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OCR Gateway Chemistry GCSE Higher Paper 2 Summary Notes

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OCR Gateway Chemistry GCSE Higher Paper 2 Summary Notes written by a Grade 9 student

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C4: Predicting and identifying reactions and products

Chapter 4.1: Predicting chemical reactions
Group 1: alkali metals
Properties
●​ React with water to form alkaline solutions
●​ Metals
●​ Have some typical properties of metals:
○​ Shiny when freshly cut
○​ Good conductors of electricity
○​ Solid at room temperature
●​ Atypical properties:
○​ Soft enough to cut with a knife
○​ Lithium is hardest and they get softer as you go down group
○​ Density typically increases as you go down group (sodium is denser than expected)
○​ Melting point decreases as you go down group
Reactions
●​ Lithium, sodium and potassium react rapidly with oxygen and water so stored in oil
●​ Reacts with water to produce metal hydroxide and hydrogen
●​ Reactivity of alkali metals with water increases as you go down group:
○​ Lithium freezes steadily and slowly disappears
○​ Sodium melts to form silvery ball, fizzes vigorously and quickly disappears
○​ Potassium immediately ignites, burns with lilac flame and very quickly disappears
Explaining trend in reactivity
●​ Alkali metals have similar properties - all have 1 electron in outer shell
●​ The easier it is for alkali metal to lose outer electron, the more reactive it is
●​ Large atoms means it is easier to lose outer electron

Group 7: halogens
Properties
●​ Non-metals
●​ Typical properties of non-metals eg. brittle and poor conductors of electricity
●​ All elements exist as diatomic with weak intermolecular forces
●​ Fluorine: pale yellow gas
●​ Chlorine: green gas
●​ Bromine: orange-brown liquid that vaporises easily
●​ Iodine: shiny grey-black crystalline solid that sublimes to form purple vapour
●​ Density, melting and boiling points increase as you go down group
Reactions
●​ Reacts with metals to produce salts
●​ Reacts vigorously with group 1 elements, especially if metal is heated
●​ Reactivity of halogens decrease as you go down group
Explaining trend in reactivity
●​ Halogens have similar properties - all have 7 electrons in outer shell
●​ The easier it is for halogen to gain electron the more reactive it is
●​ Small atoms make it easier to attract electron to get full outer shell
Halogen displacement reactions
●​ Halogens can react with halides in solution
●​ Halides: compound of group 7 element and one other element, usually hydrogen or metal
●​ Example:

, ○​ Cl2 (g) + 2NaBr (aq) → 2NaCl (aq) + Br2 (aq)
○​ Reaction mixture turns orange-brown as bromine is produced
○​ Chlorine displaces (push out) bromine from sodium bromide in displacement reaction
●​ Halogen will displace a less reactive halogen from its halide ions in solution - smaller atom so
can attract electron
●​ Safety:
○​ Use aqueous solutions of chlorine, bromine and iodine than pure elements in school
○​ Wear eye protection - can be irritating to eyes
○​ Asthmatics should take extra care to not breathe in any chemical fumes

Group 0: noble gases
Properties
●​ Non-metals
●​ All gases at room temperature
●​ Very rarely react
●​ Monatomic - exist as single atoms
●​ Weak forces between atoms that can be easily overcome
●​ Attractive forces between atoms get stronger as you go down group
●​ Boiling point and density increases as you go down group
Lack of reactivity
●​ All have full outer shells
●​ No tendency to lose or gain electrons to form ions or share electrons to form molecules in
reactions
●​ As a result, noble gases are very unreactive

Transition metals
Properties
●​ Metals
●​ Typical metal properties:
○​ Shiny when freshly cut
○​ Good conductors of electricity
○​ Strong
○​ Malleable
●​ Compared to group 1:
○​ Stronger and harder
○​ Higher densities and higher melting points (except mercury)
●​ Means transition metals are good for making everyday objects
Chemical properties
●​ Less reactive than group and react slowly (if at all)
●​ Iron reacts slowly with water and oxygen to produce rust, hydrated iron (III) oxide
●​ Gold, platinum and iridium don’t react with water or oxygen at all
●​ Alkali metals produce white or colourless ionic compounds but transition metals produce
coloured ionic compounds:
○​ Sodium: colourless
○​ Iron (II): light green
○​ Iron (III): yellow
○​ Copper: blue
○​ Nickel: dark green
○​ Cobalt: red
●​ Alkalis can only form ions with single positive charge but many transition metals can form
multiple types of ions eg. iron (II) and iron (III)
●​ Transition metals often good catalysts

, ●​ Catalysts: substances that increase rate of chemical reactions without being used up
●​ Platinum, rhodium and palladium used in catalytic converters - converts harmful gases in
vehicle exhaust fumes into less harmful ones

Reactivity of elements
Metals reacting with water and dilute acids
●​ Metals form positive ions in reactions
●​ More easily this happens, the more reactive the metal
●​ Metal can react with water or dilute acids if more reactive than hydrogen
●​ Metal + water = metal hydroxide + oxygen
●​ Metal + acid = salt + hydrogen
Rate of reaction
●​ Metal reaction with water or dilute hydrochloric acid can be used to put metals in order of
reactivity
●​ More reactive the metal, the greater the rate of hydrogen production - more vigorous bubbling
(use eye protection)
●​ If there is no bubbling, heat water up - don’t heat acid (dangerous to boil it)
Metal displacement reactions
●​ More reactive metal can displace less reactive metal from solutions of its compounds
●​ Displacement reactions are examples of redox reactions - more reactive metal is oxidised,
less reactive metal is reduced
Predicting reactions using periodic table
●​ Elements in group 0 don’t react
●​ Reactive non-metals may form covalent bonds with each other
●​ Metals may form ionic compounds with reactive non-metals
●​ Metals in group 1 & 2 are more reactive than transition & other metals and more reactive
down the group
●​ Non-metals in group 7 become less reactive down group



Chapter 4.2: Identifying products of chemical reactions
Detecting gases
Detecting carbon dioxide
●​ Use limewater - calcium hydroxide solution
●​ Turns cloudy white when carbon dioxide bubbled through it
●​ Change caused by calcium hydroxide reacting with carbon dioxide to form water and white
precipitate of calcium carbonate
Detecting chlorine
●​ Chlorine dissolves in water to form acidic solution
●​ Bleaches dyes - changes them from coloured to colourless
●​ Perform simple laboratory test for chlorine based on these properties:
○​ Hold a drop of tap water to dampen a piece of blue litmus paper
○​ Hold paper near to a container that holds substance
○​ If chlorine is present, the paper turns red then white
Smelling substances
●​ Can use sense of smell to detect substances eg. chlorine
●​ Must not breathe in a lungful of anything
●​ Follow these steps:
○​ With container well away from nose, breathe in enough air to almost fill lungs
○​ Hold container few cm away from nose and waft any smell towards you - take a
cautious sniff

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