Chemistry Notes by Vasumitra Gajbhiye
Chemistry Notes by Vasumitra Gajbhiye
Water is quite a volatile liquid. Ethanol, with a boiling point of 78 °C, is more volatile than
water. It has a higher volatility than water and evaporates more easily.
If the surrounding pressure falls, the boiling point falls. If the surrounding pressure is
increased, the boiling point rises.
A pure substances consists of only one substance without any contaminating impurities.
A pure substance melts and boils at definite temperatures.
This means that we can use BP to test the purity of a sample. These values can also be
used to check the identity of an unknown substance.
not able to move freely, but simply vibrate in their fixed positions.
In a gas, the intermolecular space is large and can be reduced by increasing the
external pressure. Therefore, gases are easily compressible. In liquids, this space is
very much smaller. As a result, liquids are not very compressible.
An increase in temperature increases the kinetic energy of each particle, as the thermal
energy is transformed to kinetic energy, so they move faster and there is less chance of
interaction between them. The gas particles move more freely and occupy a greater
volume.
An increase in pressure pushes the particles closer together meaning that the moving
particles are more likely to interact with each other and move closer together.
An decrease in pressure pushes the particles further apart meaning that the moving
particles are less likely to interact with each other and further apart together.
When solids are heated, the particles absorb TE which is converted into KE. This causes
its particles to vibrate more and as the temperature increases. The KE is used to break
bonds. They vibrate so much that the solid expands until all the bonds are broken and
the solid melts.
On further heating, liquid substance expands more and some particles at the surface
gain sufficient energy to overcome the intermolecular forces and evaporate. When the
BP is reached, all the particles gain enough energy to escape and the liquids boils
Unlike most solids, gases become less soluble in water as the temperature rises.
Diffusion does not take place in solids as the particles cannot move from place to place.
The pressure of a gas is the result of collisions of the fast-moving particles with the walls
of the container.
Heavier gas particles move more slowly than lighter particles at the same temperature.
Mixture → two or more substances mixed together but not chemically combined - the
substances can be separated by physical means.
Mass number/nucleon number(A) is the total number of protons and neutrons in the
nucleus of an atom.
The electrons are held within the atom by an electrostatic force of attraction between
them and the positive charge of the protons in the nucleus.
Hydrogen have only one proton and one electron. It does not have a neutron in its
nucleus.
Group VIII noble gases have a full outer shell. The number of outer shell electrons is
equal to the group number in Groups I to VII. The number of occupied electron shells is
equal to the period number.
Isotopes are different atoms of the same element that have the same number of protons
but different numbers of neutrons.
Isotopes of the same element have the same chemical properties because they have the
same number of electrons and therefore the same electronic configuration.
Some isotopes are radioactive because their nuclei are unstable (radioisotopes).
The masses of the isotopes of the same element differ and therefore other properties,
such as density and rate of diffusion, also vary.
To form sodium chloride, sodium atoms loses a electron and chlorine atom gains an
electron. Sodium ion has a stable electron arrangement of neon atom. Chloride ion has
a stable electron arrangement of argon atom.
Ionic compounds do not conduct electricity when solid because there are no free mobile
electrons or ions to carry the current through the solid.
A covalent bond is formed when a pair of electrons is shared between two atoms leading
to noble gas electronic configurations.
Diatomic molecules contain two atoms, doesn’t matter that they should be of the same
element. E.g. H2 and CO .
Low melting points and boiling points → They are made of simple covalent
molecules. The forces between the molecules (intermolecular forces) are only very
week. Not much energy is needed to move the molecules further apart.
Poor electrical conductivity → There are no free electrons or ions present to carry
the electrical current.
In Diamond each carbon atom is attached to four other atoms - the atoms are arranged
tetrahedrally.
Diamond is used in cutting tools because diamond is very hard. Diamond is very hard
because strong covalent bonds extends throughout the whole structure.
Each carbon atom is bonded to three others by strong covalent bonds. Between the
layers there are weaker forces of attraction.
This means that graphite feels slippery and can be used as a lubricant. Graphite is used
in pencils. When we write with a pencil, thin layers of graphite are left stuck to the paper.
In silica (silicon( Ⅳ) dioxide, SiO2 ) each silicon atom is bonded to four oxygen atoms,
but each oxygen is only bonded to two silicon atoms.
very hard
high MP and BP
does not conduct electricity, because there are no free electrons to move through
the structure.
Metallic bonding is the electrostatic attraction between the positive ions in a giant
metallic lattice and a ‘sea’ of delocalised electrons.
High MP & BP → Large amount of energy is needed to overcome the strong and
extensive force of attraction between the positive metal ions and the ‘sea’ of
Malleability and ductility → Metals are easily bent and shaped (malleable) or
stretched into wires (ductile). The positive ions in a metal are arranged in layers.
When a force is applied, the layers can slide over each other. The attractive forces in
metallic bonding act in all directions to hold the structure together. This means that
when the layers slide over each other new bonds are easily formed. This movement
of layers leaves the metal with a different shape.
B3. Stoichiometry
Empirical formula → the simplest whole number ratio of the different atoms or ions in a
compound.
Where the metal can form more than one ion, then the name indicates which ion is
present. Ex - iron(II) chloride.
Compounds containing only two elements have names ending in -ide, except
hydroxides. Ex - sodium hydroxide.
Relative atomic mass, Ar , is the average mass of the isotopes of an element compared
to 1/12th of the mass of an atom of C-12.
Relative molecular mass, Mr , is the sum of the relative atomic masses. Relative formula
mass, Mr , will be used for ionic compounds
The mole, mol, is the unit of amount of substance and one mole contains 6.02 × 10^23
particles, e.g. atoms, ions, molecules; this number is the Avogadro constant
The molar gas volume, is taken as 24dm3 at room temperature and pressure, r.t.p.
L.6. Electrochemistry
Electrolysis is the decomposition of an ionic compound, when molten or in aqueous
solution, by the passage of an electric current.
Metals or hydrogen are formed at the cathode and non-metals (other than hydrogen) are
formed at the anode.
Metal objects are electroplated to improve their appearance and resistance to corrosion.
Object to be electroplated is placed at the cathode. And the metal from which it is
electroplated placed at the anode. ions travel from anode to cathode. Nitrate of the metal
at the anode is used as electrolyte.
The loss of electrons occur at anode and gain of electrons occur at the cathode.
Electrolysis of aqueous copper(ll) sulfate using carbon electrode produce copper at the
cathode and oxygen at anode.
Electrolysis of aqueous copper(ll) sulfate using copper electrode produce copper at the
cathode and anode dissolve to give copper ions in the electrolyte. Mass of cathode
increase and mass of anode decrease.
Electrolysis of sulfuric acid produce oxygen at the anode and hydrogen at the cathode.
The transfer of thermal energy during a reaction is called the enthalpy change, ∆H, of
the reaction.
Activation energy, Ea , is the minimum energy that colliding particles must have to react.
Increasing the pressure of a gas increase the rate of reaction because there are more
number of particles per unit volume. So frequency of collision between particles
increase.
Increasing the surface area of a solid increase the rate of reaction because more
particles are exposed to collide. So frequency of collision between particles increase.
Increasing the temperature increase the rate of reaction because there is an increase in
average kinetic energy of the particles. particle move faster. more particles have energy
greater than activation energy. So frequency of collision between particles increase.
A catalyst increases the rate of a reaction and is unchanged at the end of a reaction.
Anhydrous cobalt(ll) chloride react with water to form hydrated cobalt(ll) chloride. There
is a colour change from blue to pink. The reaction is exothermic.
The rate of the forward reaction is equal to the rate of the reverse reaction.
In equilibrium, increasing the temperature favours the side with endothermic reaction.
In equilibrium, decreasing the temperature favours the side with exothermic reaction.
In equilibrium, increasing the pressure favours the side with fewer mols of gas.
In equilibrium, decreasing the pressure favours the side with more mols of gas.
In equilibrium, increasing the concentration of a reactant favours the side that makes
less of that reactant, i.e. favours the opposite side of the reaction.
The typical conditions in the Haber process are 450°C, 20000kPa /200atm and an iron
catalyst.
The oxidation number of a monatomic ion is the same as the charge on the ion.
The sum of the oxidation numbers in an ion is equal to the charge on the ion.
Potassium iodide is a reducing agent and is used to test for oxidising agent. There is a
colour change from colourless to yellow-brown because iodide ions are oxidised to
iodine. If starch indicator is added there is a colour change to blue-black because of the
presence of iodine.
Acidified potassium manganate(VII) is an oxidising agent and used to test for reducing
agent. There is a color change from purple to colourless because manganate(VII) ions
are reduced.
An oxidising agent is a substance that oxidises another substance and is itself reduced.
A reducing agent is a substance that reduces another substance and is itself oxidised.
Bases are oxides or hydroxides of metals and alkalis are soluble bases.
Amphoteric oxides → oxides that react with acids and with bases to produce a salt and
water. E.g. Al2 O3 and ZnO
1. Warm the acid. Switch off the Bunsen burner. Add an excess of the metal to the
acid. Wait until no more bubbles.
3. Heat the filtrate till crystallisation point. leave it to cool. Filter the crystals, wash, dry
between filter paper.
1. Add excess insoluble base to an acid. stir. Wait until the solution no longer turns red
blue litmus paper blue.
3. Heat the filtrate till crystallisation point. leave it to cool. Filter the crystals, wash, dry
between filter paper.
1. Add an excess of the metal carbonate to the acid. Wait until no more bubbles.
3. Heat the filtrate till crystallisation point. leave it to cool. Filter the crystals, wash, dry
between filter paper.
Titration
2. using pipette
Precipitations reaction
1. add equal volume of water to equal mass of both the soluble salts in two different
beakers
Elements become less metallic as you move to the right of the periodic table.
Elements in same group of the periodic table have similar chemical properties because
they have same number of valence electrons, and similar electronic configuration.
increasing density
increasing reactivity
Group I alkali metals, lithium, sodium and potassium, as relatively soft metals.
decreasing reactivity
More reactive halogens displace less reactive halogens from their compound.
Transition metals:
Group VIII noble gases are unreactive, monatomic gases because they have full outer
shell.
B9. Metals
Metal + water:
More reactive metals like sodium, potassium and calcium react with cold water.
a much more vigorous reaction takes place if steam is passed over heated
magnesium, iron or zinc.
if a metal reacts with cold water, a metal hydroxide and hydrogen are formed
Moderately reactive metals such as magnesium, zinc or iron can be reacted safely with
dilute acids to produce hydrogen gas.
Uses of metals:
copper in electrical wiring because of its good electrical conductivity and ductility and
it is unreactive.
Stainless steel is a mixture of iron and other elements such as chromium, nickel and
carbon.
Alloys can be harder and stronger than the pure metals and are more useful.
Alloys are harder than pure metals because the different sized atoms in alloys mean the
layers can no longer slide over each other.
Stainless steel is used in cutlery because of its hardness and resistance to rusting.
measure
• start timing when solid added
• stop timing when all solid gone / reaction to stop
OR
• start timing when solid added
• stop timing when collected set volume of gas
OR
• start timing when solid added
• measure volume of gas after a set time
OR
• measure temperature at start
• measure temperature after reaction OR highest temperature reached
conclusion
• shortest time is most reactive
OR
• biggest volume of gas most reactive
OR
• biggest temperature change most reactive
More reactive metals displace less reactive metals because more reactive metals have
greater tendency to form positive ions.
Aluminium has a thin layer of aluminium oxide. This layer sticks to the surface of the
metal and doesn’t flakes off. This layer makes aluminium unreactive.
The burning of carbon (coke) to provide heat and produce carbon dioxide
C + O2 => CO2
The reduction of carbon dioxide to carbon monoxide
Extraction of aluminium:
Cryolite is added
Cryolite reduces the melting point of aluminium oxide and increases conductivity
of aluminium oxide
Painting, greasing and coating with plastic are some common barrier methods.
Barrier methods prevent rusting by preventing iron and steel from coming into contact
with water and oxygen.
Zinc is more reactive than iron so loses electrons more easily. Hence, it corrodes in
preference to iron.
To check the purity of water check it’s boiling or the ice’s melting point.
Distilled water is used in practical chemistry rather than tap water because it contains
fewer chemical impurities.
1. dissolved oxygen
2. metal compounds
3. plastics
4. sewage
5. harmful microbes
4. nitrates and phosphates lead to deoxygenation of water and damage to aquatic life
Purification of water:
4. Distillation is not performed because chlorination does the job of distillation and also
have few more beneficial effects.
NPK fertilisers are used to provide the elements nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium for
improved plant growth.
The composition of clean, dry air is approximately 78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen and the
remainder as a mixture of noble gases and carbon dioxide.
3. methane from the decomposition of vegetation and waste gases from digestion in
animals
5. sulfur dioxide from the combustion of fossil fuels which contain sulfur compounds
1. carbon dioxide: higher levels of carbon dioxide leading to increased global warming,
which leads to climate change
The sun emits infrared radiation towards the earth. Earth reflect the infrared radiation.
Greenhouse gases absorb this infrared radiation. This reduce the thermal energy loss to
the space. If excess thermal energy is absorbed this causes enhanced green house
effect and increases the average temperature of earth and cause climate change.
Photosynthesis is the reaction between carbon dioxide and water to produce glucose
and oxygen in the presence of chlorophyll and using energy from light.
L.18. TO L.20.
General Formulas:
Alkane → CnH2n+2
Alkene → CnH2n
Alcohol → CnH2n+1OH
A saturated compound has molecules in which all carbon–carbon bonds are single
bonds.
Structural formula is an unambiguous description of the way the atoms in a molecule are
arranged, e.g. CH2 = CH2 , CH3 CH2 OH, CH3 COOCH3
Structural isomers is compounds with the same molecular formula, but different
structural formulae,
higher volatility
lower viscosity
Uses of fractions:
diesel oil/ gas oil fraction for fuel used in diesel engines
fuel oil fraction for fuel used in ships and home heating systems
The bonding in alkanes is single covalent and alkanes are saturated hydrocarbons.
The properties of alkanes are being generally unreactive, except in terms of combustion
and substitution by chlorine.
The bonding in alkenes includes a double carbon–carbon covalent bond and alkenes are
unsaturated hydrocarbons.
Large change alkanes are cracked to small change alkenes and hydrogen in the
presence of a catalyst and high temperature (~500°C).
an alkane with a shorter chain than the original, and a short-chain alkene
The demand for the various fractions from the refinery does not necessarily match with
their supply from the oil fields. There is a greater demand for the lighter fractions such as
petrol that have shorter chain length. The longer molecules from these heavier fractions
can, be broken into shorter, more valuable, alkane or alkene molecules using cracking.
To distinguish between saturated and unsaturated hydrocarbons add bromine water to it.
If the colour remains yellow-orange it is saturated and if the colour change to colourless
it is unsaturated.
During combustion of alkene, carbon dioxide and water are produced if there is sufficient
supply of oxygen. If not carbon monoxide is produced.
Alkenes react with bromine in addition reaction. The double bond break open and a
bromine molecule attach to the alkene. And it becomes bromo-alkane(NOT bromo-
alkene).
heated gas.
Manufacture of Ethanol:
catalytic addition of steam to ethene at 300°C and 6000kPa /60 atm in the presence
of an acid catalyst.
Notice that in formula ethanoate group comes first then the metal.
Carboxylic acid react with alcohol in the presence of acid catalyst (concentrated sulfuric
acid) to from ester. alcohol form the first part of the name (alkyl group) and carboxylic
acid form the second part of the name (-notate group).
Polymers is large molecules built up from many smaller molecules called monomers.
Structure of protein:
accumulation in oceans
stopwatches
thermometers
balances
burettes
measuring cylinders
gas syringes
Residue is a substance that remains after evaporation, distillation, filtration or any similar
process.
Simple balance have low resolution, e.g. 0.1g. More complex balance have higher
resolution, e.g. 0.001g.
pH can be measured using either universal indicator paper or more accurately with a
digital probe. A digital probe may read to 0.1 or even 0.01 on the pH scale, giving
significantly higher resolution.
Titration
2. using pipette
Chromatography:
attach the paper to a splint or pencil using a clip and suspend the paper in the
solvent
remove the paper from the solvent after it has travelled about 80% of the way up the
paper.
mark the solvent front with a pencil to show how far the solvent moved.
Crystallisation → Place the filtrate into an evaporating basin and heat over a water-
bath. Allow water to evaporate until crystallisation point or crystals start to form when a
glass rod is placed in the solution. pat dry between filter papers.
Simple distillation → Heat the mixture in a distillation flask. The solvent evaporates.
The solvent vapour is condensed by passing it down a water-cooled condenser and then
collected as the distillate.
ALL THE SALTS THAT ARE SOLUBLE IN EXCESS SOLUTION GIVE A SOLUTION
OF THAT COLOUR.
Ammonium salts react with alkalis to produce a metal salt, water and ammonia.
As the pressure increase MP & BP increase, but for water MP & BP decrease.
In → Iron
The higher the Rf value the further the unknown substance travels.
Mild steel does not have a high resistance to corrosion. It is used in car bodies.
Insoluble salts can only be made by mixing two soluble aqueous salts or acids.
Oxides of nitrogen are formed from the combustion reactions inside car engines.
Electrons do not move round the external circuit from the cathode to the anode. Ions
move round the internal circuit from the cathode to the anode.
Down group 1 metals become softer so their melting point and boiling point decrease
decrease. Density increase. Reactivity increase.
During treatment of water for drinking, filtration and chlorination takes place. distillation
doesn’t take place.
When we write the charge alone without the symbol, we write the negative/positive sign
before the number. e.g. +1, -7.
Whenever writing reaction for Haber or contact process use reversible symbol And also
write that the reaction is reversible.
To make a salt by mixing acid and metal oxide, you must heat the acid First.
Carbon dioxide is a waste product in extraction of iron, nitrogen isn’t produced during the
process.
Electrons move from anode to cathode in external circuit. Positive ions move from anode
to cathode in electrolyte (internal circuit).