Igcse Chemistry Notes
Igcse Chemistry Notes
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Liquid Properties:
Definite volume but no shape. High Density Not compressible Model: Occur in clusters with molecules slightly further apart compared to solids Free to move about within a confined vessel
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Gas Properties:
No Fixed volume and no fixed shape Low density Compressible Model: Very far apart Travel at high speed Independent and random motions Negligible forces of attraction between them
Diffusion in Gases
Gases diffuse in different rates. Those rates depend on their factors: 1. Mass of the particles The lower the mass of its particles the faster a gas will diffuse. Why? Because the lighter the molecules...the faster it will travel (obviously...) 2. The temperature The higher the temperature, the faster a gas will diffuse. Why? Because particles gain energy as they are heated
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Pure substances and impurities
A pure substance is a substance that has no particles of any other substance mixed with it. An unwanted substance, mixed with a wanted substance, is called an impurity. To check if a substance is pure, you have to check its melting and boiling points. A pure substance has a definite, sharp, melting point. When a substance is impure, the melting point falls and its boiling point rises. So the more impurity present, the wider and bigger the change in melting and boiling point.
Separation methods:
Filter ------------------------- Solid from liquid Centrifuge ------------------ Solid from liquid Evaporation ---------------- Solid from its solution Crystallization -------------- Solid from its solution Distillation ------------------ Solvent from a solution Fractional distillation ----- Liquid from each other Chromatography ---------- Different substances from a solution Separation methods 1. Filtering Example: A mixture of chalk and water... 1. A filter paper is placed in a funnel, the funnel placed on a flask. 2. The mixture is poured on the filter paper. The chalk (the residue) will remain in the filter paper and the water (the filtrate) will fall down in the flask. 2. Centrifuging This method is used to separate small amounts of solid and liquid. Inside a centrifuge (its a machine), test tubes are spun very fast so the solid gets flung to the bottom. 3. Evaporation This method is used to separate a solution in which the solid is dissolved in the liquid. 1. The solution is heated so that the liquid evaporates and the solid remains in the bottom of the evaporating dish.
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4. Crystallization This method is similar to evaporation but here the solid forms crystals then the crystals are left to dry. Separating a mixture of two solids 1. This can be done by dissolving one in an appropriate solvent. 2. Then filtering one and extracting the other from the solution by evaporation. 5. Simple distillation 1. 2. 3. 4. The impure liquid is heated. It boils, and steam rises into the condenser. The impurities are left behind. The condenser is cold so the steam condenses to the pure liquid and it drops out on the beaker.
6. Fractional distillation 1. The mixture is heated. 2. The wanted substance boils and evaporates (some of the unwanted liquid will evaporate too) and rises up the column. 3. The substance will condense on the beads in the column causing them to heat. 4. When the beads reach a certain temperature when the wanted liquid wont condense anymore (Thats the boiling point) it will rise while the unwanted liquid will condense and drop. The wanted liquid will make its way through the condenser where it will condense and drop down in the beaker.
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7. Chromatography This method is used to separate a mixture of substances. For example you can use it to find how many coloured substances there are in black ink. Steps: 1. Drop the black ink on to the center of a filter paper and allow it to dry. 2. Drop water on to the ink spot, one drop at a time. 3. Suppose there are three rings: yellow, red and blue. This shows the ink contains 3 coloured substances. The substances travel across the paper at different rates. Thats why they separate into rings. The filter paper showing the separate substances is called a chromatogram. This method works because different substances travel at different speeds because they have different levels of attraction to it.
Uses of chromatography: Separate mixtures of substances Purify a substance by separating the impurities from it Identify a substance
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Uses of radiation:
1. Check for leaks in pipes (industry) This is done by adding a radioisotope to the oil or gas. At a leak, the radiation is detected using an instrument. Radioisotopes used in this way are called tracers. 2. in cancer treatment (Medical) Radioisotopes can cause cancer but yet also can cure it. Using radiotherapy the radioisotope will decay and give out rays that can kill cancer cells. These rays will be aimed exactly at the cancer cells. 3. To find the age of old remains A tiny percentage of a living thing contains carbon-14 atoms. When living thing dies it no longer takes in new carbon atoms. But existing carbon-14 atom decay over time - we can measure the faint radiation from them.
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Properties of ionic compound
1. Ionic compounds have high melting and boiling points. This is because ionic bonds are very strong, so it takes a lot of heat energy to break up the lattice. 2. Ionic compounds are usually soluble in water. The water molecules can attract the ions away from the lattice. The ions can then move freely, surrounded by water molecules. 3. Ionic compounds can conduct electricity when they are melted or dissolved. When melted the lattice breaks up and the ions are free to move. Since they are charged, this means they can conduct electricity. The solutions of ionic compounds conduct electricity too because they are also free to move.
Covalent bonding is for non-metals only since only non-metals need to gain electrons. A molecule is a group of atoms held together by covalent bonds.
When a pair of electrons is shared, it is called a single covalent bond, or just single bond. When 2 pairs of electrons are shared, it is called a double covalent bond, or just double bond. When 3 pairs of electrons are shared, it is called a triple covalent bond, or just triple bond.
Covalent compounds
A covalent compound is when atoms of different elements share electrons with each other. The molecules in a covalent compound isnt flat because each electron repel each other and try to get as far apart from each other.
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Molecular substances
Most molecular substances are gases or liquids at room temperature. Molecular solids are held in a lattice but the forces between the molecules are weak. All molecular solids have similar structure. The molecules are held in regular pattern in a lattice. So the solids are crystalline. When you cool down a molecular liquid or gas the molecules lose energy so they start moving slowly and at the freezing point, they form a lattice (a good example would be ice)
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Graphite a very different giant structure
Like diamond graphite is made only of carbon atoms. So diamond is and graphite are allotropes of carbon (means they are two forms of the same element) Graphite, unlike diamond, is one of the softest solids on earth. In graphite, each carbon atom forms a covalent bond to three others. This gives rings of six atoms. Graphite properties: 1. Is soft and slippery because the sheets can slide over each other 2. Is a good conductor of electricity because each carbon atom has four outer electron and graphite bonds 3 only so the fourth electron is free to move carrying a charge.
Substance
Diamond
Properties
-Hardest known substance and does not conduct -Sparkles when cut
Uses
In tools for drilling and cutting For jewellery -In sandpaper -For making glass and lenses -In bricks for lining furnaces -As a lubricant for engines -For pencil lead (mixed with clay) -For electrodes, and connecting brushes in generators.
Silica
-Hard, can scratch things -Hard, lets light through -High melting point
Graphite
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Properties of Diamond:
Hard substance High MP / BP Cant conduct electricity
Properties of Graphite:
Soft and slippery Good Conductor
Properties of Silica:
High BP / MP Hard
Comparing Bonds
Differences in STRUCTURE
Covalent
Molecular Shares electrons Simple molecules Non metal only ionic Exchange electrons Giant lattices Metals and non metals
Ionic
Differences in PROPERTIES
Dissolves in organic liquid (not water) Low Boiling and melting point Does no conduct electricity Dissolves in water High boiling and melting point Conducts electricity
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Metallic bonding
Metals form giant structures in which electrons in the outer shells of the metal atoms are free to move. The metallic bond is the force of attraction between these free electrons and metal ions. Metallic bonds are strong, so metals can maintain a regular structure and usually have high melting and boiling points.
Properties of metals:
1. Metals have high melting points This is because it takes a lot of heat energy to break up the lattice. 2. Metals are malleable and ductile. Malleable: They can be bent and pressed into shapes. Ductile: They can be drawn out into wires. This is because the layers can slide without the metallic bond breaking, because the electrons are free to move too. 3. Metals are good conductors of heat Thats because the free electrons take in heat energy, which makes them move faster and they quickly transfer the heat through the metal structure. 4. Metals are good conductors of electricity This is because the free electrons can move through the lattice carrying the charge.
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Periods The period number gives information about the number of electron shells that are available in that period. Hydrogen Hydrogen sits alone in the table because its the only element with one electron shell.
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Trends in the periodic table The elements in each numbered group shows trends in their properties. For example as you go down group 1, the elements become more reactive or as you go down group 7 the elements become less reactive and so on.
Why they have similar properties? Because atoms with the same number of valency electrons react in a similar way.
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As you go down the group reactivity increase. Why? Because the atoms get larger down the group because they add electron shells.
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Group 0: The noble gases
A non-metal group Contains colorless gases, which occur naturally in air Monatomic they exist as single atoms Unreactive because they have a full outer shell. Trends in their physical properties Helium Neon Argon Krypton Xenon Size and mass of atom increases Density of gas increases boiling points increase
Krypton Xenon
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The transition elements
The transition elements are the block of 30 elements in the middle of the periodic table. They are all metals.
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Chemical change
In a chemical change, a new chemical substance is produced.
Physical change
If no new chemical substance is formed, a change is a physical change.
www.studyguide.pk C C
1 atom of carbon
1 molecule of oxygen
CO
This short way to describe the reaction is called a chemical equation. The reaction between hydrogen and oxygen:
H H
H H
O
H
O
H
2 molecules of hydrogen
1 molecules of oxygen
2 molecules of water
2H
2HO
On the left same as on the right, so: On the left: 4 hydrogenstate symbols Adding atoms 2 Oxygen atoms Adding state On the right: 4 hydrogen atoms 2 Oxygen atoms
symbols
You can show the state of the reactants and products by adding state symbols to the equation: (s) for solid (l) for liquid (g) for gas (aq) for aqueous solution (solution in water)
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On this scale: An acidic solution has a pH number less than 7 An alkaline solution has a pH number greater than 7 A neutral solution has a pH number of exactly 7 Acids produce hydrogen ions Acidic solutions contain hydrogen ions, this what makes them acidic
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The difference between strong and weak acids
In solution of strong acids, all molecules become ions. In solution of weak acids, only some do. The higher the concentration of hydrogen ions, the lower the pH, the stronger the acid. Alkalis produce hydroxide ions Alkaline solutions contain hydroxide ions, this is what makes them alkaline. The difference between a strong alkali and weak alkali In solution of strong alkali, it contains more hydroxide ions. In solution of weak alkali, it contains less hydroxide ions. The higher the concentration of hydroxide ions, the higher the pH. To tell if the solution is a weak or strong acid. You can also measure there conductivity. A strong acid will show high conductivity and low pH. A weak acid does not conduct well, and has a higher pH. For alkalis, a strong alkali will show high conductivity and high pH. A weak acid will show low conductivity and low pH.
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Reactions of bases 1. Neutralizing acids, giving salt and water. With carbonates carbon dioxide is produce too. 2. All the alkalis (except ammonia) will react with ammonium compounds, giving ammonia out. The ionic equation An ionic equation shows only the ions that actually take part in a reaction. It leaves out the rest. 1. First write down all the ions present in the equation 2. Now cross out any ions that appear, unchanged, on both sides of the equation 3. Whats left is the ionic equation for the reaction Proton donors and acceptors Acids donate its protons to bases and bases accept them. For example: Magnesium oxide is a insoluble base. The acid donates its H+ protons and the oxygen from magnesium oxide react with it to make water molecules. Acidity in soil Most crops grow best when the pH of the soil is near 7. If soil is too acidic or too alkaline, crops grow badly or not at all. Usually acidity is the problem. Why? Because of a lot of vegetation rotting in it or because too much fertilizer was used in the past. To reduce the acidity, the soil is treated with a base like limestone or quicklime or slaked lime. Acid rain Acid rain is caused by factories, power stations, homes who burn fossil fuels to make electricity. The waste gases from all these reactions include sulphur dioxide, and oxides of nitrogen. They go into the air and react with air and water to produce sulphuric acid and nitric acid which are strong acids.
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Making salts
You can make salts by reacting metals, insoluble bases, or soluble bases with acids. With metals: Example: 1. Add the zinc to the sulphuric acid in a beaker It will start to dissolve and hydrogen bubbles are given off. Stops when all the acid is used up. 2. Excess zinc is removed by filtering. This leaves a aqueous solution of zinc sulphate.
3. The solution is heated to evaporate some water. Then it is left to cool and crystals of zinc sulphate start to form. With insoluble base: Its the same method as the one above but, the metal wont react with the acid. So you must start with a metal oxide. With an alkali (soluble base): 1. Put the alkali into a flask and add some drops of indicator 2. Add the acid from a burette, just a little at a time. Swirl the flask to help the acid and alkali mix. 3. When the indicator turns green stop adding acid. 4. Calculate how much acid was used. 5. Carry out the experiment again without the indicator and add same amount of acid that was used before. This is because the indicator will make the salt impure. 6. Heat the solution from the flask and crystals will start to form.
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Making insoluble salts by precipitation
Not all salts are soluble. Soluble All sodium, potassium, and ammonium salts All nitrates Chlorides Sluphates Sodium, potassium, and ammonium carbonates Except silver and lead chloride Except calcium, barium and lead sulphate But all other carbonates are insoluble. Insoluble
To precipitate an insoluble salt, you must mix a solution that contains its positive ions with one that contains its negative ions.
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Stop clock
Using this you can measure the amount of hydrogen produced in a period of time.
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Collisions For a chemical reaction to occur, the reactant particles must collide. But collisions with too little energy do not produce a reaction. The particles must have enough energy for the collision to be successful in producing a reaction. The rate of reaction depends on the rate of successful collisions between reactant particles. The more successful collisions there are, the faster the rate of reaction. Changing the temperature If the temperature is increased: the reactant particles move more quickly they have more energy the particles collide more often, and more of the collisions result in a reaction the rate of reaction increases Changing the concentration or pressure If the concentration of a dissolved reactant is increased, or the pressure of a reacting gas is increased: the reactant particles become more crowded there is a greater chance of the particles colliding the rate of reaction increases Changing the surface area If a solid reactant is broken into small pieces or ground into a powder: its surface area increases more particles are exposed to the other reactant there are more collisions the rate of reaction increases The effect of light Some chemical reactions obtain the energy from light. They are called photochemical reactions. For example: 1. Silver bromide is pale yellow, but darkens on exposure to light because the light causes it to decompose to silver:
Light
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2AgBr 2Ag + Br 2. Plants use carbon dioxide from the air to make sugar called glucose, in a reaction called photosynthesis. This uses the energy in sunlight. The green substance chlorophyll in leaves speeds up the reaction: 6CO + 6HO C6 H12 O6 + 6O
Light chlorophyll
glucose + oxygen
In both these reaction, the stronger the light, the more energy it provides so the faster the reaction goes. Effect of catalysts A catalyst is a substance that can increase the rate of a reaction. The catalyst itself remains unchanged at the end of the reaction it catalyses. Only a very small amount of catalyst is needed to increase the rate of reaction between large amounts of reactants. A catalyst works by lowering the activation energy for the reaction. Enzymes: biological catalysts Enzymes are proteins that act as catalysts. So they are often called biological catalysts. How enzymes work First the enzyme and the reactant molecule fit together like jigsaw pieces. The reactant molecule has to be the right shape. The enzyme breaks down the molecule to smaller pieces and so on. Important notes: An enzyme works best in conditions that match those in the living cells it came from. This means most enzymes work best in the temperature range 25-45C If the temperature is too high, an enzyme loses its shape and it becomes denatured. An enzyme also works best in a particular pH range. Uses of enzymes 1. In making ethanol 2. In making bread 3. In biological detergents
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Properties of metals:
They are strong. They are malleable They are ductile They are sonorous (They make a ringing noise when you strike them) They are shiny when polished They are good conductors of electricity and heat They have high melting and boiling points (they are all solid at room temperature, except mercury) 8. They have high density (they are heavy) 9. They react with oxygen to form oxides 10. When they react, metals form positive ions. The last two properties are chemical properties, the others are physical properties. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
Metals reactivity
A reactive element has a strong drive to become a compound. So it reacts readily with other elements and compounds. If a metal is more reactive than another metal, then it displaces it and takes it place. For example: When a metal is heated with a oxide of a less reactive metal, it acts as a reducing agent. The reaction always gives out heat it is exothermic. (reducing agent: a substance which brings about the reduction of another substance.) A metal will always displace a less reactive metal from solutions of its compounds.
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The reactivity series
Potassium, K Sodium, Na Calcium, Ca Magnesium, Mg Aluminum, Al Carbon Zinc, Zn Iron, Fe Lead, Pb Hydrogen Copper, Cu Silver, Ag Gold, Au Least Reactive Increasing Reactivity Metals above the red line: They displace hydrogen from acids, and hydrogen cant reduce their oxides. Most reactive
Metals above the blue line: Carbon cant reduce their oxides.
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The stability of some metal compounds
Many compounds break down easily on heating. In other words, they undergo thermal decomposition. (Thermal decomposition is the breakdown of a compound by heating it)
1. Carbonates Most decompose to oxide and carbon dioxide, on heating. But the carbonates of potassium and sodium do not decompose. Strong heating is needed to break down calcium carbonate and the reaction is reversible. The further down the series, the more easily the other carbonates break down. For example Copper(II) carbonate breaks down very easily, like this: CuCO (s) CuO (s) + CO (g)
2. Hydroxides Most decompose to oxide and water on heating, like this: Zn(OH) (s) ZnO (s) + HO (l)
But the hydroxide of potassium and sodium do not decompose. The further down the series, the more easily the others break down.
3. Nitrates All decompose on heating but not all the same products. Potassium and sodium nitrates break down to nitrites, releasing only oxygen, like this: 2NaNO (s) 2NaNO (s) + O (g)
But the nitrates of the other metals break down further to oxides, releasing the brown gas nitrogen dioxide as well as oxygen: 2Pb(NO) 2bO (s) + 4NO (g) + O (g)
The further down the series, the more easily they break down
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Uses of reactivity series
The thermite process The sacrificial protection of iron Galvanizing Making cells (batteries)
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Extraction
Method of extraction
Potassium, K Sodium, Na Calcium, Ca Magnesium, Mg Aluminum, Al Carbon Zinc, Zn Iron, Fe Lead, Pb Hydrogen Increasing Reactivity Most reactive Ores more difficult to decompose Electrolysis Method of extraction more difficult Method of extraction more expensive
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Extraction of zinc from zinc blende
Zinc blende is mainly zinc sulphide, ZnS. First it is roasted in air, giving zinc oxide: Zinc sulphide 2ZnS (s) + Oxygen 3O Zinc oxide 2ZnO (s) + Sulphur dioxide 2SO
Then the oxide is reduced in one of the two ways below: 1. Using carbon monoxide. This is carried in a furnace: Zinc oxide ZnO (s) + Carbon monoxide CO (g) Zinc Zn (s) + Carbon dioxide CO (g)
The final mixture contains zinc and a slag of impurities. The zinc is separated from it by fractional distillation. (It boils at 907C) 2. Using electrolysis
Extraction of iron
The blast furnace
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The reactions in the blast furnace
Stage 1: The coke burns giving off heat The blast of hot air starts the coke burning. It reacts with the oxygen in the air, giving carbon dioxide: Carbon C (s) + Oxygen O (g) Carbon dioxide CO
Explanation: Its a combustion reaction which means its a redox reaction. The carbon is oxidized to carbon dioxide. The blast of air provides the oxygen for the reaction. The reaction is exothermic it gives off heat, which helps to heat the furnace. Stage 2: Carbon monoxide is made The carbon dioxide reacts with more coke, giving carbon monoxide: Carbon C (s) + Carbon dioxide CO (g) Carbon monoxide 2CO (g)
Explanation: In this redox reaction, the carbon dioxide loses oxygen. It is reduced. The reaction is endothermic it takes in heat from the furnace. This is good because stage 3 needs a lower temperature. Stage 3: The iron(III) oxide is reduced This is where the actual extraction occurs. Carbon monoxide reacts with the iron ore giving liquid iron: Iron(III) oxide + Carbon monoxide FeO (s) 3CO (g) Iron 2Fe (l) + Carbon dioxide 3CO (g)
The iron trickles to the bottom of the furnace. Explanation: In this redox reaction, carbon monoxide acts as the reducing agent. It reduces the iron(III) oxide to the metal. At the same time the carbon monoxide is oxidized to carbon dioxide.
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What is the limestone for? The limestone reacts with the sand (silica) in the ore, to form calcium silicate or slag. Limestone CaCO (s) + Silica SiO (s) Calcium silicate CaSiO (s) + Carbon dioxide CO (g)
The slag runs down the furnace and floats on the iron. Explanation: The purpose of this reaction is to remove impurities from the molten iron. Silica is an acidic oxide. Its reaction with limestone is neutralization (because limestone is a base), giving calcium silicate, a salt. The waste gases These are carbon dioxide and nitrogen. They come out at the top of the furnace. Explanation: The carbon dioxide is from the reduction reaction in stage 3. The nitrogen is from the air blast. It has not taken part in the reactions so has not been changed. The molten iron is tapped from the bottom. It is impure with carbon as the main impurity. Some is run into moulds to give cast iron. This is hard but brittle. But most of the iron is turned into steel.
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Uses of some metals
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Steel and other alloys
An alloy is a mixture of metals that changes there properties or increase them. Turing a metal into an alloy increases its range of uses. Pure iron is too soft and stretches easily and rusts. When carbon (0.5%) is mixed with it, the result is mild steel. This is hard and strong. Uses of mild steel (MUST KNOW): buildings, ships, car bodies and machinery When nickel and chromium are mixed with iron, the result is stainless steel. This is hard and rustproof. Uses of stainless steel (MUST KNOW): car parts, kitchen sinks and cutlery.
Making steels
This is how steels are made: 1. First, unwanted impurities are removed from the iron. The molten iron from the blast furnace is poured into an oxygen furnace. Calcium oxide is added, and a jet of oxygen is turned on. The calcium oxide neutralizes any acidic impurities, forming a slag that is skimmed off. The oxygen reacts with the others burning them away. 2. Then other elements may be added This is measured out carefully, to give steels with the required properties.
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Corrosion
Corrosion is when a metal is attacked by air, water, or other substances in its surroundings, the metal is said to corrode. The more reactive a metal is, the more readily it corrodes.
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How to prevent rusting
1. Coat the metal with something to keep out air and moisture. You could use: Paint Grease Plastics Another metal. For example:
Zinc: by dipping iron into molten zinc. This is called galvanizing. Tin: deposited on the steel by electrolysis, in a process called tin plating. Chromium: coating with chromium. The chromium is deposited by electrolysis. 2. Use sacrificial protection This is when a more reactive metal is attached to the metal and it corrodes instead of the steel. This is called sacrificial protection.
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These can be separated by fraction distillation. This works because the gases in air have different boiling points.
Uses of oxygen
1. In hospitals People with breathing problems are given oxygen through oxygen tanks covering the nose and mouth, they also use oxygen tents. 2. Welding metals A mixture of oxygen and ethanol is used in oxy-acetylenes torches for that are used in welding metals.
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Air pollutants
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Catalytic converters
A exhaust pipe is a pipe where waste gases are disposed off. In it, harmful gases are present:
Water
Uses of water: At home for drinking, cooking, washing things and flushing toilet waste away. On farms it is needed as a drink for animals, and to water crops. In industry, they use it as a solvent, and to wash things, and to keep hot reaction tanks cool. Power stations use it to make steam. The steam then drives the turbines that generate electricity.
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Purifying water
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Alkanes General molecular formula = Cn H2n+2 The alkanes are a homologus series which means that all of the compound have the same functional group same general formula same chemical properties show a gradual change in chemical properties Khalid mafee zeb