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Summary GRADE 9 AQA GCSE CHEMISTRY PAPER 1 NOTES

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Detailed Grade 9 notes for AQA GCSE Chemistry Paper 1! Concise typed notes based directly off the AQA Specification and past GCSE Exam Questions. Colour coded notes with diagrams, images and mnemonics to aid your revision. 1 Atomic structure and the periodic table 2 Bonding, structure and properties of matter 3 Quantitative chemistry 4 Chemical changes 5 Energy changes

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TOPIC 1: ATOMIC STRUCTURE AND THE PERIODIC TABLE
ATOMS, ELEMENTS AND COMPOUNDS

Atoms
All substances are made of atoms. An atom is the smallest part of an element that can exist.
Examples= gold atoms, oxygen atoms

Elements
A substance made of only one type of atom.
There are 100 different elements which are shown on the periodic table.
Examples= hydrogen, helium, lithium

Compounds
Two or more different elements chemically joined together
Can only be separated into elements by chemical reactions.
Examples= carbon dioxide, ammonia, water, hydrochloric acid, stainless steel

Mixtures
Two or more elements or compounds not chemically joined together
Mixtures can be separated by physical processes.
Examples= air, salt & water

Molecules
Any elements chemically joined together.
Examples = oxygen, chlorine, water



SEPARATING TECHNIQUES
There are 5 different techniques used to separate mixtures:

1) Filtration
2) Crystallisation
3) Simple distillation
4) Fractional distillation
5) Chromatography

Filtration
Used to separate an insoluble solid from a liquid
e.g. sand from water

Filter paper has tiny holes in it to allow small molecules to pass
through. It is folded in a cone shape.

EQUIPMENT:
Filter paper
Beaker

,Crystallisation
Used to separate a soluble solid from a liquid
e.g. copper from copper sulphate solution


Liquid evaporates, and solid crystals remain.
EQUIPMENT:
Evaporating basin
Heat



Simple distillation
Used to separate a liquid from a solution
e.g. pure water from seawater

1. Solution is heated
2. Part of the solution with the lowest boiling point
evaporates first
3. Vapour is cooled, condensed and collected
EQUIPMENT:
Only used to separate things with very different boiling points. Thermometer
Condenser
Heat
Beaker


Fractional distillation
Used to separate a mixture of different liquids
Liquids must have different boiling points
e.g. crude oil into fuels

1. Solution is heated
2. Part of the solution with the lowest boiling point evaporates first
3. Vapour is cooled, condensed and collected
4. Other liquids are evaporated, cooled and collected in order of
different boiling points
EQUIPMENT:
Fractionating column is coolest at the top Thermometer
Condenser
Heat
Fractionating column
Beaker
Fractions

, Chromatography
Used to separate soluble substances
e.g. dyes in ink/food colours/plant dye

Gives information to help identify substances.

➢ Pure substances = produce one spot
➢ Impure substances= produce a number of spots

Mobile phase: Solvent (water/ethanol)
Stationery phase: Chromatography Paper EQUIPMENT:
Filter paper
Each chemical is attracted to the stationery phase to a different extent Beaker
Strongly attracted chemicals will not move very far Lid
Weakly attracted chemicals will move far Pencil

Starting line must be drawn in pencil:
Pencil will not dissolve in the solvent, but ink would

Solvent height must be lower than the pencil line:
Otherwise the substances would dissolve into the solvent




SUBATOMIC PARTICLES

Atoms are very small with a radius of 1 x 10 -10 m
Radius of a nucleus is less than 1/10000 of the radius of an atom
Between nucleus + electrons = empty space

Atoms have no overall charge because the number of electrons =
number of protons
Charge Mass
Proton +1 1
Neutron 0 1
Electron -1 Negligible
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