100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Exam (elaborations)

AQA GCSE Chemistry - Paper 2 Questions & Answers

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
28
Grade
A
Uploaded on
12-01-2025
Written in
2024/2025

Mean rate of reaction (with reactant) - ANSWERSRate of reaction: Quantity of reactant used ---------------------------- Time taken Mean rate of reaction (with product) - ANSWERSRate of reaction: Quantity of product formed ---------------------------- Time taken Measurements for quantity of product or reactant - ANSWERSEither as mass in g or as volume in cm³ Measurements for the rate of reaction - ANSWERSEither as g/s, cm³/s, or mol/s Factors which affect rate of chemical reaction - ANSWERS- *Temperature*: a faster temperature means faster reaction - *Concentration / pressure*: a higher concentration or pressure means a faster reaction - *Surface area*: a larger surface area: volume ratio means a faster reaction - *Catalysts*: a reaction in the presence of a catalyst is faster Collision theory - ANSWERSThis states that a chemical reaction can only happen when reacting particles collide with each other with enough energy. Activation energy - ANSWERSThis is the minimum energy required for a reaction to take place. How surface area, concentration or pressure changes rate of reaction in terms of collision theory - ANSWERSThis increases the frequency of collisions, as there are more particles that are able to collide, increasing rate of reaction. How temperature changes rate of reaction in terms of collision theory - ANSWERSThis increases the frequency of collisions as well as the energy the collisions have, increasing rate of reaction. Catalysts - ANSWERS- A catalyst is a substance that changes the rate of reaction - It is not used up during the reaction, and therefore does not show up in the products or reactants - Different reactions require different catalysts, for example an enzyme - The catalyst does this by supplying a different pathway to the reaction that requires a lower activation energy, shown in the picture Reversible reactions - ANSWERSThis is a reaction in which the products can react to produce the original reactants A + B ⇌ C + D Example of a reversible reaction - ANSWERSThis reaction is reversible, meaning the reactants can be heated to get the products as well as the products can be cooled to get the reactants: Ammonium chloride ⇌ ammonia + hydrogen chloride Energy changes in reversible reactions - ANSWERSIf a reaction is endothermic in one direction, it is exothermic in the other. The same amount of energy is transferred each way. Equilibrium in a reversible reaction - ANSWERSIf the apparatus are set up to prevent the escape of reactants or products, an equilibrium can be reached, in which the rate of forward and reverse reactions are the same. This will always occur in consistent conditions. The effect of changing concentration in a reversible reaction - ANSWERSWhen the concentration of one product or reactant is changed, the system is no longer at equilibrium: - If the concentration of the reactants is increased, more products are formed until a balance is reached - If the concentration of the products is increased, more reactants will form until a balance is reached The effect of increasing temperature in a reversible reaction - ANSWERSWhen the temperature is *increased*: - More product is formed for an endothermic reaction - Less product is formed for an exothermic reaction The effect of decreasing temperature in a reversible reaction - ANSWERSWhen the temperature is *decreased*: - Less product is formed for an endothermic reaction - More product is formed for an exothermic reaction The effect of changing pressure in a reversible reaction - ANSWERSFor a gaseous reaction at equilibrium: - An increase in pressure causes the equilibrium position to shift towards the side of the smaller number of moles, meaning whichever side has less moles, more of it will be formed - A decrease in pressure causes the equilibrium position to shift towards the side with more moles, meaning whichever side has more moles, more of it will be formed Hydrocarbon - ANSWERSA hydrocarbon is a material that contains only carbon and hydrogen atoms. Alkanes - ANSWERS- These are saturated, meaning there are only single bonds between atoms - They are relatively unreactive, although they do combust - Their single bonds are quite strong - They are a homologous series of hydrocarbons (organic compounds with the same functional group and similar chemical properties) - There are trends in their physical properties Formula for alkanes - ANSWERSCn H2n+2 The first four alkanes - ANSWERS- Methane - Ethane - Propane - Butane Formula for methane - ANSWERSCH₄ Formula for ethane - ANSWERSC₂H₆ Formula for propane - ANSWERSC₃H₈ Formula for butane - ANSWERSC₄H₁₀ Crude oil - ANSWERS- A finite resource found in rocks - Mostly ancient biomass, e.g. plankton, which has been buried in mud - It is a mixture of many compounds, mostly hydrocarbons, which are mostly alkanes - They are separated by fractional distillation Why fractional distillation works - ANSWERSThe hydrocarbons in crude oil can be separated into fractions, which are chemicals that have a similar boiling point. These are molecules with a similar number of carbon atoms. Each fraction has different properties and uses, a lot of which are processed to produce fuels and feedstock for the petrochemical industry, e.g. petrol, kerosene, heavy fuel oil and liquefied petroleum gases. Process of fractional distillation - ANSWERS1. Oil is firstly heated so it turns into a gas and evaporates 2. It is piped to the bottom of the column 3. The gas rises up the column and it gradually cools 4. Different compounds in the mixture have different condensation points, so they turn back into a liquid at different places in the column Properties of molecules at the top of the column - ANSWERS- Small - Low boiling point - Very volatile (easily evaporated) - Flows easily - Ignites easily Properties of the molecules at the bottom - ANSWERS- Large - High boiling point - Not very volatile - Does not flow easily - Does not ignite easily Products of fractional distillation (from bottom upwards) - ANSWERS- *Bitumen*: used in roads and roofs - *Heavy fuel oil*: used as a fuel for ships and power stations - *Diesel*: used as a fuel for some cars and trains - *Kerosene*: used as a fuel for aircraft - *Petrol*: used as a fuel for cars - *Liquified petroleum gases*: used in domestic heating and cooking Trends in physical properties of hydrocarbons - ANSWERS- The shorter the molecule, the *less viscous* (thick, sticky) it is - The shorter the molecule, the *lower the boiling point* - The shorter the molecule, the *more flammable* Combustion in hydrocarbons - ANSWERSWhen a hydrocarbon is burnt in air, both hydrogen and carbon are oxidised, including a release of energy. When there is enough oxygen, the carbon will be completely oxidised, called *complete combustion*: Hydrocarbon + oxygen → carbon dioxide + water (g) Cracking - ANSWERSCracking is the process of breaking down hydrocarbons into smaller, more useful molecules, either by steam cracking or catalytic cracking. It involves a long chain being broken down into several smaller chains. It is a *thermal decomposition* reaction, meaning it involves heating to break the molecules apart. Process of catalytic cracking - ANSWERS1. Heat the larger hydrocarbon until it vaporises 2. Pass the vapour over a hot, powdered catalyst, e.g. *aluminium oxide* 3. The long chain molecules split apart on the surface of the specks of catalyst Process of steam cracking - ANSWERS1. Heat the larger hydrocarbon until it vaporises 2. Mix the vapour with steam (water vapour) 3. Heat to very high temperature (often around 850°C) 4. This leads to the thermal decomposition of long chain hydrocarbons to form smaller ones Products of cracking - ANSWERSThe products of cracking are alkanes and alkenes. Cracking is done because there is a high demand for fuels with small molecules. Alkenes are also used to produce polymers. Alkenes - ANSWERS- A homologous series of hydrocarbons - They have a double carbon (C=C) bond, which is their functional group - They are unsaturated because they have two fewer hydrogen atoms than the alkane with the same number of carbon - They are more reactive than alkanes Formula for alkenes - ANSWERSCn H2n The first four alkenes - ANSWERS- Ethene - Propene - Butene - Pentene Formula for ethene - ANSWERSC₂H₄ Formula for propene - ANSWERSC₃H₆ Formula for butene - ANSWERSC₄H₈

Show more Read less
Institution
AQA GCSE Chemistry -
Course
AQA GCSE Chemistry -










Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
AQA GCSE Chemistry -
Course
AQA GCSE Chemistry -

Document information

Uploaded on
January 12, 2025
Number of pages
28
Written in
2024/2025
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Questions & answers

Subjects

Content preview

AQA GCSE Chemistry - Paper 2
Questions & Answers
Mean rate of reaction (with reactant) - ANSWERSRate of reaction:

Quantity of reactant used
----------------------------
Time taken

Mean rate of reaction (with product) - ANSWERSRate of reaction:

Quantity of product formed
----------------------------
Time taken

Measurements for quantity of product or reactant - ANSWERSEither as mass in g or as
volume in cm³

Measurements for the rate of reaction - ANSWERSEither as g/s, cm³/s, or mol/s

Factors which affect rate of chemical reaction - ANSWERS- *Temperature*: a faster
temperature means faster reaction
- *Concentration / pressure*: a higher concentration or pressure means a faster reaction
- *Surface area*: a larger surface area: volume ratio means a faster reaction
- *Catalysts*: a reaction in the presence of a catalyst is faster

Collision theory - ANSWERSThis states that a chemical reaction can only happen when
reacting particles collide with each other with enough energy.

Activation energy - ANSWERSThis is the minimum energy required for a reaction to
take place.

,How surface area, concentration or pressure changes rate of reaction in terms of
collision theory - ANSWERSThis increases the frequency of collisions, as there are
more particles that are able to collide, increasing rate of reaction.

How temperature changes rate of reaction in terms of collision theory - ANSWERSThis
increases the frequency of collisions as well as the energy the collisions have,
increasing rate of reaction.

Catalysts - ANSWERS- A catalyst is a substance that changes the rate of reaction
- It is not used up during the reaction, and therefore does not show up in the products or
reactants
- Different reactions require different catalysts, for example an enzyme
- The catalyst does this by supplying a different pathway to the reaction that requires a
lower activation energy, shown in the picture

Reversible reactions - ANSWERSThis is a reaction in which the products can react to
produce the original reactants

A+B⇌C+D

Example of a reversible reaction - ANSWERSThis reaction is reversible, meaning the
reactants can be heated to get the products as well as the products can be cooled to
get the reactants:

Ammonium chloride ⇌ ammonia + hydrogen chloride

Energy changes in reversible reactions - ANSWERSIf a reaction is endothermic in one
direction, it is exothermic in the other. The same amount of energy is transferred each
way.

Equilibrium in a reversible reaction - ANSWERSIf the apparatus are set up to prevent
the escape of reactants or products, an equilibrium can be reached, in which the rate of
forward and reverse reactions are the same. This will always occur in consistent
conditions.

The effect of changing concentration in a reversible reaction - ANSWERSWhen the
concentration of one product or reactant is changed, the system is no longer at
equilibrium:
- If the concentration of the reactants is increased, more products are formed until a
balance is reached
- If the concentration of the products is increased, more reactants will form until a
balance is reached

The effect of increasing temperature in a reversible reaction - ANSWERSWhen the
temperature is *increased*:
- More product is formed for an endothermic reaction

, - Less product is formed for an exothermic reaction

The effect of decreasing temperature in a reversible reaction - ANSWERSWhen the
temperature is *decreased*:
- Less product is formed for an endothermic reaction
- More product is formed for an exothermic reaction

The effect of changing pressure in a reversible reaction - ANSWERSFor a gaseous
reaction at equilibrium:
- An increase in pressure causes the equilibrium position to shift towards the side of the
smaller number of moles, meaning whichever side has less moles, more of it will be
formed
- A decrease in pressure causes the equilibrium position to shift towards the side with
more moles, meaning whichever side has more moles, more of it will be formed

Hydrocarbon - ANSWERSA hydrocarbon is a material that contains only carbon and
hydrogen atoms.

Alkanes - ANSWERS- These are saturated, meaning there are only single bonds
between atoms
- They are relatively unreactive, although they do combust
- Their single bonds are quite strong
- They are a homologous series of hydrocarbons (organic compounds with the same
functional group and similar chemical properties)
- There are trends in their physical properties

Formula for alkanes - ANSWERSCn H2n+2

The first four alkanes - ANSWERS- Methane
- Ethane
- Propane
- Butane

Formula for methane - ANSWERSCH₄

Formula for ethane - ANSWERSC₂H₆

Formula for propane - ANSWERSC₃H₈

Formula for butane - ANSWERSC₄H₁₀

Crude oil - ANSWERS- A finite resource found in rocks
- Mostly ancient biomass, e.g. plankton, which has been buried in mud
- It is a mixture of many compounds, mostly hydrocarbons, which are mostly alkanes
- They are separated by fractional distillation

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
Bestgrades2 West Virginia University
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
23
Member since
1 year
Number of followers
0
Documents
4063
Last sold
2 months ago

4.0

3 reviews

5
1
4
1
3
1
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions