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Published bySara Morgan Modified over 9 years ago
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Making Changes Topic overview
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The topic can be conveniently split into six interrelated sections Oxidation/Reduction Salts Preparation of gases Metal extraction Reactions of carbonates Hydration
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Oxidation & Reduction A substance is oxidised when It gains oxygen Or loses hydrogen 2Cu + O 2 2CuO Copper (Cu) is oxidised A substance is reduced when It gains hydrogen Or loses oxygen CuO + H 2 Cu + H 2 O Copper oxide (CuO) is reduced
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Salts Are formed when a metal atom replaces the hydrogen atom(s) in an acid Are usually soluble The acids that are needed to be known about are Sulphuric acid - H 2 SO 4 - makes sulphates Hydrochloric acid - HCl- makes chlorides Nitric Acid - HNO 3 - makes nitrates
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Metal oxide + acid metal salt + water Magnesium Oxide + sulphuric Acid magnesium sulphate + water MgO + H 2 SO 4 MgSO 4 + H 2 O Metal Hydroxide + acid metal salt + water Sodium Hydroxide + Hydrochloric acid sodium chloride + water NaOH + HCl NaCl + H 2 O Metal carbonate + acid metal salt + water + carbon dioxide Calcium carbonate + nitric acid calcium nitrate + water + carbon dioxide CaCO 3 + HNO 3 Ca(NO 3 ) 2 + H 2 O + CO 2
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Neutralisation When an acid is added to an alkali Equal amounts of the acid and alkali react together Technique for measuring amounts is called titration Titration can be used to measure concentrations of alkaline solutions and acids
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Preparation of oxygen Decomposition of hydrogen peroxide in the presence of manganese dioxide catalyst Hydrogen peroxide oxygen + water H 2 O 2 O 2 + H 2 O Preparation of hydrogen React a metal with acid Magnesium + Hydrochloric acid magnesium chloride + hydrogen Mg + 2HCl MgCl 2 + H 2
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Collection of gases Upward displacement of water – suitable for a low density, insoluble gas e.g. oxygen or hydrogen Downward displacement of air – suitable for a dense, soluble gas e.g. chlorine Gas syringe – suitable for soluble gases, e.g. ammonia or carbon dioxide
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Tests for common gases Oxygen- relights a glowing spill Hydrogen- “pop” test with a lit spill Carbon dioxide- turns limewater cloudy (or milky) Ammonia- forms a white smoke with hydrochloric acid vapour Chlorine- bleaches moist indicator paper
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Metal extraction An ore is any rock containing commercially useful amounts of a metal Metals often found as oxides or sulphides The method used to extract a metal depends upon the reactivity of that metal Unreactive metals (below hydrogen in the reactivity series) e.g. gold, platinum Often found un-combined (or “native”) in the ore Ore simply broken up and the pure metal extracted Sometimes simple heating of the ore is required to extract the metal
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Metals in the middle of the reactivity series (above hydrogen, below carbon) Metal compound converted to oxide if not already Heated with carbon, the metal is displaced by the carbon Carried out in a blast furnace Reactive metals (above carbon in the reactivity series) Extraction is more difficult Either displacement using a more reactive metal (Titanium Chloride + sodium titanium + sodium chloride) Or use electrolysis (e.g. aluminium or sodium)
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Carbonates Decompose on heating (thermal decomposition) to give the oxide and carbon dioxide Calcium carbonate Calcium Oxide + carbon dioxide CaCO 3 CaO + CO 2 Hydrogen carbonates Decompose readily on heating to give the oxide, carbon dioxide and water Sodium hydrogen carbonate sodium oxide + carbon dioxide + water
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Hydration When a substance has water present it is said to be hydrated, If the water is removed it is dehydrated or anhydrous E.g. anhydrous copper sulphate is a pale blue/grey colour, addition of a small amount of water to the anhydrous salt turns it into the dark blue hydrated salt. Anhydrous copper sulphate + water hydrated copper sulphate CuSO 4 + 5H 2 O CuSO 4.5H 2 O Dehydration is the reverse, for example heating the hydrated copper sulphate will give the anhydrous form and water
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