particulates)
If the coal contains sulphur
impurities, then SO2 will be
released
High temperatures in a furnace cause
nitrogen and oxygen in the air to react
and produce NO
NO is oxidised further to form NO2
These are the nitrogen oxides
Vehicles burn
petrol/diesel, which are
hydrocarbons
Oxygen and nitrogen in the air enter
the engine, CO2, H2O, CO and NO
are produced
The formation of carbon
particulates and CO is
called incomplete
combustion
E; How are scientists working to reduce air pollution?
Concentration is the amount of
pollutants in a certain volume of air,
if there is a low concentration, this
indicates good air quality
If there is a high
concentration of
pollutants, this indicates
poor air quality
If a scientist measures the
concentration of a substance in
the air, they will get varying
results, this may be because
they used the equipment
differently, or there were
differences in the equipment
itself
It is better to take more
measurements as it is easier to
estimate the true value, which
is what the measurement
should really be. The accuracy
of a result depends on how
close it is to the true value
Engineers are working to improve the efficiency
of car engines, a more efficient engine will burn
less fuel to travel to the same distance, which
therefore reduces the amount of pollutants
produced
This benefits car owners, as they do not
need to buy so much fuel
Scientists have developed a catalytic
converter, which changes harmful
pollutants into less harmful ones, all
cars are now fitted with a catalytic
converter in the exhaust system
CO and NO are changed into less harmful
substances, CO2 and nitrogen
Although these are less harmful to humans directly, CO2
has a large impact on climate change, and the only way to
produce less CO2 is to burn less fossil fuels
So, some cars run on low-sulfur fuels,
which reduces the amount of SO2,
which helps reduce acid rain
Other cars are electric, and use
batteries. This means the
pollutants are not released in a
large city area, but at the
power station, if they burn
fossil fuels
F: Representations of chemical reactions
The chemicals before the arrow are the
reactants of the reaction
The chemicals after the arrow are
the products of the reaction
The word equation for this reaction is:
carbon + oxygen = carbon dioxide
The atoms at the beginning of the
reaction are still there at the end, no
atoms are destroyed, and no new ones
are created. This is the conservation of
atoms
All atoms have mass, as the atoms
are conserved, so is the mass of
the products. This is the
conservation of mass