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AP Chemistry Review Preparing for the AP Chemistry Exam 1 Table of Contents Title Pg Top 25 Things to Know before you take the AP Chemistry Exam 3 About the AP Chemistry Exam 5 AP Chemistry Study Guide 8 Types of Reactions 19 AP Subject Review 24 Multiple Choice Practice test 48 Practice Free Response Questions 66 Practice Free Response Scoring Guide 71 2 Top 25 Things to know before you take the AP chemistry Exam. Assume the person grading your exam is an idiot. Make it clear for them to understand your process and grade your exam with ease. It is not acceptable to lose points because of not showing work/units or messy handwriting. If you need to cross something out do it like this “The reaction is spontaneous because.” . No need to scribble and make a mess. Focus on your weakest areas; it is doubtful you can do/know everything. The AP Chemistry Exam is designed so that it is impossible to know absolutely everything on it (in case you haven’t noticed). Review your incorrect MC from the Practice Exam and understand the concepts. Know the 6 strong acids HCl, HI, HBr, H2SO4, HClO4, HNO3 and the one weak by formula acetic acid CH3COOH, everything else is weak. Remember that strong acids/bases don’t make buffers!!! You should be 100% confident what ionizes and what doesn’t. Know ammonia has the formula NH 3 and is a weak base Know the strong bases: Group 1 hydroxides, Ba(OH) 2, Sr(OH)2, Ca(OH)2 Know how to determine which molecule has the largest dipole moment (difference in electronegativity). Know hybridization on a carbon atom (Remember Double Bonds and Triple bonds don’t count) Lone Pairs do count!!! Single bonds are sigma, double and triple are pi-bonds. Solubility Rules are a must. If you still don’t know them get cracking!!! Know some basic geometry’s of molecules. Do not expect complicated ones like See-Saw etc. Stick with the basics. If any really hard ones are on there you will prob. need to guess. Know the bond angles on a Bent Geometry, Trigonal Planer, Trigonal Pyrimidal, and Tetrahedral. Also know why bond angles shrink as lone pairs are added (b/c if increased repulsion amongst the electrons causing the bond angles to squeeze) It would be a safe bet to assume that when a metal by itself it placed in acid you will get H2 gas and some aqueous salt and the negative ion is the spectator ion. Cu does not react in HCl, but in AP chemistry it is safe to assume that there is always a reaction. Also groups 1 and group 2 metal by themselves placed in water always give you H2 gas and a base (which usually ionizes). Know the carbonate reactions! You always get CO2 on the other side…. Be ready for a complex ion. You should be confident in determining the answer. Remember to “cheat” on the reaction and determine the product first (using the double it rule) and work backwards to the get the reactants. Know the units on the rate constant k for kinetics. Know the kinetics graphs. Lighter atoms (molar mass) are faster than heavier atoms (molar mass) at the same temperature. Also lighter atoms “effuse” (leak) out of small hole in a container faster than heavier ones. Know the periodic table trends. It would useful to know the E.N values for F =4.0, O=3.5, N=3.0 C=2.5, H=2.1, and what type of bonds occur as a result. 3 Know your intermolecular forces, how to I.D. than and what they mean in terms of boiling points. Know about covalent network bonds and what they mean! Know what the signs on Delta H, S and G mean and be able to explain each. Know how to use Ksp Be sure to look over your Labs, there will a question on the part two this topic. The Chart. You will need to know it. No doubt. Be Ready G Ecell Keq + --‐ <1 --‐ + >1 0 0 1 OIL RIG and REDCAT. The only time reduction does not occur at the cathode is when it is an electrolysis reaction in which energy is added. Usually you are given the reduction or the oxidation on this type of diagram/question. Decide what else to study from the exam memorization guide. 25)The test will be hard, but don’t get frustrated, just keep plugging through, and don’t give up. You might surprise yourself. You are prepared. Good luck and Congratulations on finishing the course!!! 4 About the AP Chemistry Exam Section I: Multiple-Choice Section: 90 minutes (50% of your grade) Section I consists of 60 multiple-choice questions, either as discrete questions or question sets, that represent the knowledge and science practices outlined in the AP Chemistry Curriculum Framework, which students should understand and be able to apply. Question sets are a new type of question: They provide a stimulus or a set of data and a series of related questions. Calculators are not permitted on the Multiple Choice section. Examine each question for a maximum of thirty seconds (on the average, some will take less time allowing more time for others). Quickly determine the subject of the question. By the end of the thirty seconds either: Mark the correct answer. Mark a “Y” next to the questions that you know how to work but need more time. Mark a “N” next to the questions that you don’t have any idea how to work. Force yourself to move through twenty questions each ten minutes and the full seventy-five questions in forty minutes. Now make a second pass concentrating on the “Y” questions only. Do not spend any time on the “N” questions. If you don’t know the correct answer see if some key piece of knowledge will allow you eliminate two or three of the choices. Complete this pass in forty minutes. Now make your third pass. Focus only on the “N” questions. Attempt to eliminate at least two choices. If you can, then make an intelligent guess. If not, guess. You are not penalized for the wrong answer. Any correct choices on this pass are bonus points. You have only ten minutes, so make it count! Before time expires, count the number that you have answered. You should answer at least sixty (60) questions. Section II: Free-Response Section 105 minutes (50% of your grade) Section II contains two types of free-response questions (short and long), and each student will have a total of 90 minutes to complete all of the questions. This section also contains questions pertaining to experimental design, analysis of authentic lab data and observations to identify patterns or explain phenomena, creating or analyzing atomic and molecular views to explain observations, articulating and then translating between representations, and following a logical/analytical pathway to solve a problem. Beginning with the May 2014 administration of the AP Chemistry Exam, multiple-choice questions will contain four answer options, rather than five. This change will save students valuable time without altering the rigor of the exam in any way. A student's total score on the multiple choice section is based on the number of questions answered correctly. Points are not deducted for incorrect answers or unanswered questions. What to Bring to the Exam 2-3 Sharpened #2 pencils Acceptable calculator A positive attitude Get a good night’s rest and eat breakfast that morning! 5 AP Chemistry Exam Format Section I Question Type Number of Questions Timing Multiple Choice 60 90 minutes Section II Long Free Response (10 points) Short Free Response (4 points) 3 4 105 minutes Calculators are allowed on the free-response section. Section II Free Response Questions require you to apply and explain chemical concepts and solve multiple step problems. You do not have to answer in essay form and may save time using one of the following methods: bullet format, chart format or outline format. Write your answers in the space provided and number your answer clearly. There is a slight penalty for incorrect sig figs. Stating a Principle, Law, Theory or stating the name of the Principle law or theory is not an explanation or justification for an answer. Stating a trend is also not an explanation. State and apply the Principle , Law or Theory to the specific situation in the questions to explain your answer and use the reason for trends as explanations for trends not just stating the trend. Answer everything, no matter what If you don’t know the answer, substitute in a number to complete the remaining parts of the question. You will be given credit for following the correct procedure even if the answer may be wrong Part A (Question 1) Equilibrium Read all of the question before doing any work. Items later in the problem may provide keys to earlier sections. Part A is always equilibrium. Determine which type (Gaseous equilibrium, acid/base, buffer, or precipitation). Look for key words and clues. Acid/Base: Look for the words acid or base, K a or K b , [H+], [OH-], or [H3O+]. Any of these indicate an acid/base problem. Buffer: Look for the word buffer. Also, check for a weak acid and its conjugate base. Precipitation: Look for Ksp or the word solubility. Gas Equilibrium: Look for (g) on most of the reactants and products. After determining the type of reaction, write a reaction if one is not provided. Use the general forms given below: Acid: HA H+ + ABase A- + H2O HA + OHPrecipitation: MA(s) M+ + AWrite an equilibrium constant expression. Leave out solids and liquids. 6 Solve the problem. THINK! Put in all of the given quantities in the equilibrium constant expression and solve for the unknown allowing the units to direct the problem. Part A (Questions 2 and 3) Read both problems all the way through before doing any work. Determine which type of problem each is. Select the problem you know the most about and solve it. Remember that if you cannot solve an earlier part you may still get some credit for a later section by showing how you could use the earlier answer in succeeding parts of the problem. Question 2 & 3 generally cover the following: Lab procedure Kinetics Electrochemistry Stoichiometry Thermochemistry Part B (Question 4) Consists of three reactions and usually a lab question about the reaction. Write the reactant in symbol form for all reactions showing each reactant in net ionic form as follows: Strong Acids, bases, and soluble salts written as ions. Weak acids, bases, and insoluble salts written as molecules. Classify the reactions as: Acid/Base - Look for H or OH or salts which could act as a weak acid or base. Precipitation - Look for insoluble salts which could form as products according to the solubility rules. Redox - If it is not acid/base or precipitation, it is probably oxidation-reduction. Check for elements which could change oxidation states. Pay particular attention to the common oxidizing agents (NO3-, MnO4-, Cr2O72-, H2O2) and reducing agents (Cl , Br , I and elemental metals). Other - Anything else which doesn’t fit above (usually either organic or complexation). Remember you score one point for getting the reactants in the correct form and two points for each product. At least get all of the reactants correct and possibly two or three products. Part B (Questions 5-7) Typically includes the following topics: Bonding/intermolecular forces/hybridization Electrochemistry Lewis dot structures/Periodic Trends Be as specific as possible in your answer. Look for clues in the question as to what is really important. Answer the question. State exactly what you are asked not what you would like to answer. Do not simply restate the question. Remember that you will be getting partial credit. Answer any part about which you have any knowledge. 7 AP Chemistry Study Guide Atoms and Elements The Development of the Atomic Theory: Define the three theories that Dalton explained in terms of atoms: o Law of Conservation of Matter o Law of Definite/Constant Proportions o Law of Multiple Proportions Give examples and solve calculation problems related to each of the three theories. Sketch a cathode ray tube as demonstrated in class and state how J.J. Thomson’s experiments led to the idea that atoms have positive and negative parts, the negative parts are all the same, and the negative parts (called electrons) have a certain charge/mass ratio. Define cathode rays. State the factors that determine how much a moving charged particle will be deflected by an electric or magnetic field. Explain Millikan’s oil drop experiment & how it added to the atomic theory. Sketch the set-up used by Ernest Rutherford (the gold-foil experiment), show what he observed, and explain how these observations led to the idea that most of the mass of the atom is concentrated into a tiny, amazingly massive, positively-charged nucleus. Parts of the Atom: State the three particles that make up an atom, their symbol, their charge, their mass, and their location. State the number of protons, neutrons, and electrons in any atom or ion. Explain that isotopes are two atoms with the same atomic number (number of protons) but different mass numbers (number of nucleons— protons + neutrons). 220 Represent the nucleus with isotopic notation, such as: 86 Rn Recognize when two nuclei are isotopes of each other. Molar Mass Calculations: Calculate the isotopic mass of an atom given the resting mass of protons and neutrons. Explain that a mole of any element is actually made up of various isotopes in a constant percentage abundance. Calculate the average atomic mass of an element using the percent abundance and mass of each isotope. Calculate the percent abundance of isotopes given the average atomic mass and isotopic masses of an element. The Families of the Periodic Table: List the common families of the periodic table and recognize to which family any element belongs. Recognize metals, non-metals, and metalloids (semi-metals) on the periodic table. State and define the terms conductivity, malleability, and ductility. State some element facts such as which elements are too radioactive to exist, which is the largest non-radioactive element, which element has the greatest density, and which element has the highest melting point. Explain how Dmitri Mendeleev put together the periodic table and why we give him credit for the table even though others were working along the same lines. List the three elements that Mendeleev predicted and where they are located on the periodic table. Nuclear Chemistry: State that Henri Becquerel discovered radioactivity and Marie Curie studied it. List the three “Becquerel rays” (alpha, beta, and gamma) and state why alpha particles were the perfect tool for Ernest Rutherford to study the structure of atoms. State that the alpha particle is the same as a helium nucleus, a beta particle is a high-speed electron, and a gamma ray is a high-energy form of light. Chemical Formulas Formulas Look at a formula and state how many elements and atoms are in that compound. Calculate the molecular mass or molar mass of any compound. State that the mass of a molecule is measured in amu’s and the mass of a mole is measured in grams. Give examples of empirical formulas, molecular formulas, and structural formulas. Identify a formula as empirical, molecular, or structural. Ionic Compounds State whether a compound is an ionic compound or a nonmetal compound. Write the formula of an ionic compound given the two ions or its name. Know when to use parentheses. Name an ionic compound given the formula. Determine the charge on an ion from information in an ionic formula. 8 Nonmetal Compounds (aka Molecular Compounds) Write the formula of a binary nonmetal compound (molecular compound) given its name. Name a binary nonmetal compound (molecular compound) given its formula. Percent Composition Calculate the percent composition (by mass) for any compound. Calculate the empirical formula from percent composition data. Determine the molecular formula of a compound given its empirical formula and molar mass. Hydrates Give examples of hydrates and anhydrous compounds. Calculate the formula of a hydrate from dehydration data. The Mole State the significance of the mole. State the three mole facts for any substance (molar volume, molar mass, Avogadro’s number) o 1 mole = 22.4 Liters @ STP (gases only) o 1 mole = 6.02 x 1023 particles o (particles = molecules or atoms) o 1 mole = gram molecular mass of chemical Use dimensional analysis to convert between moles, mass, volume, and number of particles for a chemical. Use density as a conversion factor in mole problems. Use gas density to calculate molar mass. Chemical Equations and Stoichiometry Chemical Equations Give examples of products and reactants in a chemical equation. State that Antoine Lavoisier introduced the law of conservation of matter. Combustion State that combustion is another name for burning. Write an equation for a combustion reaction given only the fuel that is burned. Correctly label substances in an equation as solid (s) , gas (g), liquid (l), or aqueous (aq) Balancing Equations Balance equations by adding coefficients. Recognize when an equation is balanced. State that the formulas of reactants and products should not be changed in order to balance equations. Stoichiometry Problems Use the stoichiometric factor ( of the problem) to convert from moles of one substance to moles of a different substance. (i.e. In the equation: N2 + 3H2 2NH3, 3 mol H2 2 mol NH3) Convert between the quantities of mass, volume, molecules and moles using dimensional analysis (i.e. use 1 mol = 22.4 L, 1 mol = 6.02 x 1023 molecules, and 1 mol = gram molecular mass) Show the units of molar mass as grams/mol or g·mol-1. Limiting Reactant Problems Recognize that a problem with two “given values” is a limiting reactant problem. Determine the limiting reactant and excess reactant in a problem. Solve problems involving Limiting Reactants Calculate how much excess chemical is left over after a reaction. Percent Yield Problems Use stoichiometry to calculate the theoretical yield (mass of a product) in a problem. State that actual yields are usually given in a problem. Use the theoretical yield and actual yield to calculate the percent yield. Chemical Analysis Problems Calculate the mass of each element in a given compound given data such as the masses of CO2 and H2O formed in a combustion reaction. Use mass and mole information to calculate the empirical formula of an unknown substance. Use percent composition to equalize mass and mole information derived from different samples. 9 Reactions in Aqueous Solution____________________________________________________________ Properties of Aqueous Solutions Define solute, solvent, and solution. Give examples. Define electrodes. Give operational and theoretical definitions of electrolytes. Know that soluble ionic compounds and strong acids are strong electrolytes. Ionic compounds of low solubility [e.g. Mg(OH) 2] and weak acids/bases are weak electrolytes. Know that molecular compounds (except acids) are non-electrolytes. Know that alcohols (e.g. CH3OH )are not ionic hydroxides. Bases are usually metallic hydroxides. Know the solubility rules. State whether an ionic compound is soluble in water. Precipitation Reactions Know that ppt reactions are double replacement reactions that produce an insoluble product. Given two ionic compounds in solution, correctly determine the products. (Know your ions). Determine which product(s) is/are precipitates. Use (aq) and (s) symbols correctly. Correctly write the ions in a soluble ionic compound. [e.g. CaCl2(aq) becomes Ca2+ + 2Cl ] Identify spectator ions. Write molecular, detailed ionic, and net ionic equations for a ppt reaction. Acids and Bases Give operational (cabbage juice) and theoretical (ions) definitions of acids and bases. Know that acids increase the H+ ion concentration in an aqueous solution. (Theoretical definition) Memorize the 8 strong acids. Know that acids are molecular compounds that form ions when in aqueous solution. Be able to name acids according to their anion. [ide hydro__ic acid; ate __ic acid; ite __ous acid; sulfur: add “ur”; phosphorus: add “or”] Know that bases increase the OH ion concentration in an aqueous solution. (Theoretical definition) Memorize the soluble hydroxides (except NH4OH) that are the strong bases. Understand that ammonia(aq), NH3 + H2O NH4+ + OH forms a weak basic solution. Know that metal oxides form bases [CaO + H2O Ca(OH)2] while nonmetal oxides form acids [CO2 + H2O H2CO3] Know that acids react with bases to form H2O and a salt. (Neutralization) Write equations for acid-base reactions including NH3 (example on page 199) as the base. Know that strong acids and strong bases are written as ions in the ionic equations. Gas Forming Reactions Recognize the six products that turn into gases. Memorize the gases formed. Organizing Reactions in Aqueous Solution Double Replacement reactions (text calls them exchange reactions) (Fred-Wilma/Barney-Betty reactions) also have the old fashioned name: metathesis reactions. Know the three examples of double replacement reactions and the “driving force” for each. Precipitate reactions form an insoluble product. Acid-Base reactions form water (a very weak electrolyte therefore, a very stable product). Gas-forming reactions form a gas. Know that a driving force is something that keeps the new combinations of ions from reforming the old combinations of ions. Oxidation-Reduction is a fourth type of reaction driven by the transfer of electrons. Oxidation-Reduction Reactions Know that an important type of reaction gets its name from atoms that combine with oxygen. During the refining of iron, carbon monoxide combines with oxygen (from the iron ore), CO CO2 and is oxidized. Large masses of iron ore (Fe2O3) are reduced to a smaller amount of iron metal. Understand that since CO helps the iron ore to be reduced, CO is called the reducing agent. Since Fe2O3 causes the C to be oxidized, iron ore is called the oxidizing agent. What ever is oxidized acts as the reducing agent. What ever is reduced acts as the oxidizing agent. Know that oxidation-reduction (redox) is driven by the transfer of electrons. Mnemonics to help: GROL (Gain=Reduce / Oxidize=Lose); LeO the lion says GeR (Losing e ’s = Oxidation / Gaining e ’s = Reduction); OIL RIG (Oxidation is Losing e ’s / Reduction is Gaining e ’s) A redox reaction can be divided into two half-reactions. The oxidation half-reaction has electrons as a product. The r eduction half-reaction has electrons as a reactant. Be able to assign oxidation numbers to any atom in any substance. Learn the rules on page 207. 10 Recognize redox reactions because oxidation numbers change. (# = oxidation / # = reduction), electrons are gained or lost, or oxygen atoms are gained or lost. Know several common oxidizing agents and reducing agents and what they turn into. Measuring Concentrations of Compounds in Solution Know the definition of molarity, M, as one way to communicate concentration of solute. Know that the symbol [X] means the concentration of X in moles/Liter. Be able to determine the concentration of ions in an ionic compound. For example, in 0.25 M AlCl3 [AlCl3] = 0.25 M [Al3+] = 0.25 M [Cl ] = 0.75 M Use the molarity formula to calculate moles, mass, volume, or molarity of a solution. Know that Volume x Molarity = moles of solute. Dilution problems use ViMi = VfMf. Describe how to make a solution correctly. Know what a volumetric flask is. Stoichiometry of Reactions in Aqueous Solution Use molarity as another conversion factor to solve stoichiometry problems. Know that titration is a technique called quantitative chemical analysis because you are measuring. It is also called volumetric analysis (because you are measuring volumes). [Note: qualitative analysis involves no measurements such as using solubility rules to determine the identity of an unknown ionic compound.] Understand the terms indicator, equivalence point, standardization, and primary standard. [Note: you saw a titration being done in the Measurement video early in the summer. Chloride ion from the Chesapeake Bay was being titrated against silver nitrate to determine the salinity (saltiness) of the water. Yellow K2CrO4 was used as an indicator because it formed the reddish-brown ppt, Ag2CrO4 (which looked pink) when all the chloride ion was used up.] Know common indicators such as phenolphthalein for titrations with strong bases. Understand that a titration can be done with an acid-base reaction or a redox reaction. In each case, some sort of indicator must be used to tell when equivalent amounts of reactants have been mixed. Energy and Chemical Reactions Driving Forces state that product-favored (spontaneous) reactions tend toward maximum entropy, S, and minimum enthalpy, H. state the sign of H based on observation of warming or cooling of the surroundings. correctly apply the terms exothermic and endothermic to situations where the surroundings are warming or cooling. draw a PE curve (uphill or downhill) based on information about warming or cooling of the surroundings. Measuring Heat state the units of heat capacity, specific heat, and molar heat capacity as well as the significance of each. convert between the heat units of calories and Joules. (4.184 J = 1 calorie) use calorimetry (q=mCT) to calculate heat changes during temperature changes. calculate the heat transferred when two objects, at different temperatures, come into contact. Energy = Heat and Work state the difference between work and heat energy. state the difference between system and surroundings. recognize the system and the surroundings in a chemical or physical system. calculate the change in internal energy based on changes in heat absorbed by the system and work done by the system. state that H is a more general (and useful) measure of energy than E and that H = q when a reaction occurs at constant pressure. Chemical Work = Expanding Gases relate physical work (w=F·d) and chemical work (w=P·V). calculate PV work done by an expanding gas. state that no work is done in a constant volume situation such as a bomb calorimeter. Calculating H -- Hess’s Law state the definition of a state function. list examples of properties that are and are not state functions. write the equation for the heat of formation of a substance. state that the heat of formation of an element under standard conditions has a value of zero. use Hess’s Law to calculate the energy of a chemical or physical change. Calculating Heat During Phase Changes – Heats of Fusion and Vaporization use heats of vaporization or heats of fusion to calculate heat changes during phase changes. write an equation showing the heat of fusion or heat of vaporization. 11 Atomic Theory and Bonding Periodic Trends Atomic Radius Decreases -Up due to the n = # becoming smaller (less shells) and to the right due to the Effective Nuclear Charge (Zeff) increasing or greater attraction Ionic Radius o + ion < neutral < - ion o + ion has more attraction between nucleus and valence electrons (lose e- gets smaller) o ion has more repulsion between valence electrons (gain e- gets bigger) Ionization Energy Increases (Energy required to remove an electron) Up due to the n= # becoming smaller (electrons are closer to the nucleus therefore will be held more tightly) To the Right due to greater shielding. Electronegativity ncreases (Ability to attract an electron in a bond – 0 EN for Noble Gases) Same reasons as Ionization Energy Reactivity o Alkali Metals : Greater Reactivity going down Group IA due to Ionization Energy. o Halogens: Greater Reactivity going up Group VIIA due to Electron Affinity Effective Nuclear Charge (Positive + Charge Affecting the Valence Electrons) Higher Zeff is more attraction on valence electrons o Zeff = Z – S (where Z = atomic number and S = e- in the inner shell) K: 19-18 = +1 Br: 35-18 = +17 Bromine has a smaller radius due to greater Zeff Lewis Dot Structures Count total # of e Lone atom in center, fill the outside atoms with octets Add left over e- to the center atom If there is less than an octet on the center atom move outer e- to multiple bonds Stronger Bonds − < = < ≡ Single Bond: σ (1 sigma) Double Bond: σ and π (1 sigma and pi) Triple Bond: σ and 2π (1 sigma and 2 pi) VSEPR Bonding Sites Hybridization Shape Longer Bonds ≡ < = < − 1 or 2 sp Linear Bond Angle Example 3 sp2 Trigonal Planar 120° BCl3 Bent < 120° SO2 Tetrahedral 109.5° CH4 4 sp3 180° Trigonal Pyramidal 107° 5 6 sp3d sp3d2 HF NH3 Bent 105° Trigonal Bipyramidal 90°/120° PCl5 Seesaw 90°/<120° SF4 T-Shaped 90° ClF3 Linear 180° XeF2 Octahedral 90° SF6 Square Pyramidal 90° Square Planar H2O BrF5 90° 12 XeF4 CO2 Common Resonance Structures NO2 Dimerization into N2O4 Liquids and Solids Phase Diagram of Water Triple Point Diagram of Water Boiling Point is when the Vapor Pressure = Atmospheric Pressure If the Melting / Freezing Point line is below the temperature of the Triple Point, the substance will sink in its liquid form (solid will be more dense than the liquid). Intermolecular Forces Covalent Network Metallic Ionic Covalent: o Polar - Asymmetric, lone pairs of e Hydrogen Bonding Dipole-dipole forces o Nonpolar London Dispersion forces Solutions Concentration Calculations moles of solute 𝑀𝑜𝑙𝑎𝑟𝑖𝑡𝑦 = Liters of solution 𝑚𝑜𝑙𝑎𝑙𝑖𝑡𝑦 = moles of solute kg of solvent Freezing Point Depression or Boiling Point Elevation Problems moles(n) ∆T = 𝑖 K 𝑚 𝑚= kg of solvent i = Van Hoff’t Factor = # of particles in solution C6H12O6 i = 1 NaCl i = 2 Na2SO4 i = 3 Colligative Properties Vapor Pressure is Lowered Boiling Point Elevation Freezing Point Depression Osmosis = i MRT PA = Ptotal x Mole Fraction Solubility 13 (𝑋) 𝑚𝑜𝑙𝑒 𝑓𝑟𝑎𝑐𝑡𝑖𝑜𝑛 = moles (n) = mass Molar Mass Ca3(PO4)2 i = 5 moles total moles Raoult’s Law – Like Dissolves Like Gases - Henry’s Law – Solubility of a Gas is proportional to Gas Pressure; High Pressure, Low Temperature = Higher Solubility of a Gas Solids and Liquids – Increase Temperature (KE), Increase # of Surface Areas, Add a Catalyst, Add More Solvent will all Increase Solubility Chemical Kinetics: Rates of Reaction Reaction Rate rate = [chemical]/time Common Units: M/s, mol·L-1·s-1 o rate of disappearance of reactant or o rate of appearance of product o use coefficients to change one rate to another Reaction: 2A + 3B 4C 1 2 [A] [B] = 13 = t t 1 4 [C] t watch your signs ([React.] = -[Prod.]) From a graph of [R] vs time Average rate is the slope of a segment. Instantaneous rate is slope of the tangent. Initial rate is often used. How to Speed Up a Reaction [Use Collision Theory, Kinetic Molecular Theory] o increase the concentration of reactants - increase molarity of solutions - increase partial pressure of gases [collision model: more collisions] o more surface area between unlike phases [collision model: more collisions] o increase the temperature [collision model: more & harder collisions] o add a catalyst requires lower energy collision orensures that correct particles collide] - homogeneous catalyst (used & reformed) - heterogeneous catalyst (surface catalyst)[ Rate Laws Equation: A + B C Rate = k [A]x[B]y k is the “specific rate constant” Use experimental data to determine x, y, and k. The Rate Law CANNOT be determined from the overall reaction. It MUST be determined experimentally because the rate law reflects only the “rate determining step.” Rate law can be determined from initial rates. Rate Law matches the Molecularity of the Rate Determining Step in the Mechanism Examples for: 2A + 3B C Rate Law Rate = k [A][B] A + B X (slow) Rate = k [A]2 A + A X (slow) Rate = k [A]2[B] Rate = k Rate Determining Step in the mechanism B + X Y (slow) Each step is usually bimolecular. A third order overall reaction often comes from a fast equilibrium before a slow step. This could be a mechanism that depends on a catalyst only. The concentrations would not matter. order of rxn - first and second order reactions - what these look like graphically - how you can graphically tell the order of a reaction order straight-line plot Slope 0 [A] vs. t -k 1 ln[A] vs. t -k 2 1/[A] vs. t k 14 Order 0 1 2 Rate law Rate = k Rate = k[A] Rate = k[A]2 Integrated rate law [A] = -kt + [A]0 ln[A] = -kt + ln[A]0 1/[A] = kt + 1/[A]0 Half life t1/2 = [A]0/2k t1/2 = 0.693/k t1/2 = 1/k[A]0 Two Important Diagrams o PE energy profile of a reaction +50 c +35 PE a 0 d b –35 –50 e reaction coordinate ∆H of the reaction relates reactant and product PE’s / exo- or endothermic/ downhill, -H, or uphill, +H activation energy (Ea) = energy barrier activated complex (at the peak) whether a reaction is fast or slow depends on the activation energy in the PE profile PE profile does not change with change in temperature of the reactants? adding a catalyst lowers the Ea Reaction mechanisms - step-by-step...two particles at a time - example - overall reaction is sum of steps - slowest step is rate-determining step half-life - relationship to radioactivity (a first order reaction) - the equation ln - [ A]o kt [ A]t the special case of half-life ln(2) = 0.693 = kt½ Arrhenius Equation Finding activation energy: k = Ae-Ea/RT or ln(k) = - Ea (1/T) + ln(A) R ln(k2/k1) = Ea/R (1/T1 – 1/T2) Chemical Equilibria aA +bB + . . . Kc = rR +sS + . . . [R] [S] [A]a [B]b r s and for gases: Kp = (PR ) r (PS ) s (PA ) a (PB ) b K > 1 products favored K < 1 reactants favored 3. Excluded: solids; pure liquids; water (in aqueous solutions) because their [ ]’s do not change. 15 Convert from Kc to Kp Kp = Kc(RT)n where n = moles of gaseous product – moles of gaseous reactant. Typical question: Given Kc and the starting concentrations of reactants, find concentrations of products at equilibrium. Example: Kc for acetic acid = 1.8 x 10-5. What is the equilibrium concentration of [H+] in a 0.100 M solution of the acid? Equilibrium constant for a reverse reaction = 1 K 2. K the value of the forward reaction. Equilibrium constant for a doubled reaction = When using Hess’s Law: Koverall = K1 x K2 Le Châtelier’s Principle: effect of changes in concentration, pressure, & temperature. Equilibrium always “shifts” away from what you add. “Stress” means too much or too little: chemical, heat, or room. If out of equilibrium: Calculate the reaction quotient (Q) similar to the way an equilibrium constant would be found. If: Q<K forward reaction occurs to reach equilibrium Q>K reverse reaction occurs to reach equilibrium Problem solving: Set up problems using the “magic box” (or ICE box) C = “change” or . Example: A B+C A B C initial 5.0 M 0M 0M equilibrium “” row only follows the stoichiometry of the equation. Learn when to make an approximation (needed for multiple choice questions!) 5% rule usually works when value of K is 103 smaller than value of known concentrations. Example: A B+C K = 3.0 x 10-6 if [A] = 5.0M initially; find [C] at equilibrium. Another easy to solve situation is the perfect squares situation. Example: H2 + I2 2HI K = 3.5 x 102 Calculate [HI] when [H2] = [I2] = 0.10 M Acids and Bases, Aqueous Equilibria Acid-Base Theories Arrhenius: Acids – Have H+ Bases – Have OH Bronsted-Lowry: Acids – H+ donors Bases – H+ acceptors Lewis: Acids – e- pair acceptor Bases – e- pair donors BF3 + :NH3 BF3NH3 Strong and Weak Acids/Bases Strong Acids HCl, HBr, HI, HNO3, HClO4, H2SO4 Strong Bases Group I and II Hydroxides Weak Acids All others including HF and HC2H3O2 (can abbreviate them as HA) Weak Bases All others including NH3 (can abbreviate them as B) pH Calculations pH + pOH = 14 [H+] [OH-] = 1 x 10-14 pH = - log [H+] [H+] = 10^[-pH] pOH = - log [OH-] 16 Dilutions or Titrations M1V1 = M2V2 Equivalence Point - when the moles of acid = moles of base Titration Curves Strong Acid Titrated with a Strong Base (Equivalence Point at pH = 7.00) Weak Acid Titrated with a Strong Base (Equivalence Point above pH = 7.00) Weak Base Titrated with a Strong Acid (Equivalence Point below pH = 7.00) Entropy and Free Energy There are two driving forces for reactions. Reactions tend toward: minimum Enthalpy, H (heat energy) H<0, downhill maximum Entropy, S (randomness) S +, S>0, uphill Recognize whether S >0 or < 0. Entropy increases, S +, S > 0: from solid to liquid to gas fewer moles (g) to more moles (g) simpler molecules to more complex molecules smaller molecules to longer molecules ionic solids with strong attractions to ionic solids with weaker attractions separate solute & solvent to solutions gas dissolved in water to escaped gas Product or Reactant favored reactions depend on H, S, and absolute Temp H S Product-Favored… + + at higher temperatures at lower temperatures + + at all temperatures never (reactant-favored at all temps) Many books use the term “spontaneous” for “product-favored.” A spontaneous reaction does not necessarily mean a fast reaction. The SPEED of a reaction is Kinetics (Ch 15)… we are discussing whether a reaction CAN OCCUR which is Thermodynamics (Ch 6 and Ch 20). Gibbs Free Energy, G, puts the effects of H, S, and Temperature together. G = H - TS G<0, -favored reaction G>0, G +, reactant-favored reaction G=0, reaction is at equilibrium Important: Note that H is usually in kJ/mol S is usually in J/mol·K Convert between K, G, and E using equations given on the AP Exam. 17 Electrochemistry Electrochemistry is all oxidation-reduction chemistry. Leo Ger OIL RIG Oxidation: loss of e ; ox # increases Reduction: gain of e ; ox # decreases example: Fe2+ + 2e Fe(s) (reduction) In a reaction, the oxidizing agent gets reduced; the reducing agent gets oxidized. Balancing redox reactions: half-reaction method. o determine oxidation & reduction o write two separate half-reactions o balance all atoms except H & O o balance O’s (add H2O’s) o balance H’s (add H+’s) o add e ‘s to more positive side o balance e-‘s between half-reactions o combine half-reactions o adjust for basic solution if needed Electricity can either cause a reaction (electrolysis, electrolytic cell) or can be produced by the reaction (Galvanic cell, electrochemical cell, Voltaic cell). Electrolysis / Electroplating coulomb (C) = an amount of charge amp = current = charge per second 1 amp · 1 second = 1 Coulomb 1 C / amp·s Faraday constant, F: 1 mole e- = 96,500 C Electrolysis calculations begin with amp·s Example: How many moles of copper metal can be plated using a 10 amp circuit for 30 s? 10amp x 30s x 1C x 1 mol e- x 1 mol Ag = 1 amp·s 96500C 1 mol e= 3.1 x 10-3 mole Ag Spontaneous redox reactions (unlike electrolysis/electroplating) can simply occur (as in the ornament lab) or can be separated so the oxidation and reduction occur in different containers (half-cells). In this way, the electrons must move through an outside wire (this is an electrochemical cell—a battery). Every atom has a different “potential” to accept electrons… “reduction potential” E° = +0.80 v Ag+(aq) + e¯ Ag(s) Cd2+(aq) + 2e¯ Cd(s) These are measured by comparing every chemical to the same “standard half-cell.” The reduction with the more positive E value will occur as written; the other reaction will reverse (oxidation). Ex: 2Ag+ + Cd 2Ag + Cd2+ The difference in the E values is the voltage of a cell made using these two reactions. Ex: +0.80 v – (-0.40 v) = 1.20 volts NOTE that you do not multiply the Cd voltage by 2. Comparing every cell to the same standard cell accounts for this. Any change that drives the reaction forward will increase the cell’s voltage. In all electrochemical cells: Oxidation occurs at the Anode Reduction occurs at the Cathode Nuclear Chemistry Know the types of nuclear decay Write and balance nuclear reactions Calculate half life problems 18 TYPES OF REACTIONS SOLUBILITY RULES SOLUBLE COMPOUNDS EXCEPTIONS All Group 1 salts None All ammonium (NH4+) salts None All NO3−, ClO3−, ClO4−, and C2H3O2− salts None All Cl−, Br−, I− salts Ag+, Hg22+ (mercury (I)), Pb2+ All F− salts Mg2+ Ca2+, Sr2+, Ba2and Pb2+ All salts of SO42− Ca2+, Sr2+, Ba2+, Pb2+, Ag+, Hg22+ INSOLUBLE COMPOUNDS EXCEPTIONS All salts of OH− Group I, NH4+, Ba2+, Sr2+, Ca2+ All salts of S2−, SO32−, CO32−, PO43−, CrO42− and any other polyatomic not named! Group I and NH4+ Oxides* * some of these oxides are actually “soluble” because they are basic anhydrides and react with water to form a base: MO + H2O M(OH). More about this later! STRONG ACIDS - ionize 100% in water Type Formula Hydrogen halides (aq) HCl Oxyacids of halogens HBr HI HClO3 HBrO3 HIO3 HClO4 HBrO4 HIO4 Sulfuric (1st H+ only!!) H2SO4 Nitric Acid HNO3 STRONG BASE - dissociate 100% in water. All hydroxides of group I and II except beryllium and magnesium (okay, Mg(OH)2 tends to decompose but we will neglect that little detail!) DOUBLE REPLACEMENT ODDITIES How to recognize: Ionic &/or acid with Ionic &/or acid Decompose: H2CO3 H2O + CO2 Decompose: H2SO3 H2O + SO2 19 Decompose: NH4OH NH2+ H2O Aqueous NH3 as a reactant: WRITE NH3 + H2O THINK NH4OH SINGLE REPLACEMENT ODDITIES How to recognize: metal plus an ionic compound Active metal plus water Active metal plus acid halogen plus an ionic halide hydrogen with an ionic compound Higher Oxidation States: “As Snoopy Fell, Huge Cups Cracked” Diatomics: HOFBrINCl COMPLEX ION ODDITIES How to recognize: Al or transition metal ion with a ligand such as CN─, OH─, halogen ion, SCN─, NH3, H2O Metal ion is the Lewis Acid Ligand has extra pair of electrons and is the Lewis Base If reactant is Al metal, H2 gas forms Fe2+ has a coordination # of “6” instead of “4” Fe3+ only coordinates one SCN─ (ie Fe(SCN)2+) Decomposition is like a double replacement with an acid REDOX RULES How to recognize: Look for words like: Acidified or acidic Alkaline or basic Concentrated or dilute Oxidizing agents (ie will be reduced) Products formed MnO41− (acidic soln.) Mn2+ MnO41− (neutral or basic soln.) MnO2(s) MnO2 (acidic soln.) Mn2+ Cr2O72− (acidic soln.) Cr3+ HNO3 (concentrated) NO2 HNO3 (dilute) NO H2SO4 (Concentrated, hot) SO2 Na2O2 (peroxide) NaOH H2O2 (peroxide) H2O (or HOH) ClO4− (In HClO4 – strong acid) Cl− Free Halogens (F2, Cl2, Br2, I2) Halide ion Metal-ic ions (higher oxidation state) Metal-ous ions (lower) 20 Reducing Agent (ie will be oxidized) Product formed C2O42− (oxalate ion) CO2 HCOOH (formic acid) CO2 H2O2 O2 Halide ions (F−, Cl−, Br−, I−) Free halogen Free metals metal ion* Metal-ous Metal-ic SO32− (sulfite) or SO2 SO42− (sulfate) NO2− (nitrite) NO3− (nitrate) Free halogens (dilute basic) ex. Cl2 Hypohalite (ClO−) Free Halogens (conc. Basic) ex. Cl2 Halate ion (ClO3−) Electrolysis of pure molten 2NaCl 2Na + Cl2 Electrolysis of aqueous NaCl: water is electrolyzed instead Know the ½ rxns for water electrolysis! Cathode (reduction): 2H2O(l) + 2e− → H2(g) + 2OH−(aq) Anode (oxidation): 4OH−(aq) → O2(g) + 2H2O(l) + 4e− SYNTHESIS/COMBINATION/ADDITION How to recognize: a. Element + element b. Element + compound c. Compound + compound Phosphorus exists as the red form (P) or the white form (P4). Sulfur’s most stable form is rings with eight sulfur atoms (S8) Rules to memorize: a. Sulfur dioxide + metal oxide metal sulfite b. Sulfur trioxide + metal oxide metal sulfate c. Carbon dioxide + metal oxide metal carbonate d. BX3 + NY3 X3BNY3 DECOMPOSITION How to recognize: Compound heated, often in presence of a catalyst. Rules to memorize: a. Metal carbonates metal oxides + CO2 b. Metal sulfites metal oxides + SO2 c. Metallic chlorates metallic chlorides + oxygen. d. Ammonium Carbonate ammonia + water + CO2 e. Ammonium nitrate N2 + O2 + H2O (or N2O + H2O) f. Hydrogen peroxide H2O + O2 g. Carbonic acid SPONTANEOUSLY H2O + CO2 h. Sulfurous acid SPONTANEOUSLY H2O + SO2 21 Sodium hydrogen carbonate sodium carbonate + CO2 + H2O COMBUSTION How to recognize: a. adding oxygen to a compound b. Look for words such as “burned”, “undergoes combustion”. NOTE: You need to supply the oxygen because it will not be explicitly given! RULES TO MEMORIZE! element Most common oxygen containing cmpd i. C CO in limited oxygen C CO2 in excess oxygen S8 SO2 in limited oxygen (Assume if lim or xs not indicated) S8 SO3 in excess oxygen N NO in limited oxygen N NO2 in excess oxygen(Assume if lim or xs not indicated) P4 P2O5 or P4O10 H H2O Metal Metallic oxide ANHYDRIDES How to recognize: Anhydride means “without water” so we are taking a substance that is without water and re-hydrating it so to speak Rules: 1. Metal oxides are “basic anhydrides” 2. Metallic hydrides plus water yield metallic hydroxides and hydrogen gas. 3. Phosphorus halides and phosphorus oxyhalides react with water to produce two acids: phosphorus oxyacid and a hydrohalic acid (HCl, HBr, HI). 4. Group I and II nitrides react with water to form a base and ammonia 5. Metal Carbides react with water to form metal hydroxides and methane. KEY: OXIDATION NUMBERS DO NOT CHANGE EXCEPT THE HYDRIDES! CAUTION: Sometimes an anhydride will be combined with an acid base reaction! Example Sulfur dioxide is bubbled through a solution of excess strontium hydroxide. SO2 + H2O + Sr(OH)2 (aq) H2SO3 + Sr(OH)2 (aq) SrSO3 (s) + H2O SO2 + H2O + Sr2+ + OH− (aq) H2SO3 + Sr(OH)2 (aq) SrSO3 (s) + H2O 22 ACIDS & BASES & SALT HYDROLYSIS How to Recognize: a. Look for an acid plus a base. This is really a subset of double replacement with products typically being a salt and water. b. If the acid is polyprotic, the product may still be an acid. c. Look for the words “equal molar”, “equal volume”, “same moles”, “twice the moles”, “excess”. You will need to consider whether the acid or base is fully or partially neutralized. BE CAREFUL! Sometimes anhydrides are mixes with acid/base neutralization. CAUTION! Don’t forget to decompose H2CO3 & NH4OH if they form in a hydrolysis reaction! Strategy d. Follow a similar strategy as double replacement. e. If the words such as “equal molar” are used, then put the mole ratio under the species in the complete molecular. Example: Equimolar volumes of phosphoric acid and sodium hydroxide solutions are mixed. H3PO4 (aq) + LiOH(aq) LiH2PO4 (aq) + H2O 23 AP Subject Review Stoichiometry Percentage Composition Calculate the percent of each element in the total mass of the compound (#atoms of the element)(atomic mass of element) x 100 (molar mass of the compound Determining the empirical formula Determine the percentage of each element in your compound Treat % as grams, and convert grams of each element to moles of each element Find the smallest whole number ratio of atoms If the ratio is not all whole number, multiply each by an integer so that all elements are in whole number ratio Determining the molecular formula Find the empirical formula mass Divide the known molecular mass by the empirical formula mass, deriving a whole number, n Multiply the empirical formula by n to derive the molecular formula Examples: 1. 60 grams propane gas is burned in excess oxygen: How much water is produced? C3H8(g) + 5O2(g) 3CO2(g) + 4H2O(l) 2. 7.321 mg of an organic compound containing carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen was analyzed by combustion. The amount of carbon dioxide produced was 17.873 mg and the amount of water produced was 7.316 mg. Determine the empirical formula of the compound. 3. Sodium metal reacts vigorously with water to produce a solution of sodium hydroxide and hydrogen gas: 2Na(s) + 2H2O(l) 2NaOH(aq) + H2(g) What mass of hydrogen gas can be produced when 10 grams of sodium is added to 15 grams of water? 4. 0.1101 gram of an organic compound containing carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen was analyzed by combustion. The amount of carbon dioxide produced was 0.2503 gram and the amount of water produced was 0.1025 gram. A determination of the molar mass of the compound indicated a value of approximately 115 grams/mol. Determine the empirical formula and the molecular formula of the compound. Chemical Equations and Stoichiometry Solving Stoichiometry Problems for Reactions in Solution Identify the species present in the combined solution, and determine what reaction occurs. Write the balanced net ionic equation for the reaction. 24 Calculate the moles of reactants. Determine which reactant is limiting. Calculate the moles of product(s), as required. Convert to grams or other units, as required. Example: 5. 10.0 mL of a 0.30 M sodium phosphate solution reacts with 20.0 mL of a 0.20 M lead(II) nitrate solution (assume no volume change). Types of Reactions Precipitation Reactions A double displacement reaction in which a solid forms and separates from the solution. Simple Rules for Solubility Most nitrate (NO3-) salts are soluble. Most alkali metal (group 1A) salts and NH4+ are soluble. Most Cl-, Br-, and I-salts are soluble (except Ag+, Pb2+, Hg22+). Most sulfate salts are soluble (except BaSO4, PbSO4, Hg2SO4, CaSO4). Most OH- are only slightly soluble (NaOH, KOH are soluble, Ba(OH)2, Ca(OH)2 are marginally soluble). Most S2-, CO32-, CrO42-, PO43- salts are only slightly soluble, except for those containing the cations in Rule 2. Complete Ionic Equation All substances that are strong electrolytes are represented as ions. Ag+(aq) + NO3-(aq) + Na+(aq) + Cl-(aq) AgCl(s) + Na+(aq) + NO3-(aq) Net Ionic Equation Includes only those solution components undergoing a change. Show only components that actually react. Acid–Base Reactions (Brønsted–Lowry) Acid—proton donor Base—proton acceptor For a strong acid and base reaction: H+(aq) + OH–(aq) H2O(l) Redox Reactions Reactions in which one or more electrons are transferred. Rules for Assigning Oxidation States Oxidation state of an atom in an element = 0 Oxidation state of monatomic ion = charge of the ion Oxygen = -2 in covalent compounds (except in peroxides where it = -1) Hydrogen = +1 in covalent compounds Fluorine = -1 in compounds Sum of oxidation states = 0 in compounds Sum of oxidation states = charge of the ion in ions Balancing Oxidation–Reduction Reactions by Oxidation States Write the unbalanced equation. Determine the oxidation states of all atoms in the reactants and products. Show electrons gained and lost using “tie lines.” Use coefficients to equalize the electrons gained and lost. Balance the rest of the equation by inspection. Add appropriate states. 25 6. What coefficients are needed to balance the remaining elements? Zn(s) + 2HCl(aq) Zn2+(aq) + 2Cl–(aq) + H2(g) 7. Write net ionic equations for the following: a) dilute nitric acid is added to crystals of pure calcium oxide. b) hydrogen sulfide is bubbled through a solution of silver nitrate. c) sodium metal is added to water. d) a solution of tin(II) chloride is added to a solution of iron(III) sulfate. e) phosphorus(V) oxytrichloride is added to water. f) solid sodium oxide is added to water. g) excess concentrated potassium hydroxide solution is added to a precipitate of zinc hydroxide. h) excess concentrated sodium hydroxide solution is added to solid aluminum hydroxide. Gases Standard conditions STP = 1 atm (760mmHg or 101kPa) and 273K ALL temperatures must be in Kelvin! (C + 273) Gas Laws: Boyles Law: P1V1 = P2V2 Charles Law: V1/T1 = V2/T2 Guy Lussac’s Law: P1/T1 = P2/T2 Combined Gas Law: V1P1/n1T1 = V2P2/n2T2 Ideal Gas Law: PV = nRT volume in liters R = 0.0821 atm L/molK Daltons Law: Pt = P1 + P2 … Mole Fraction: mol A/total moles Root Mean Square: Grahams Law: u 2 u rms 3RT FW Rate of effusion of gas 1 = FW2 Rate of effusion of gas 2 FW1 8. A sample of hydrogen gas (H2) has a volume of 8.56 L at a temperature of 0ºC and a pressure of 1.5 atm. Calculate the moles of H2 molecules present in this gas sample. 26 9. A sample of gas at 15ºC and 1 atm has a volume of 2.58 L. What volume will this gas occupy at 38ºC and 1 atm ? 10. Sulfur dioxide (SO2), a gas that plays a central role in the formation of acid rain, is found in the exhaust of automobiles and power plants. Consider a 1.53- L sample of gaseous SO2 at a pressure of 5.6 x 103 Pa. If the pressure is changed to 1.5 x 104 Pa at a constant temperature, what will be the new volume of the gas ? 11. Suppose we have a sample of ammonia gas with a volume of 3.5 L at a pressure of 1.68 atm. The gas is compressed to a volume of 1.35 L at a constant temperature. Use the ideal gas law to calculate the final pressure 12. Mixtures of helium and oxygen are used in scuba diving tanks to help prevent “the bends.” For a particular dive, 46 L He at 25ºC and 1.0 atm and 12 L O2 at 25ºC and 1.0 atm were pumped into a tank with a volume of 5.0 L. Calculate the partial pressure of each gas and the total pressure in the tank at 25ºC. 13. Calculate the ratio of the effusion rates of hydrogen gas (H2) and uranium hexafluoride (UF6), a gas used in the enrichment process to produce fuel for nuclear reactors. Atomic Theory and Bonding Know the names and locations of the groups on the periodic table: alkali metals, alkaline earth metals, inner and outer transition metals, halogens and noble gases and their common charges as ions Electrons Be able to write electron configurations for any element Aufbau Principle Electrons fill their orbitals from lower to higher energy: 1s2s293s3p4s3d4p5s4d5p6s4f5d6p7s Hund’s Rule An electron will half fill an orbital until all orbitals of that sublevel are occupied Periodic Trends Ionization Energy o Energy required to remove an electron from a gaseous atom or ion. X(g) → X+(g) + e– o In general, as we go across a period from left to right, the first ionization energy increases. Why? Electrons added in the same principal quantum level do not completely shield the increasing nuclear charge caused by the added protons. o In general, as we go down a group from top to bottom, the first ionization energy decreases. Why? The electrons being removed are, on average, farther from the nucleus. Electron Affinity o Energy change associated with the addition of an electron to a gaseous atom. X(g) + e– → X–(g) o In general as we go across a period from left to right, the electron affinities become more negative. o In general electron affinity becomes more positive in going down a group. Atomic Radius o In general as we go across a period from left to right, the atomic radius decreases. o Effective nuclear charge increases, therefore the valence electrons are drawn closer to the nucleus, decreasing the size of the atom. 27 o o o In general atomic radius increases in going down a group. Cations have lost electrons and are generally smaller than the neutral atom (more nuclear attraction) Anions have gained electrons and are larger than the neutral atom (less nuclear attraction) 14. Write the electron configuration for Strontium and Sodium using the shorthand notation for the noble gas cores. 15. How many unpaired electrons are there in a nitrogen atom? 16. Arrange the elements S, Ge, P, and Si in order of increasing atomic size. 17. Arrange the ions Na+, K+, Cl , and Br in order of increasing size. 18. Arrange the elements Be, Ca, N, and P in order of increasing ionization energy. Bonding Types of Chemical Bonds Ionic Bonding – electrons are transferred Covalent Bonding – electrons are shared equally by nuclei Polar Covalent Bond Unequal distribution of electrons between atoms in a molecule resulting in a partial positive and negative region in the molecule Nonpolar covalent Bond: Equal distribution of the electron cloud Electronegativity: increases as you go across the period table and decreases as you go down. Fluorine has an electronegativity of 4 and is the most electronegative element. Noble gases have 0 electronegativity. The greater the e difference, the more ionic charater the bond has and the stronger it is. Dipole Moment Property of a molecule whose charge distribution can be represented by a center of positive charge and a center of negative charge. Use an arrow to represent a dipole moment. Lattice Energy The change in energy that takes place when separated gaseous ions are packed together to form an ionic solid. k = proportionality constant Q1 and Q2 = charges on the ions r= shortest distance between the centers of the cations and anions Bond Energy ΔH = Σn X D(bonds broken) – Σn X D(bonds formed) Lewis Structure Shows how valence electrons are arranged among atoms in a molecule. Octet Rule All atoms should have 8 electrons exept for hydrogen with 2 Steps for Writing Lewis Structures Sum the valence electrons from all the atoms. Use a pair of electrons to form a bond between each pair of bound atoms. Arrange the remaining electrons to satisfy the octet rule (or duet rule for hydrogen). Resonance occurs when you have a combination of multiple and single bonds: Formal Charge Formal charge = (# valence e– on free neutral atom) – (# valence e– assigned to the atom in the molecule). VSEPR Model 28 Hybridization explains why bonds in molecules with different atomic orbitals behave as identical bonds ie. CH4 sigma bond: overlap of two s orbitals or an s and a p orbital or head-to-head p orbitals. Electron density of a sigma bond is greatest along the axis of the bond. Pi (π) bonds--come from the sideways overlap of p atomic orbitals; the region above and below the internuclear axis. NEVER occur without a sigma bond first! 29 HYBRIDIZATION sp sp2 sp3 dsp3 d2sp3 # OF HYBRID ORBITALS 2 3 4 5 6 GEOMETRY Linear Trigonal planar Tetrahedral Trigonal bipyramidal Octahedral 19. Draw a Lewis structure for NH3; CH4; SF6 20. What molecular shapes are associated with the following electron pairs around the central atom? a) 3 bonding pairs and 2 lone pairs b) 4 bonding pairs and 1 lone pair 21. Name the shapes and hybridization for the following molecules or polyatomic ions: a) O3 b) GaH3 22. Determine whether the following molecules are polar or nonpolar: a) CCl4 b) XeF4 Liquids and Solids Intermolecular Forces London Dispersion forces found in all molecules. It is the only IMF in nonpolar molecules. The larger the molecule, the stronger the LDFs Dipole dipole forces found in polar molecules Hydrogen bonding between H and F,O or N A polar molecule has polar bonds and is asymmetric Some Properties of a Liquid Surface Tension: The resistance to an increase in its surface area (polar molecules). High ST indicates strong IMF’s. Capillary Action: Spontaneous rising of a liquid in a narrow tube. Viscosity: Resistance to flow (molecules with large intermolecular forces). Modeling a liquid is difficult. Gases have VERY SMALL IMFs and lots of motion. Solids have VERY HIGH IMFs and next to no motion. Liquids have both strong IMFs and quite a bit of motion. Types of Solids Crystalline Solids: highly regular arrangement of their components [often ionic, table salt (NaCl), pyrite (FeS2)]. Amorphous solids: considerable disorder in their structures (glass). Representation of Components in a Crystalline Solid Lattice: A 3-dimensional system of points designating the centers of components (atoms, ions, or molecules) that make up the substance. (a) network covalent—carbon in diamond form—here each molecule is covalently bonded to each neighboring C with a tetrahedral arrangement. Graphite on the other hand, make sheets that slide and is MUCH softer! (pictured later) (b) ionic salt crystal lattice 30 (c) ice—notice the “hole” in the hexagonal structure and all the H-bonds. The “hole” is why ice floats—it makes it less dense than the liquid! Types of Crystalline Solids Ionic Solid: contains ions at the points of the lattice that describe the structure of the solid (NaCl). VERY high MP’s. Hard. Ion-Ion Coulombic forces are the strongest of all attractive forces. “IMF” usually implies covalently bonded substances, but can apply to both types. Molecular Solid: discrete covalently bonded molecules at each of its lattice points (sucrose, ice). Atomic Solid: atoms of the substance are located at the lattice points. Carbon—diamond, graphite and the fullerenes. Boron, and silicon as well. Know this chart well: Structure and Bonding in Metals Metals are characterized by high thermal and electrical conductivity, malleability, and ductility. These properties are explained by the nondirectional covalent bonding found in metallic crystals. Electron Sea Model: A regular array of metals in a “sea” of electrons. I A & II A metals pictured at left. Band (Molecular Orbital) Model: Electrons assumed to travel around metal crystal in MOs formed from valence atomic orbitals of metal atoms. Metal alloys: a substance that has a mixture of elements and has metallic properties substitution alloys—in brass 1/3 of the atoms in the host copper metal have been replaced by zinc atoms. Sterling silver—93% silver and 7% copper. Pewter—85% tin, 7% copper, 6% bismuth and 2% antimony. Plumber’s solder—95% tin and 5% antimony. interstitial alloy—formed when some of the interstices [holes] in the closest packed metal structure are occupied by small atoms. Steel—carbon is in the holes of an iron crystal. There are many different types of steels, all depend on the percentage of carbon in the iron crystal. Network Atomic Solids—a.k.a. Network Covalent Composed of strong directional covalent bonds that are best viewed as a “giant molecule”. Both diamond and graphite are network solids. The difference is that diamond bonds with neighbors in a tetrahedral 3-D fashion, while graphite only has weak bonding in the 3rd dimension. Network solids are often: brittle—diamond is the hardest substance on the planet, but when a diamond is “cut” it is actually fractured to make the facets do not conduct heat or electricity carbon, silicon-based Diamond is hard, colorless and an insulator. It consists of carbon atoms ALL bonded tetrahedrally, therefore sp3 hybridization and 109.5 bond angles. Example Problems Liquids and Solids 23. The vapor pressure of pure chloroform at 70.0oC is 1.34 atm. How much iodine should be dissolved in one liter of chloroform, CHCl3, (d = 1.49 g/cm3) to lower the vapor pressure by 1.00 x 102 mm Hg? 31 24. Argon has a triple point at –189.3C and 516 mm Hg. It has a critical point at –122C and 48 atm. The density of the solid is 1.65 g/mL and that of the liquid is 1.40 g/mL. a. Sketch the phase diagram for argon. i. b. Complete each of the following statements using the appropriate phase change. Solid argon at 500 mm Hg ________________________ when the temperature is increased. ii. Solid argon at 2 atm _____________________________ when the temperature is increased. iii. Argon gas at –150oC ________________________________ when the pressure is increased. iv. Argon gas at –165oC ________________________________ when the pressure is increased. 25. The state of aggregation of solids can be described as belonging to the following four types: a. Ionic b. covalent network c. metallic d. molecular For each of these types of solids, indicate the kinds of particles that occupy the lattice points and identify forces among these particles. How could each type of solid be identified in the laboratory? Solutions Definitions: Solution- a homogeneous mixture of two or more substances in a single phase. solute--component in lesser concentration; dissolvee solvent--component in greater concentration; dissolver solubility--maximum amount of material that will dissolve in a given amount of solvent at a given temp. to produce a stable solution. Saturated solution- a solution containing the maximum amount of solute that will dissolve under a given set of conditions. Unsaturated solution- a solution containing less than the maximum amount of solute that will dissolve under a given set of conditions. (more solute can dissolve) Supersaturated solution- a solution that has been prepared at an elevated temperature and then slowly cooled. miscible—When two or more liquids mix (ex. Water and food coloring) immiscible—When two or more liquids DON’T mix.--they usually layer if allowed to set for a while. (ex. Water and oil) Units of solution concentration Molarity (M) = # of moles of solute per liter of solution Mole fraction () = ratio of the number of moles of a given component to the total number of moles of solution. Molality (m) = # of moles of solute per kilogram of solvent Heat of solution (Hsoln) = the enthalpy change associated with 32 Factors Affecting Solubility Pressure Effects: o The solubility of a gas is higher with increased pressure. o Henry’s Law- the amount of a gas dissolved in a solution is directly proportional to the pressure of the gas above the solution. P = kC o P = partial pressure of the gaseous solute k = constant C = concentration of the gas Temperature Effects: o The amount of solute that will dissolve usually increases with increasing temperature. Solubility generally increases with temperature if the solution process is endothermic (Hsoln > 0). Solubility generally decreases with temperature if the solution process is exothermic (Hsoln < 0). Potassium hydroxide, sodium hydroxide and sodium sulfate are three compounds that become less soluble as the temperature rises. This can be explained by LeChatelier’s Principle. o The solubility of a gas in water always decreases with increasing temperature. Colligative Properties- properties that depend on the number of dissolved particles Vapor Pressure Lowering- The presence of a nonvolatile solute lowers the vapor pressure of a solvent. Raoult’s Law: Psolution = (solvent) (Posolvent) o Psolution = observed vapor pressure of the solvent in the solution o solvent = mole fraction of solvent o Posolvent = vapor pressure of the pure solvent An ideal solution is a solution that obeys Raoult’s Law. There is no such thing. In very dilute solutions o We can find the molecular weight of a solute by using the vapor pressure of a solution. Boiling Point Elevation BPE = mki m = molality k = BP constant i= number of ions Freezing point depression FPD = mki m = molality k = BP constant i= number of ions Example problems: Solutions 26. A water solution containing 28% by mass of iron (III) chloride has a density of 1.271 g/cm3 at 20oC. Calculate the: a) Molarity b) Molality c) freezing point d) vapor pressure ( VP of H2O at 20oC = 17.54 mm Hg) 27. The solubility of hydrogen sulfide in water at 25oC is 0.0932 M at 1.00 atm. If the partial pressure of H2S is 0.12 atm, calculate the molarity of H2S. 28. Calculate the molality of a 20.0 percent by weight aqueous solution of NH4Cl. (Molecular weight: NH4Cl = 53.5) a. If this NH4Cl solution is assumed to be ideal and is completely dissociated into ions, calculate the pressure of this solution at 29.0°C. b. Actually a solution of NH4Cl of this concentration is not ideal. Calculate the apparent degree of dissociation of the NH4Cl if the freezing point of this solution is B15.3°C? (Molal freezing point constant = 1.86°C) 33 Chemical Kinetics: Rates of Reaction FACTORS THAT AFFECT REACTION RATES Nature of the reactants--Some reactant molecules react in a hurry, others react very slowly. Concentration of reactants--more molecules, more collisions. Temperature--heat >em up & speed >em up; Catalysts--accelerate chemical reactions but are not themselves transformed. Surface area of reactants--exposed surfaces affect speed Rate = change in concentration of a species per time interval When writing rate expressions, they can be written in terms of reactants disappearance or products appearance. * Rate is not constant, it changes with time. Graphing the data of an experiment will show an average rate of reaction. You can find the instantaneous rate by computing the slope of a straight line tangent to the curve at that time. reaction rate--expressed as the Δ in concentration of a reagent per unit time or Δ[A]/Δt Initial rxn rate = k[A]m[B]n[C]p Exponents can be zero, whole numbers or fractions and are determined by experiment ORDER OF A REACTION order with respect to a certain reactant is the exponent on its concentration term in the rate expression order of the reaction is the sum of all the exponents on all the concentration terms in the expression Zero order: The change in concentration of reactant has no effect on the rate. These are not very common. General form of rate equation: Rate = k First order: Rate is directly proportional to the reactants concentration; doubling [rxt], doubles rate. These are very common! Nuclear decay reactions usually fit into this category. General form of rate equation: Rate = k [A] Second order: Rate is quadrupled when [rxt] is doubled and increases by a factor of 9 when [rxt] is tripled etc. These are common, particularly in gas-phase reactions. General form of rate equation: Rate = k [A]2 TWO TYPES OF RATE LAWS o differential rate law--expresses how the rate depends on concentration o integrated rate law--expresses how the concentrations depend on time INTEGRATED RATE LAW: CONCENTRATION/TIME RELATIONSHIPS first order: second order: ln[A] = -kt + ln[A]o 1/[A] = kt + 1/[A]o HALF-LIFE AND REACTION RATE FOR FIRST ORDER REACTIONS, t1/2 the time required for one half of one of the reactants to disappear. T1/2 = 0.693 k Half life is INDEPENDENT OF ORIGINAL CONCENTRATION for 1st order!!! HALF-LIFE AND REACTION RATE FOR SECOND ORDER REACTIONS, t1/2 the time required for one half of one of the reactants to disappear. k t2 = 1 [A]o 8/3/2011 HALF-LIFE AND REACTION RATE FOR ZERO ORDER REACTIONS t2 = [A]o rxn RATE EXPRESSIONS FOR ELEMENTARY STEPS--the rate expression cannot be predicted from overall stoichiometry. The rate expression of an elementary step is given by the product of the rate constant and the concentrations of the reactants in the step. ELEMENTARY STEP MOLECULARITY RATE EXPRESSION Aproducts unimolecular rate = k[A] A + B products bimolecular rate = k[A][B] 34 A + A products bimolecular 2 rate = k[A] 2 A + B products* termolecular* 2 rate = k[A] [B] THE EFFECT OF TEMPERATURE OF REACTION RATE: ARRHENIUS EQUATION k = reaction rate constant = Ae-E*/RT o o o R is the ―energy‖ R or 8.31 x 10-3kJ/K mol A is the frequency factor units of L/(mol s) & depends on the frequency of collisions and the fraction of these that have the correct geometry--# of effective collisions -E*/RT e is always less than 1 and is the fraction of molecules having the minimum energy required for reaction CATALYSIS catalysts are not altered during the reaction--they serve to lower the activation energy and speed up the reaction by offering a different pathway for the reaction HETEROGENEOUS CATALYST-different phase than reactants, usually involves gaseous reactants adsorbed on the surface of a solid catalyst HOMOGENEOUS CATALYST—exists in the same phase as the reacting molecules. Example Problems Kinetics 29. Ethyl iodide reacts with a solution of sodium hydroxide to give ethyl alcohol according to the equation. CH3CH2I + OHB CH3CH2OH + IB The reaction is first order with respect to both ethyl iodide and hydroxide ion, and the overall-rate expression for the reaction is as follows: rate = k[CH3CH2I][OHB] What would you do in the laboratory to obtain data to confirm the order in the rate expression for either of the reactants. 30. For the reaction below, the rate constant at 380C for the forward reaction is 2.6 x 103 liter2/mole2-sec and this reaction is first order in O2 and second order in NO. The rate constant for the reverse reaction at 380C is 4.1 liter/mole-sec and this reaction is second order in NO2. 2 NO(g) + O2(g) 2 NO2(g) a. Write the equilibrium expression for the reaction as indicated by the equation above and calculate the numerical value for the equilibrium constant at 380C. b. What is the rate of the production of NO2 at 380C if the concentration of NO is 0.0060 mole/liter and the concentration of O2 is 0.29 mole/liter? c. The system above is studied at another temperature. A 0.20 mole sample of NO2 is placed in a 5.0 liter container and allowed to come to equilibrium. When equilibrium is reached, 15% of the original NO2 has decomposed to NO and O2. Calculate the value for the equilibrium constant at the second temperature. 35 31. For a hypothetical chemical reaction that has the stoichiometry 2 X + Y Z, the following initial rate data were obtained. All measurements were made at the same temperature. Initial Rate of Formation of Z, (mol.LB1.secB1) Initial [X]o, Initial [Y]o, (mol.LB1) (mol.LB1) 7.0 x 10-4 0.20 0.10 -3 1.4 x 10 0.40 0.20 2.8 x 10-3 0.40 0.40 4.2 x 10-3 0.60 0.60 a) Give the rate law for this reaction from the data above. b) Calculate the specific rate constant for this reaction and specify its units. c) How long must the reaction proceed to produce a concentration of Z equal to 0.20 molar, if the initial reaction concentrations are [X]o = 0.80 molar, [Y]o = 0.60 molar and [Z]0 = 0 molar? d) Select from the mechanisms below the one most consistent with the observed data, and explain your choice. In these mechanisms M and N are reaction intermediates. i. X + Y M (slow) X+M Z (fast) ii. X + X _ M (fast) Y+M Z (slow) iii. Y M (slow) M+X N (fast) N+X Z (fast) 32. In the equation below, the forward reaction is first order in both PCl3 and Cl2 and the reverse reaction is first order in PCl5. PCl3(g) + Cl2(g) PCl5(g) c. Suppose that 2 moles of PCl3 and 1 mole of Cl2 are mixed in a closed container at constant temperature. Draw a graph that shows how the concentrations of PCl3, Cl2, and PCl5 change with time until after equilibrium has been firmly established. d. Give the initial rate law for the forward reaction. e. Provide a molecular explanation for the dependence of the rate of the forward reaction on the concentrations of the reactants. f. Provide a molecular explanation for the dependence of the rate of the forward reaction on temperature. 36 Chemical Equilibria THE EQUILIBRIUM EXPRESSION: A general description of the equilibrium condition proposed by Gudberg and Waage in 1864 is known as the Law of Mass Action. Equilibrium is temperature dependent, however, it does not change with concentration or pressure. equilibrium constant expression--for the general reaction aA + bB cC + dD Equilibrium constant: K = [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b o Pure solids--do not appear in expression—you’ll see this in Ksp problems soon! o Pure liquids--do not appear in expression—H2O (l) is pure, so leave it out of the calculation o Water--as a liquid or reactant, does not appear in the expression. (55.5M will not change significantly) CHANGING STOICHIOMETRIC COEFFICIENTS o when the stoichiometric coefficients of a balanced equation are multiplied by some factor, the K is raised to the power of the multiplication factor (Kn). 2x is K squared; 3x is K cubed; etc. o REVERSING EQUATIONS o take the reciprocal of K ( 1/K) o ADDING EQUATIONS o multiply respective K=s (K1 x K2 x K3 …) Kc & Kp--NOT INTERCHANGEABLE! Kp = Kc(RT)Δn where o Δn is the change in the number of moles of gas going from reactants to products: o R = universal gas law constant 0.0821 L atm/ mol K o T = temperature in Kelvin Kc = Kp if the number of moles of gaseous product = number of moles of gaseous reactant. THE REACTION QUOTIENT For use when the system is NOT at equilibrium. For the general reaction aA + bB cC + dD Reaction quotient = Qc = [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b Qc has the appearance of K but the concentrations are not necessarily at equilibrium. 1. If Q<K, the system is not at equilibrium: 2. If Q = K, the system is at equilibrium. 3. If Q>K, the system is not at equilibrium: EXTERNAL FACTORS AFFECTING EQUILIBRIA Le Chatelier=s Principle: If a stress is applied to a system at equilibrium, the position of the equilibrium will shift in the direction which reduces the stress. Temperature—exothermic: heat is a product; endothermic: heat is a reactant. Adding or removing a reagent--shift tries to reestablish Q. Pressure--increase favors the side with the least # of gas moles; the converse is also true. catalysts--NO EFFECT on K; just gets to equilibrium faster! Example Problems Equilibrium 33. For the system 2 SO2(g) + O2(g) 2 SO3(g) , ΔH is negative for the production of SO3. Assume that one has an equilibrium mixture of these substances. Predict the effect of each of the following changes on the value of the equilibrium constant and on the number of moles of SO3 present in the mixture at equilibrium. Briefly account for each of your predictions. (Assume that in each case all other factors remain constant.) a. Decreasing the volume of the system. b. Adding oxygen to the equilibrium mixture. c. Raising the temperature of the system. 37 34. Ammonium hydrogen sulfide is a crystalline solid that decomposes as follows: NH4HS(s) NH3(g) + H2S(g) a. Some solid NH4HS is placed in an evacuated vessel at 25C. After equilibrium is attained, the total pressure inside the vessel is found to be 0.659 atmosphere. Some solid NH4HS remains in the vessel at equilibrium. For this decomposition, write the expression for KP and calculate its numerical value at 25C. b. Some extra NH3 gas is injected into the vessel containing the sample described in part (a). When equilibrium is reestablished at 25C, the partial pressure of NH3 in the vessel is twice the partial pressure of H2S. Calculate the numerical value of the partial pressure of NH3 and the partial pressure of H2S in the vessel after the NH3 has been added and the equilibrium has been reestablished. c. In a different experiment, NH3 gas and H2S gas are introduced into an empty 1.00 liter vessel at 25C. The initial partial pressure of each gas is 0.500 atmospheres. Calculate the number of moles of solid NH4HS that is present when equilibrium is established. 35. At 25C the solubility product constant, Ksp, for strontium sulfate, SrSO4, is 7.6 x 10-7. The solubility product constant for strontium fluoride, SrF2, is 7.9 x 10-10. a. What is the molar solubility of SrSO4 in pure water at 25C? b. What is the molar solubility of SrF2 in pure water at 25C? c. An aqueous solution of Sr(NO3)2 is added slowly to 1.0 litre of a well-stirred solution containing 0.020 mole F- and 0.10 mole SO42- at 25C. (You may assume that the added Sr(NO3)2 solution does not materially affect the total volume of the system.) 1. Which salt precipitates first? 2. What is the concentration of strontium ion, Sr2+, in the solution when the first precipitate begins to form? d. As more Sr(NO3)2 is added to the mixture in (c) a second precipitate begins to form. At that stage, what percent of the anion of the first precipitate remains in solution? 36. When H2(g) is mixed with CO2(g) at 2,000 K, equilibrium is achieved according to the equation above. In one experiment, the following equilibrium concentrations were measured. [H2] = 0.20 mol/L [CO2] = 0.30 mol/L [H2O] = [CO] = 0.55 mol/L a. What is the mole fraction of CO(g) in the equilibrium mixture? b. Using the equilibrium concentrations given above, calculate the value of Kc, the equilibrium constant for the reaction. c. Determine Kp in terms of Kc for this system. d. When the system is cooled from 2,000 K to a lower temperature, 30.0 percent of the CO(g) is converted back to CO2(g). Calculate the value of Kc at this lower temperature. 38 e. In a different experiment, 0.50 mole of H2(g) is mixed with 0.50 mole of CO2(g) in a 3.0-liter reaction vessel at 2,000 K. Calculate the equilibrium concentration, in moles per liter, of CO(g) at this temperature Acids and Bases, Aqueous Equilibria ACID-BASE THEORIES: ARRHENIUS DEFINITION acid--donates a hydrogen ion (H+) in water base--donates a hydroxide ion in water (OH-) This theory was limited to substances with those "parts"; ammonia is a MAJOR exception! BRONSTED-LOWRY DEFINITION acid--donates a proton in water base--accepts a proton in water conjugate acid-base pair--A pair of compounds that differ by the presence of one H+ unit. This idea is critical when it comes to understanding buffer systems. Pay close attention here! LEWIS DEFINITION acid--accepts an electron pair base--donates an electron pair This theory explains all traditional acids and bases + a host of coordination compounds and is used widely in organic chemistry. Uses coordinate covalent bonds monoprotic--acids donating one H+ (ex. HC2H3O2) diprotic--acids donating two H+'s (ex. H2C2O4) polyprotic--acids donating many H+'s (ex. H3PO4) polyprotic bases--accept more than one H+; anions with -2 and -3 charges (ex. PO43- ; HPO42-) ACIDS ONLY DONATE ONE PROTON AT A TIME!!! RELATIVE STRENGTHS OF ACIDS AND BASES Strength is determined by the position of the "dissociation Do Not confuse concentration with strength! STRONG ACIDS: Hydrohalic acids: HCl, HBr, HI Nitric: HNO3 Sulfuric: H2SO4 Perchloric: HClO4 STRONG BASES: Hydroxides OR oxides of IA and IIA metals THE STRONGER THE ACID THE WEAKER ITS CB, the converse is also true. WEAK ACIDS AND BASES: are in equilibrium HA + H2O H3O+ + AKa = [H3O+][A-] <1 [HA] for weak base reactions: B + H2O HB+ + OH2 Keq[H2O] = Kw = [H3O+][OH-] Kw = 1.0 x 10-14 ( Kw = 1.008 x 10-14 @ 25 degrees Celsius) Kw = Ka x Kb (another very beneficial equation) The pH Scale Used to designate the [H+] in most aqueous solutions where H+ is small. pH = - log [H+] pOH = - log [OH-] pH + pOH = 14 Calculating pH of Weak Acid Solutions 39 Calculating pH of weak acids involves setting up an equilibrium. Always start by writing the equation, setting up the acid equilibrium expression (Ka), defining initial concentrations, changes, and final concentrations in terms of X, substituting values and variables into the Ka expression and solving for X. (use the RICE diagram learned in general equilibrium!) Determination of the pH of a Mixture of Weak Acids Only the acid with the largest Ka value will contribute an appreciable [H+]. Determine the pH based on this acid and ignore any others. Calculating pH of polyprotic acids Acids with more than one ionizable hydrogen will ionize in steps. Each dissociation has its own Ka value. The first dissociation will be the greatest and subsequent dissociations will have much smaller equilibrium constants. As each H is removed, the remaining acid gets weaker and therefore has a smaller Ka. As the negative charge on the acid increases it becomes more difficult to remove the positively charged proton. ACID-BASE PROPERTIES OF SALTS: HYDROLYSIS Salts are produced from the reaction of an acid and a base. (neutralization) Salts are not always neutral. Some hydrolyze with water to produce acidic and basic solutions. Neutral Salts- Salts that are formed from the cation of a strong base and the anion of a strong acid form neutral solutions when dissolved in water. A salt such as NaNO3 gives a neutral solution. Basic Salts- Salts that are formed from the cation of a strong base and the anion of a weak acid form basic solutions when dissolved in water. The anion hydrolyzes the water molecule to produce hydroxide ions and thus a basic solution. K2S should be basic since S-2 is the CB of the very weak acid HS-, while K+ does not hydrolyze appreciably. S2- + H2O OH- + HS Acid Salts- Salts that are formed from the cation of a weak base and the anion of a strong acid form acidic solutions when dissolved in water. The cation hydrolyzes the water molecule to produce hydronium ions and thus an acidic solution. NH4Cl should be weakly acidic, since NH4+ hydrolyzes to give an acidic solution, while Cl- does not hydrolyze. NH4+ + H2O H3O+ + NH3 If both the cation and the anion contribute to the pH situation, compare Ka to Kb. If Kb is larger, basic! The converse is also true. 1. Strong acid + strong base = neutral salt 2. Strong acid + weak base = acidic salt 3. Weak acid + strong base = basic salt 4. Weak acid + weak base = ? ( must look at K values to decide ) THE LEWIS CONCEPT AND COORDINATE BONDS acid--can accept a pair of electrons to form a coordinate covalent bond base--can donate a pair of electrons to form a coordinate covalent bond Example Problems Acids and Bases 37. What is the pH of a 2.0 molar solution of acetic acid. Ka acetic acid = 1.8 x 10-5 a. A buffer solution is prepared by adding 0.10 liter of 2.0 molar acetic acid solution to 0.1 liter of a 1.0 molar sodium hydroxide solution. Compute the hydrogen ion concentration of the buffer solution. b. Suppose that 0.10 liter of 0.50 molar hydrochloric acid is added to 0.040 liter of the buffer prepared in (b). Compute the hydrogen ion concentration of the resulting solution. 38. A 5.00 gram sample of a dry mixture of potassium hydroxide, potassium carbonate, and potassium chloride is reacted with 0.100 liter of 2.00 molar HCl solution c. A 249 milliliter sample of dry CO2 gas, measured at 22C and 740 torr, is obtained from this reaction. What is the percentage of potassium carbonate in the mixture? d. The excess HCl is found by titration to be chemically equivalent to 86.6 milliliters of 1.50 molar NaOH. Calculate the percentages of potassium hydroxide and of potassium chloride in the original mixture. 40 39. A solution is prepared from 0.0250 mole of HCl, 0.10 mole propionic acid, C2H5COOH, and enough water to make 0.365 liter of solution. Determine the concentrations of H3O+, C2H5COOH, C2H5COO-, and OH- in this solution. Ka for propionic acid = 1.3x10-5 40. The value of the ionization constant, Ka, for hypochlorous acid, HOCl, is 3.1x10-8. e. Calculate the hydronium ion concentration of a 0.050 molar solution of HOCl. f. Calculate the concentration of hydronium ion in a solution prepared by mixing equal volumes of 0.050 molar HOCl and 0.020 molar sodium hypochlorite, NaOCl. g. A solution is prepared by the disproportionation reaction below. Cl2 + H2O HCl + HOCl Calculate the pH of the solution if enough chlorine is added to water to make the concentration of HOCl equal to 0.0040 molar. 41. The percentage by weight of nitric acid, HNO3, in a sample of concentrated nitric acid is to be determined. h. Initially a NaOH solution was standardized by titration with a sample of potassium hydrogen phthalate, KHC8H4O4, a monoprotic acid often used as a primary standard. A sample of pure KHC8H4O4 weighing 1.518 grams was dissolved in water and titrated with the NaOH solution. To reach the equivalence point, 26.90 millilitres of base was required. Calculate the molarity of the NaOH solution. (Molecular weight: KHC8H4O4 = 204.2) i. A 10.00 milliliter sample of the concentrated nitric acid was diluted with water to a total volume of 500.00 milliliters. Then 25.00 milliliters of the diluted acid solution was titrated with the standardized NaOH solution prepared in part (a). The equivalence point was reached after 28.35 milliliters of the base had been added. Calculate the molarity of the concentrated nitric acid. j. The density of the concentrated nitric acid used in this experiment was determined to be 1.42 grams per milliliter. Determine the percentage by weight of HNO3 in the original sample of concentrated nitric acid. Thermochemistry ENERGY AND WORK E = q(heat) + w(work) Signs of q +q if heat absorbed –q if heat released Signs of w + w if work done on the system (i.e., compression) -w if work done by the system (i.e., expansion) When related to gases, work is a function of pressure w = -PV 41 NOTE: Energy is a state function. (Work and heat are not.) ENTHALPY H is a state function H = q at constant pressure (i.e. atmospheric pressure) Enthalpy can be calculated from several sources including: Coffee-cup calorimetry. q = H @ these conditions. Bomb calorimetry – weighed reactants are placed inside a steel container and ignited. Heat capacity – energy required to raise temp. by 1 degree (Joules/ C) Specific heat capacity (Cp) – same as above but specific to 1 gram of substance specific heat quantity of heat transferred ( g of material) (degrees of temperature change) Molar heat capacity -- same as above but specific to one mole of substance (J/mol K or J/mol C ) Energy (q) released or gained -- q = mCpT q = quantity of heat ( Joules or calories) m = mass in grams ΔT = Tf - Ti (final – initial) Cp = specific heat capacity ( J/gC) Specific heat of water (liquid state) = 4.184 J/gC ( or 1.00 cal/g C) Heat lost by substance = heat gained by water Enthalpy of a Reaction Hrxn = Hf (products) - Hf (reactants) Hess’s Law sum up the H’s for the individual reactions to get the overall Hrxn. First decide how to rearrange equations so reactants and products are on appropriate sides of the arrows. If equations had to be reversed, reverse the sign of H If equations had be multiplied to get a correct coefficient, multiply the H by this coefficient since H’s are in kJ/MOLE (division applies similarly) Check to ensure that everything cancels out to give you the exact equation you want. Hint** It is often helpful to begin your work backwards from the answer that you want! Bond Energies Energy must be added/absorbed to BREAK bonds (endothermic). Energy is released when bonds are FORMED (exothermic). H = sum of the energies required to break old bonds (positive signs) plus the sum of the energies released in the formation of new bonds (negative signs). H = bonds broken – bonds formed H = + reaction is endothermic H = - reaction is exothermic (favored – nature tends towards lower energy) ENTHALPY (H) heat content (exothermic reactions are generally favored) ENTROPY (S) disorder of a system (more disorder is favored) Nature tends toward chaos! Think about your room at the end of the week! Your mom will love this law. S = - H T S = + MORE DISORDER (FAVORED CONDITION) S = - MORE ORDER Calculating Entropy Srxn = S (products) - S (reactants) FREE ENERGY 42 G = H - TS G = G + RT ln (Q) G = free energy not at standard conditions G = free energy at standard conditions R = universal gas constant 8.3145 J/molK T = temp. in Kelvin ln = natural log Q = reaction quotient: Q = [products] [reactants] “RatLink”: G = -RTlnK Grxn = G (products) - G (reactants) SUMMARY OF FREE ENERGY: G = + NOT SPONTANEOUS G = - SPONTANEOUS Conditions of G: H S negative positive positive positive negative negative positive negative Result spontaneous at all temperatures spontaneous at high temperatures spontaneous at low temperatures not spontaneous, ever Example problems Thermochemistry For the reaction below, the following data are available: Br2 + 2 Fe2+(aq) 2 Br-1(aq) + 2 Fe3+(aq) 2 Br-(aq) Br2(l) + 2eE= -1.07 volts 2+ 3+ Fe (aq) Fe (aq) + eE= -0.77 volts Scal/moleC Br2(l) 58.6 Fe (aq) -27.1 Br-(aq) 19.6 Fe3+(aq) -70.1 _____________________________________________________ i. Determine S 2+ ii. Determine G iii. Determine H iv. 42. Standard Entropy Substance cal/deg mole N2(g) 45.8 H2(g) 31.2 NH3(g) 46.0 Ammonia can be produced by the following reaction: N2(g) + 3 H2(g) 2 NH3(g) The Gibbs free energy of formation Gfof NH3(g) is -3.94 kilocalories per mole. a. Calculate the value for Hfor the reaction above 298K. b. Can the yield of ammonia be increased by raising the temperature? Explain. 43 c. What is the equilibrium constant for the reaction above at 298K? d. If 235 milliliters of H2 gas measured at 25C and 570 millimeters Hg were completely converted to ammonia and the ammonia were dissolved in sufficient water to make 0.5000 liter of solution, what would be the molarity of the resulting solution? 43. State the physical significance of entropy. a. From each of the following pairs of substances, choose the one expected to have the greater absolute entropy. Explain your choice in each case. Assume 1 mole of each substance. b. Pb(s) or C(graphite) at the same temperature and pressure. c. He(g) at 1 atmosphere or He(g) at 0.05 atmosphere, both at the same temperature. d. H2O(l) or CH3CH2OH(l) at the same temperature and pressure. e. Mg(s) (s) 44. When a 2.000-gram sample of pure phenol, C6H5OH(s), is completely burned according to the equation above, 64.98 kilojoules of heat is released. Use the information in the table below to answer the questions that follow. Standard Heat of Absolute Entropy, S°, Substance Formation, H°f, at 25°C (J/mol-K) at 25°C (kJ/mol) C(graphite) 0.00 5.69 CO2(g) -395.5 213.6 H2(g) 0.00 130.6 H2O(l) -285.85 69.91 O2(g) 0.00 205.0 C6H5OH(s) ? 144.0 a. Calculate the molar heat of combustion of phenol in kilojoules per mole at 25°C. b. Calculate the standard heat of formation, H°f, of phenol in kilojoules per mole at 25°C. c. Calculate the value of the standard free-energy change, G° for the combustion of phenol at 25°C. d. If the volume of the combustion container is 10.0 liters, calculate the final pressure in the container when the temperature is changed to 110°C. (Assume no oxygen remains unreacted and that all products are gaseous.) Electrochemistry OIL RIG – oxidation is loss, reduction is gain (of electrons) Oxidation – the loss of electrons, increase in charge Reduction – the gain of electrons, reduction of charge Oxidation number – the assigned charge on an atom Oxidizing agent (OA) – the species that is reduced and thus causes oxidation Reducing agent (RA) – the species that is oxidized and thus causes reduction GALVANIC CELLS Parts of the voltaic or galvanic cell: Anode--the electrode where oxidation occurs. After a period of time, the anode may appear to become smaller as it falls into solution. 44 Cathode-- the electrode where reduction occurs. After a period of time it may appear larger, due to ions from solution plating onto it. inert electrodes—used when a gas is involved OR ion to ion involved such as Fe3+ being reduced to Fe2+ rather than Fe0. Made of Pt or graphite. Salt bridge -- a device used to maintain electrical neutrality in a galvanic cell. This may be filled with agar which contains a neutral salt or it may be replaced with a porous cup. Electron flow -- always from anode to cathode. (through the wire) Standard cell notation (line notation) anode/solution// cathode solution/ cathode Ex. Zn/Zn2+ (1.0 M) // Cu2+ (1.0M) / Cu Voltmeter measures the cell potential (emf) . Usually is measured in volts. cell potential Ecell, Emf, or cell—it is a measure of the electromotive force or the “pull” of the electrons as they travel from the anode to the cathode [more on that later!] volt (V) The unit of electrical potential; equal to 1 joule of work per coulomb of charge transferred voltmeter measures electrical potential; some energy is lost as heat [resistance] which keeps the voltmeter reading a tad lower than the actual or calculated voltage. Digital voltmeters have less resistance. If you want to get picky and eliminate the error introduced by resistance, you attach a variable-external-power source called a potentiometer. Adjust it so that zero current flows—the accurate voltage is then equal in magnitude but opposite in sign to the reading on the potentiometer. STANDARD REDUCTION POTENTIALS Each half-reaction has a cell potential Each potential is measured against a standard which is the standard hydrogen electrode [consists of a piece of inert Platinum that is bathed by hydrogen gas at 1 atm]. The hydrogen electrode is assigned a value of ZERO volts. standard conditions—1 atm for gases, 1.0M for solutions and 25C for all (298 K) naught, Ecell, Emf, or cell become Ecello , Emfo , or cello when measurements are taken at standard conditions. Calculating Standard Cell Potential Decide which element is oxidized or reduced using the table of reduction potentials. Remember: THE MORE POSITIVE REDUCTION POTENITAL GETS TO BE REDUCED. Write both equations AS IS from the chart with their voltages. Reverse the equation that will be oxidized and change the sign of the voltage [this is now Eoxidation] Balance the two half reactions **do not multiply voltage values** Add the two half reactions and the voltages together. Ecell = Eoxidation + Ereduction means standard conditions: 1atm, 1M, 25C AN OX – oxidation occurs at the anode (may show mass decrease) RED CAT – reduction occurs at the cathode (may show mass increase) FAT CAT – The electrons in a voltaic or galvanic cell ALWAYS flow From the Anode To the CAThode Ca+hode – the cathode is + in galvanic cells Salt Bridge – bridge between cells whose purpose is to provide ions to balance the charge. Usually made of a salt filled agar (KNO3) or a porous cup. EPA--in an electrolytic cell, there is a positive anode. CELL POTENTIAL, ELECTRICAL WORK & FREE ENERGY V = work (J)/charge (C) The work that can be accomplished when electrons are transferred through a wire depends on the “push” or emf which is IF work flows OUT it is assigned a MINUS sign When a cell produces a current, the cell potential is positive and the current can be used to do work THEREFORE and work have opposite signs! =-w q therefore -w = q 45 faraday(F)—the charge on one MOLE of electrons = 96,485 coulombs q = # moles of electrons x F For a process carried out at constant temperature and pressure, wmax [neglecting the very small amount of energy that is lost as friction or heat] is equal to G, therefore…. ΔGo = -nFEo G = Gibb’s free energy. n = number of moles of electrons. F = Faraday constant 9.6485309 x 104 J/V mol -Eo implies nonspontaneous. +Eo implies spontaneous (would be a good battery!) Strongest Oxidizers are weakest reducers. As Eo reducing strength . As Eo oxidizing strength . DEPENDENCE OF CELL POTENTIAL ON CONCENTRATION Voltaic cells at NONstandard conditions: LeChatlier’s principle can be applied. An increase in the concentration of a reactant will favor the forward reaction and the cell potential will increase. The converse is also true! 0.0592 NERNST EQUATION: E = Eo - ---------- log Q @ 25C (298K) n As E declines with reactants converting to products, E eventually reaches zero. Zero potential means reaction is at equilibrium [dead battery]. Also, Q =K AND G = 0 as well. Example Problems: Electrochemistry 45. Using the equation: Sn + 2 Ag+ Sn2+ + 2 Ag a. Calculate the standard voltage of a cell involving the system above. b. What is the equilibrium constant for the system above? c. Calculate the voltage at 25°C of a cell involving the system above when the concentration of Ag+ is 0.0010 molar and that of Sn2+ is 0.20 molar. 46. When 300.0 milliliters of a solution of 0.200 molar AgNO3 is mixed with 100.0 milliliters of a 0.0500 molar CaCl2 solution, what is the concentration of silver ion after the reaction has gone to completion? d. Write the net cell reaction for a cell formed by placing a silver electrode in the solution remaining from the reaction above and connecting it to a standard hydrogen electrode. e. Calculate the voltage of a cell of this type in which the concentration of silver ion is 4X10-2 M. f. Calculate the value of the standard free energy change G°for the following half reaction: Ag+ (1M) + e- Ag° 47. When a dilute solution of H2SO4 is electrolyzed, O2(g) is produced at the anode and H2(g) is produced at the cathode. g. Write the balanced equations for the anode, cathode, and overall reactions that occur in this cell. h. Compute the coulombs of charge passed through the cell in 100. minutes at 10.0 amperes. i. What number of moles of O2 is produced by the cell when it is operated for 100. minutes at 10.0 amperes? 46 j. The standard enthalpy of formation of H2O(g) is -242 kilojoules per mole. How much heat is liberated by the complete combustion, at 298K and 1.00 atmospheres, of the hydrogen produced by the cell operated as in (c)? Nuclear Chemistry Types of decay Balancing Nuclear Reactions 6 2 4 3Li + 1H → 2He + ? Sr + 84Kr 116Pd + 88 Nuclear Fission and Fusion & Energy Example Problems Nuclear 48. The carbon isotope of mass 12 is stable. The carbon isotopes of mass 11 and mass 14 are unstable. However, the type of radioactivity decay is different for these two isotopes. CarbonB12 is not produced in either case. a. Identify a type of decay expected for carbon-11 and write the balanced nuclear reaction for that decay process. b. Identify the type of decay expected for carbon-14 and write the balanced nuclear reaction for that decay process. c. Gamma rays are observed during the radioactive decay of carbon-11. Why is it unnecessary to include the gamma rays in the radioactive decay equation of (a)? d. Explain how the amount of carbon-14 in a piece of wood can be used to determine when the tree died. 49. Explain each of the following in terms of nuclear models. e. The mass of an atom of 4He is less than the sum of the masses of 2 protons, 2 neutrons, and 2 electrons. f. Alpha radiation penetrates a much shorter distance into a piece of material than does beta radiation of the same energy. g. Products from a nuclear fission of a uranium atom such as 90Sr and 137Ce are highly radioactive and decay by emission of beta particles. h. Nuclear fusion requires large amounts of energy and to get started, whereas nuclear fission can occur spontaneously, although both processes release energy. 47 Practice AP Exam: Multiple Choice Questions Notes Note: For all questions involving solutions and/or chemical equations, assume that the system is in pure water at room temperature unless otherwise noted. Questions 1-4 refer to the following types of energy. (A) Activation energy (B) Free energy (C) Ionization energy (D) Kinetic energy (E) Lattice energy 1. The energy required to convert a ground-state atom in the gas phase to a gaseous positive ion 2. The energy change that occurs in the conversion of an ionic solid to widely separated gaseous ions 3. The energy in a chemical or physical change that is available to do useful work 4. The energy required to form the transition state in a chemical reaction Question 5-8 refer to atoms for which the occupied atomic orbitals shown below. 5. Represents an atom that is chemically unreactive 6. Represents an atom in an excited state 7. Represents an atom that has four valence electrons. 8. Represents an atom of a transition metal. Question 9-12 refer to aqueous solutions containing 1:1 mole ratios of the following pairs of substances. Assume all concentrations are 1 M. 48 (A) NH3 and NH4Cl (B) H3PO4 and NaH2PO4 (C) HCl and NaCl (D) NaOH and NH3 (E) NH3 and HC2H3O2 (acetic acid) 9. The solution with the lowest pH 10. The most nearly neutral solution 11. A buffer at a pH > 8 12. A buffer at a pH < 6 Questions 13-16 refer to the following descriptions of bonding in different types of solids. (A) Lattice of positive and negative ions held together by electrostatic forces. (B) Closely packed lattice with delocalized electrons throughout (C) Strong single covalent bonds with weak intermolecular forces. (D) Strong multiple covalent bonds (including bonds.) with weak intermolecular forces (E) Macromolecules held tgether with strong polar bonds. 13. Cesium chloride, CsCl (s) 14. Gold, Au(s) 15. Carbon dioxide, CO2(s) 16. Methane, CH4(s) Question 17-18 refer to the following elements. (A) Lithium (B) Nickel (C) Bromine (D) Uranium (E) Fluorine 17. Is a gas in its standard state at 298 K 18. Reacts with water to form a strong base Directions: Each of the questions or incomplete statements below is by five suggested answers or completions. Select the one that is best in each case and then fill in the corresponding oval on the answer sheet. 49 19. Which of the following best describes the role of the spark from the spark plug in an automobile engine? (A) The spark decreases the energy of activation for the slow step. (B) The spark increases the concentration of the volatile reactant. (C) The spark supplies some of the energy of activation for the combustion reaction. (D) The spark provides a more favorable activated complex for the combustion reaction. (E) The spark provides the heat of vaporization for the volatile hydrocarbon. 20. What mass of Au is produced when 0.0500 mol of Au2S3 is reduced completely with excess H2? (A) 9.85 g (B) 19.7 g (C) 24.5 g (D) 39.4 g (E) 48.9 g 21. When a solution of sodium chloride is vaporized in a flame, the color of the flame is (A) blue (B) yellow (C) green (D) violet (E) White 22. Of the following reaction, which involves the largest decrease in entropy? (A) CaCO3(s) ---> CaO(s) + CO2(g) (B) 2 CO(g) + O2(g) ---> 2 CO2 (C) Pb(NO3)3 + 2 KI ---> PbI2 + 2 KNO3 (D) C3H8 + O2 ---> 3 CO2 + 4 H2O (E) 4 La + 3 O2 ---> 2 La2O3 50 23. A hot-air balloon, shown right, rises. Which of the following is the best explanation for this observation? (A) The pressure on the walls of the balloon increases with increasing tempearature. (B) The difference in temperature between the air inside and outside the ballon produces convection currents. (C) The cooler air outside the balloon pushes in on the walls of the ballon. (D) The rate of diffusion of cooler air is less than that of warmer air. (E) The air density inside the ballon is less than that of the surrounding air. 24. The safest and most effective emergency procedure to treat an acid splash on skin is to do which of the following immediately? (A) Dry the affected area with paper towels (B) Sprinkle the affected area with powdered Na2SO4(s) (C) Flush the affected area with water and then with a dilute NaOH solution (D) Flush the affected area with water and then with a dilute NaHCO3 solution (E) Flush the affected area with water and then with a dilute vinegar solution 25. The cooling curve for a pure substance as it changes from a liquid to a solid is shown right. The solid and the liquid coexist at (A) point Q only (B) point R only (C) all points on the curve between Q and S (D) all points on the curve between R and T (E) no point on the curve . . .C10H12O4S(s) + . . O2(g) ---> . . . CO2(g) + . . . SO2(g) + . . . H2O(g) 51 26. When the equation above is balanced and all coefficients are reduced to their lowest whole-number terms, the coefficient for O2(g) is? (A) 6 (B) 7 (C) 12 (D) 14 (E) 28 27. Appropriate uses of a visible-light spectrophtometer include which of the following? I. Determining the concentration of a solution of Cu(NO3)2 II. Measuring the conductivity of a solution of KMnO4 III. Determining which ions are present in a solution that may contain Na+, Mg2+, Al3+ (A) I only (B) II only (C) III only (D) I and II only (E) I and III only 28. The melting point of MgO is higher than that of NaF. Explanations for this observation include which of the following? I. Mg2+ is more positively charged than Na+ II. O2¯ is more negatively charged than F¯ III. The O2¯ ion is smaller than the F¯ ion (A) II only (B) I and II only (C) I and III only (D) II and III only (E) I, II, and III 29. The organic compound represented above is an example of (A) an organic acid (B) an alcohol (C) an ether (D) an aldehyde (E) a ketone 52 H2Se(g) + 4 O2F2(g) ---> SeF6(g) + 2 HF(g) + 4 O2(g) 30. Which of the following is true regarding the reaction represented above? (A) The oxidation number of O does not change. (B) The oxidation number of H changes from -1 to +1. (C) The oxidation number of F changes from +1 to -1. (D) The oxidation number of Se changes from -2 to +6. (E) It is a disproportionation reaction for F. 31. If the temperature of an aqueous solution of NaCl is increased from 20 °C to 90 °C, which of the following statements is true? (A) The density of the solution remains unchanged. (B) The molarity of the solution remains unchanged. (C) The molality of the solution remains unchanged. (D) The mole fraction of solute decreases. (E) The mole fraction of solute increases. 32. Types of hybridization exhibited by the C atoms in propene, CH3CHCH2, include which of the following? I. sp II. sp2 III. sp3 (A) I only (B) III only (C) I and II only (D) II and III only (E) I, II, and III 33. A 1.0 L sample of an aqueous solution contains 0.10 mol of NaCl and 0.10 mol of CaCl2. What is the minimum number of moles of AgNO3 that must be added to the solution in order to precipitate all of the Cl¯ as AgCl(s) ? (Assume that AgCl is insoluble.) (A) 0.10 mol (B) 0.20 mol (C) 0.30 mol (D) 0.40 mol (E) 0.60 mol Questions 34-35 refer to an electrolytic cell that involves the following half-reaction. AlF63¯ + 3 e¯ ---> Al + 6F¯ 34. Which of the following occurs in the reaction? 53 (A) AlF 63¯ is reduced at the cathode. (B) Al is oxidized at the anode. (C) Aluminum is converted from the -3 oxidation state to the 0 oxidation state. (D) F¯ acts as a reducing agent. (E) F¯ is reduced at the cathode. 35. As steady current of 10 amperes in passed though an aluminum-production cell for 15 minutes. Which of the following is the correct expressions for calculating the number of grams of aluminum produced? (1 faraday = 96,500 coulombs) Initial Rate of Initial [NO] Initial [O2] Formation of NO2 Experiment (mol L¯1 (mol L¯1 (mol L¯1 s¯1) 1 0.10 0.10 2.5 x 10¯4 2 0.20 0.10 5.0 x 10¯4 3 0.20 0.40 8.0 x 10¯3 36. The initial-rate data in the table above were obtained for the reaction represented below. What is the experimental rate la for the reaction? (A) rate = k[NO] [O2] (B) rate = k[NO] [O2]2 (C) rate = k[NO]2 [O2] (D) rate = k[NO]2 [O2]2 (E) rate = k[NO] / [O2] 54 Ionization Energies for element X (kJ mol¯1) First Second Third Fourth Five 580 1815 2740 11600 14800 37. The ionization energies for element X are listed in the table above. On the basis of the data, element X is most likely to be (A) Na (B) Mg (C) Al (D) Si (E) P 38. A molecule or an ion is classified as a Lewis acid if it (A) accepts a proton from water (B) accepts a pair of electrons to form a bond (C) donates a pair of electrons to form a bond (D) donates a proton to water (E) has resonance Lewis electron-dot structures 55 39. The phase diagram for a pure substance is shown above. Which point on the diagram corresponds to the equilibrium between the solid and liquid phases at the normal melting point? (A) A (B) B (C) C (D) D (E) E 40. Of the following molecules, which has the largest dipole moment? (A) CO (B) CO2 (C) O2 (D) HF (E) F2 2 SO3 (g) <===> 2 SO2 (g) + O2 (g) 41. After the equilibrium represented above is established, some pure O2 (g) is injected into the reaction vessel at constant temperature. After equilibrium is reestablished, which of the following has a lower value cmpared to its value at the original equilibrium? (A) Keq for the reaction (B) The total pressure in the reaction vessel. (C) The amount of SO3 (g) in the reaction vessel. (D) The amount of O2 (g) in the reaction vessel. (E) The amount of SO2 (g) in the reaction vessel. . . . Li3N(s) + . . . H2O(l) ---> . . . Li+ (aq) + . . . OH¯(aq) + . . . NH3(g) 42. When the equation above is balanced and all coefficients reduced to lowest whole number terms, the coefficient for OH¯(aq) is (A) 1 (B) 2 (C) 3 (D) 4 (E) 6 43. A sample of 61.8 g of H3BO3, a weak acid is dissolved in 1,000 g of water to make a 1.0-molal solution. Which of the following would be the best procedure to determine to molarity of the solution? (Assume no additional information is available.) (A) Titration of the solution with standard acid (B) Measurement of the pH with a pH meter (C) Determination of the boiling point of the solution 56 (D) Measurement of the total volume of the solution (E) Measurement of the specific heat of the solution 44. A rigid metal tank contains oxygen gas. Which of the following applies to the gas in the tank when additional oxygen is added at constant temperature? (A) The volume of the gas increase. (B) The pressure of the gas decreases. (C) The average speed of the gas molecules remains th same. (D) The total number of gas molecules remains the same. (E) The average distance between the gas molecules increases. 45. What is the H+(aq) concentration in 0.05 M HCN (aq) ? (The Ka for HCN is 5.0 x 10¯10) (A) 2.5 x 10¯11 (B) 2.5 x 10¯10 (C) 5.0 x 10¯10 (D) 5.0 x 10¯6 (E) 5.0 x 10¯4 46. Which of the following occurs when excess concentrated NH3(aq) is mixed throughly with 0.1 M Cu(NO3)2(aq) ? (A) A dark red precipitate forms and settles out. (B) Separate layers of immiscible liquids form with a blue layer on top. (C) The color of the solution turns from light blue to dark blue. (D) Bubbles of ammonia gas form. (E) The pH of the solution decreases. 47. When hafnium metal is heated in an atmosphere of chlorine gas, the product of the reaction is found to contain 62.2 percent Hf by mass and 37.4 percent Cl by mass. What is the empirical formula for this compound? (A) HfCl (B) HfCl2 (C) HfCl3 (D) HfCl4 (E) Hf2Cl3 48. If 87.5 percent of a sample of pure 131I decays in 24 days, what is the half-life of 131I? (A) 6 days (B) 8 days (C) 12 days (D) 14 days (E) 21 days 57 49. Which of the following techniques is most appropriate for the recovery of solid KNO3 from an aqueous solution of KNO3? (A) Paper chromatography (B) Filtration (C) Titration (D) Electrolysis (E) Evaporation to dryness 50. In the periodic table, as the atomic number increases from 11 to 17, what happens to the atomic radius? (A) It remains constant. (B) It increases only. (C) It increases, then decreases. (D) It decreases only. (E) It decreases, then increases. 51. Which of the following is a correct interpretation of the results of Rutherford's experiments in which gold atoms were bombarded with alpha particles? (A) Atoms have equal numbers of positive and negative charges. (B) Electrons in atoms are agganged in shells. (C) Neutrons are at the center of an atom. (D) Neutrons and protrons in atoms have nearly equal mass. (E) The positive charge of an atom is concentrated in a small region. 52. Under which of the following sets of conditions could the most O2(g) be dissolved in H2O(l)? Pressure of O2(g) Temperature Above H2O(l) of H2O(l) (atm) °(C) A) 5.0 80 B) 5.0 20 C) 1.0 80 D) 1.0 20 E) 0.5 20 W(g) + X(g) --> Y(g) + Z(g) 53. Gases W and X react in a closed, rigid vessel to form gases Y and Z according to the equation above. The initial pressure of W(g) is 1.20 atm and that of X(g) is 1.60 atm. No Y(g) or Z(g) is initially present. The 58 experiment is carried out at constant temperature. What is the partial pressure of Z(g) when the partial pressure of W(g) has decreased to 1.0 atm? A) 0.20 atm B) 0.40 atm C) 1.0 atm D) 1.2 atm E) 1.4 atm 2NO(g) + O2(g) <===> 2 NO2(g) H < 0 54. Which of the following changes alone would cause a decrease in the value of Keq for the reaction represented above? A) Decreasing the temperature B) Increasing the temperature C) Decreasing the volume of the reaction vessel D) Increasing the volume of the reaction vessel E) Adding a catalyst 10 HI + 2 KMnO4 + 3 H2SO4 --> 5 I2 + 2 MnSO4 + K2SO4 + 8 H2O 55. According to the balanced equation above, how many moles of HI would be necessary to produce 2.5 mol of I2, starting with 4.0 mol of KMnO4 and 3.0 mol of H2SO4? A) 20 B) 10 C) 8.0 D) 5.0 E) 2.5 56. A yellow precipitate forms when 0.5 M NaI(aq) is added to a 0.5 M solution of which of the following ions? A) Pb2+(aq) B) Zn2+(aq) C) CrO42¯(aq) D) SO42¯(aq) E) OH¯(aq) M(s) + 3 Ag+(aq) --> 3 Ag(s) + M3+(aq) E = +2.46 V Ag+(aq) + e¯ --> Ag(s) E = +0.80 V 57. According to the information above, what is the standard reduction potential for the half-reaction M3+(aq) + 3 e¯ --> M(s)? 59 A) -1.66 V B) -0.06 V C) 0.06 V D) 1.66 V E) 3.26 V 58. On a mountaintop, it is observed that water boils at 90°C, not at 100°C as at sea level. This phenomenon occurs because on the mountaintop the A) equilibrium water vapor pressure is higher due to the higher atmospheric pressure B) equilibrium water vapor pressure is lower due to the higher atmospheric pressure C) equilibrium water vapor pressure equals the atmospheric pressure at a lower temperature D) water molecules have a higher average kinetic energy due to the lower atmospheric pressure E) water contains a greater concentration of dissolved gases 59. A 40.0 mL sample of 0.25 M KOH is added to 60.0 mL of 0.15 M Ba(OH)2. What is the molar concentration of OH¯(aq) in the resulting solution? (Assume that the volumes are additive) A) 0.10 M B) 0.19 M C) 0.28 M D) 0.40 M E) 0.55 M NH4NO3(s) --> N2O(g) + 2 H2O(g) 60. A 0.03 mol sample of NH4NO3(s) is placed in a 1 L evacuated flask, which is then sealed and heated. The NH4NO3(s) decomposes completely according to the balanced equation above. The total pressure in the flask measured at 400 K is closest to which of the following? ( The value of the gas constant, R, is 0.082 L atm mol¯1 K¯1) (A) 3 atm (B) 1 atm (C) 0.5 atm (D) 0.1 atm (E) 0.03 atm C2H4(g) + 3 O2(g) --> 2 CO2(g) + 2 H2O(g) 61. For the reaction of ethylene represented above, H is - 1,323 kJ. What is the value of H if the combustion produced liquid water H2O(l), rather than water vapor H2O(g)? (H for the phase change H2O(g) --> H2O(l) is 44 kJ mol¯1.) A) -1,235 kJ B) -1,279 kJ C) -1,323 kJ 60 D) -1,367 kJ E) -1,411 kJ HC2H3O2(aq) + CN¯(aq) <===> HCN(aq) + C2H3O2¯(aq) 62. The reaction represented above has an equilibrium constant equal to 3.7 x 104. Which of the following can be concluded from this information? A) CN¯(aq) is a stronger base than C2H3O2¯(aq) B) HCN(aq) is a stronger acid than HC2H3O2(aq) C) The conjugate base of CN¯(aq) is C2H3O2¯(aq) D) The equilibrium constant will increase with an increase in temperature. E) The pH of a solution containing equimolar amounts of CN¯(aq) and HC2H3O2(aq) is 7.0. 63. The graph above shows the results of a study of the reaction of X with a large excess of Y to yield Z. The concentrations of X and Y were measured over a period of time. According to the results, which of the following can be concluded about the rate of law for the reaction under the conditions studied? A) It is zero order in [X]. B) It is first order in [X]. C) It is second order in [X]. 61 D) It is the first order in [Y]. E) The overall order of the reaction is 2. 64. Equal numbers of moles of He(g), Ar(g), and Ne(g) are placed in a glass vessel at room temperature. If the vessel has a pinhole-sized leak, which of the following will be true regarding the relative values of the partial pressures of the gases remaining in the vessel after some of the gas mixture has effused? A) PHe < PNe < PAr B) PHe < PAr < PNe C) PNe < PAr < PHe D) PAr < PHe < PNe E) PHe = PAr = PNe 65. Which of the following compounds is NOT appreciably soluble in water but is soluble in dilute hydrochloric acid? A) Mg(OH)2(s) B) (NH4)2CO3(s) C) CuSO4(s) D) (NH4)2SO4(s) E) Sr(NO3)2(s) 66. When solid ammonium chloride, NH4Cl(s) is added to water at 25 °C, it dissolves and the temperature of the solution decreases. Which of the following is true for the values of H and S for the dissolving process? H S A) Postive Positive B) Positive Negative C) Positive Equal to zero D) Negative Positive E) Negative Negative 67. What is the molar solubility in water of Ag2CrO4? (The Ksp for Ag2CrO4 is 8 x 10¯12.) A) 8 x 10¯12 M B) 2 x 10¯12 M C) (4 x 10¯12 M)1/2 D) (4 x 10¯12 M)1/3 E) (2 x 10¯12 M)1/3 68. In which of the following processes are covalent bonds broken? 62 A) I2(s) --> I2(g) B) CO2(s) --> CO2(g) C) NaCl(s) --> NaCl(l) D) C(diamond) --> C(g) E) Fe(s) --> Fe(l) 69. What is the final concentration of barium ions, [Ba2+], in solution when 100. mL of 0.10 M BaCl2(aq) is mixed with 100. mL of 0.050 M H2SO4(aq)? A) 0.00 M B) 0.012 M C) 0.025 M D) 0.075 M E) 0.10 M 70. When 100 mL of 1.0 M Na3PO4 is mixed with 100 mL of 1.0 M AgNO3, a yellow precipitate forms and [Ag+] becomes negligibly small. Which of the following is a correct listing of the ions remaining in solution in order of increasing concentration? A) [PO43¯] < [NO3¯] < [Na+] B) [PO43¯] < [Na+] < [NO3¯] C) [NO3¯] < [PO43¯] < [Na+] D) [Na+] < [NO3¯] < [PO43¯] E) [Na+] < [PO43¯] < [NO3¯] 71. In a qualitative ananlysis for the presence of Pb2+, Fe2+, and Cu2+ ions in a aqueous solution, which of the following will allow the separation of Pb2+ from the other ions at room temperature? A) Adding dilute Na2S(aq) solution B) Adding dilute HCl(aq) solution C) Adding dilute NaOH(aq) solution D) Adding dilute NH3(aq) solution E) Adding dilute HNO3(aq) solution 72. After completing an experiment to determine gravimetrically the percentage of water in a hydrate, a student reported a value of 38 percent. The correct value for the percentage of water in the hydrate is 51 percent. Which of the following is the most likely explanation for this difference? A) Strong initial heating caused some of the hydrate sample to spatter out of the crucible. B) The dehydrated sample absorbed moisture after heating. C) The amount of the hydrate sample used was too small. D) The crucible was not heated to constant mass before use. E) Excess heating caused the dehydrated sample to decompose. 73. The volume of distilled water that should be added to 10.0 mL of 6.00 M HCl(aq) in order to prepare a 0.500 M HCl(aq) solution is approximately 63 A) 50.0 mL B) 60.0 mL C) 100. mL D) 110. mL E) 120. mL 74. Which of the following gases deviates most from ideal behavior? A) SO2 B) Ne C) CH4 D) N2 E) H2 75. Which of the following pairs of liquids forms the solution that is most ideal (most closely follows Raoult's law)? A) C8H18(l) and H2O(l) B) CH3CH2CH2OH(l) and H2O(l) C) CH3CH2CH2OH(l) and C8H18(l) D) C6H14(l) and C8H18(l) E) H2SO4(l) and H2O(l) Practice Test Answers Key Percent Correct Key Percent Correct Key Percent Correct 1. C 74 26. C 74 51. E 59 2. E 48 27. A 16 52. B 31 3. B 42 28. B 53 53. A 46 4. A 71 29. E 26 54. B 35 5. D 75 30. D 75 55. D 69 6. A 78 31. C 21 56. A 32 7. C 55 32. D 38 57. A 44 64 8. E 83 33. C 54 58. C 39 9. C 52 34. A 42 59. C 28 10. E 41 35. C 43 60. A 22 11. A 33 36. B 52 61. E 31 12. B 35 37. C 35 62. A 31 13. A 60 38. B 38 63. B 34 14. B 64 39. C 71 64. A 65 15. D 65 40. D 54 65. A 35 16. C 61 41. E 65 66. A 31 17. E 70 42. C 71 67. E 25 18. A 67 43. D 60 68. D 54 19. C 73 44. C 54 69. C 31 20. B 55 45. D 40 70. A 34 21. B 33 46. C 22 71. B 32 22. E 68 47. C 50 72. B 25 23. E 67 48. B 42 73. D 33 24. D 20 49. E 53 74. A 48 25. C 57 50. D 62 75. D 33 65 Advanced Placement Chemistry Practice Free Response Questions 1) The acid ionization constant, Ka, for propanoic acid, C2H5COOH, is 1.3 x 10¯5. (a) Calculate the hydrogen ion concentration, [H+], in a 0.20-molar solution of propanoic acid. (b) Calculate the percentage of propanoic acid molecules that are ionized in the solution in (a). (c) What is the ratio of the concentration of propanoate ion, C2H5COO¯, to that of propanoic acid in a buffer solution with a pH of 5.20 ? (d) In a 100-milliliter sample of a different buffer solution, the propanoic acid concentration is 0.50-molar and the sodium propanoate concentration is 0.50-molar. To this buffer solution, 0.0040 mole of solid NaOH is added. Calculate the pH of the resulting solution. 2) The molecular formula of a hydrocarbon is to be determined by analyzing its combustion products and investigating its colligative properties. (a) The hydrocarbon burns completely, producing 7.2 grams of water and 7.2 liters of CO2 at standard conditions. (b) Calculate the mass in grams of O2 required for the complete combustion of the sample of the hydrocarbon described in (a). (c) The hydrocarbon dissolves readily in CHCl3. The freezing point of a solution prepared by mixing 100. grams of CHCl3 and 0.600 gram of the hydrocarbon is -64.0 °C. The molal freezing-point depression constant of CHCl3 is 4.68 °C / molal and its normal freezing point is -63.5 °C. Calculate the molecular weight of the hydrocarbon. (d) What is the molecular formula of the hydrocarbon? 3) 66 2 ClO2(g) + F2(g) ---> 2 ClO2F(g) The following results were obtained when the reaction represented above was studied at 25 °C. (a) Write the rate law expression for the reaction above. (b) Calculate the numerical value of the rate constant and specify the units. (c) In experiment 2, what is the initial rate of decrease of [F2]? (d) Which of the following reaction mechanisms is consistent with the rate law developed in (a)? Justify your choice. I. ClO2 + F2 <---> ClO2F2 (fast) ClO2F2 ---> ClO2F + F (slow) ClO2 + F ---> ClO2F (fast) II. F2 ---> 2 F (slow) 2 (ClO2 + F ---> ClO2F) (fast) 4) Give the formulas to show the reactants and the products for FIVE of the following chemical reactions. Each of the reactions occurs in aqueous solution unless otherwise indicated. Represent substances in solution as ions if the substance is extensively ionized. Omit formulas for any ions or molecules that are unchanged by the reaction. In all cases a reaction occurs. You need not balance. Example: A strip of magnesium is added to a solution of silver nitrate. Mg + Ag+ ---> Mg2+ + Ag (a) Solid aluminum oxide is added to a solution of sodium hydroxide. (b) Solid calcium oxide is heated in the presence of sulfur trioxide gas. (c) Equal volumes of 0.1-molar sulfuric acid and 0.1-molar potassium hydroxide are mixed. (d) Calcium metal is heated strongly in nitrogen gas. 67 (e) Solid copper(II) sulfide is heated strongly in oxygen gas. (f) A concentrated solution of hydrochloric acid is added to powdered manganese dioxide and gently heated. (g) A concentrated solution of ammonia is added to a solution of zinc iodide. (h) A solution of copper(II) sulfate is added to a solution of barium hydroxide. 5) BCl3(g) + NH3(g) <---> Cl3BNH3(s) The reaction represented above is a reversible reaction. (a) Predict the sign of the entropy change, S, as the reaction proceeds to the right. Explain your prediction. (b) If the reaction spontaneously proceeds to the right, predict the sign of the enthalpy change, H. Explain your prediction. (c) The direction in which the reaction spontaneously proceeds changes as the temperature is increased above a specific temperature. Explain. (d) What is the value of the equilibrium constant at the temperature referred to in (c); that is, the specific temperature at which the direction of the spontaneous reaction changes? Explain. 6) 68 An experiment is to be performed to determine the molecular mass of a volatile liquid by the vapor density method. The equipment shown above is to be used for the experiment. A barometer is also available. (a) What data are needed to calculate the molecular mass of the liquid? (b) What procedures are needed to obtain these data? (c) List the calculations necessary to determine the molecular mass. (d) If the volatile liquid contains nonvolatile impurities, how would the calculated value of the molecular mass be affected? Explain your reasoning. 7) Explain each of the following. (a) When an aqueous solution of NaCl is electrolyzed, Cl2(g) is produced at the anode, but no Na(s) is produced at the cathode. (b) The mass of Fe(s) produced when 1 faraday is used to reduce a solution of FeSO4 is 1.5 times the mass of Fe(s) produced when 1 faraday is used to reduce a solution of FeCl3. Zn + Pb2+ (1-molar) ---> Zn2+ (1-molar) + Pb (c) The cell that utilized the reaction above has a higher potential when [Zn2+] is decreased and [Pb2+] held constant, but a lower potential when [Pb2+] is decreased and [Zn2+] is held constant. 69 (d) The cell that utilizes the reaction given in (c) has the same cell potential as another cell in which [Zn2+] and [Pb2+] are each 0.1-molar. 8) Experimental data provide the basis for interpreting differences in properties of substances. Account for the differences in properties given in Tables 1 and 2 above in terms of the differences in structure and bonding in each of the following pairs. (a) MgCl2 and SiCl4 (b) MgCl2 and MgF2 (c) F2 and Br2 (d) F2 and N2 9) Explain each of the following in terms of nuclear models. (a) The mass of an atom of 4He is less than the sum of the masses of 2 protons, 2 neutrons, and 2 electrons. (b) Alpha radiation penetrates a much shorter distance into a piece of material than does beta radiation of the same energy. (c) Products from a nuclear fission of a uranium atom such as 90Sr and 137Ce are highly radioactive and decay by emission of beta particles. (d) Nuclear fusion requires large amounts of energy to get started, whereas nuclear fission can occur spontaneously, although both processes release energy. 70 Copyright © 1991 by College Entrance Examination Board and Educational Testing Service. All rights reserved. Advanced Placement Chemistry Practice Free Response Scoring Guide Notes [square root] applies to the numbers enclosed in parenthesis immediately following All simplifying assumptions are justified within 5%. One point deduction for a significant figure or math error, applied only once per problem. No credit earned for numerical answer without justification. 1) a) three points Ka = ( [H+] [C3H5O2¯] ) ÷ [HC3H5O2] 1.3 x 10¯5 = x2 ÷ 0.20 x = [H+] = 1.6 x 10¯3 71 b) one point % dissoc. = [H+] ÷ [HC3H5O2] = 1.6 x 10¯3 ÷ 0.20 = 0.80% c) two points [H+] = antilog (- 5.20) = 6.3 x 10¯6 1.3 x 10¯5 = (6.3 x 10¯6) x ([C3H5O2¯] ÷ [HC3H5O2] [C3H5O2¯] ÷ [HC3H5O2] = 1.3 x 10¯5 ÷ 6.3 x 10¯6 = 2.1 An alternate solution for (c) based on the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation. pH = pKa + log ([base] ÷ [acid]) 5.20 = 4.89 + log ([C3H5O2¯] ÷ [HC3H5O2]) log ([C3H5O2¯] ÷ [HC3H5O2]) = 0.31 [C3H5O2¯] ÷ [HC3H5O2] = 2.0 d) six points 0.10 L x 0.35 mol/L = 0.035 mol HC3H5O2 0.10 L x 0.50 mol/L = 0.050 mol C3H5O2¯ 0.035 mol - 0.004 mol = 0.031 mol HC3H5O2 0.050 mol + 0.004 mol = 0.054 mol C3H5O2¯ 1.3 x 10¯5 = [H+] x [(0.054 mol/0.1 L) ÷ (0.031 mol/0.1 L)] Can use 0.54 and 0.31 instead. [H+] = 7.5 x 10¯6 pH = 5.13 An alternate solution for (d) based on the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation. 72 use [ ]s or moles of HC3H5O2 and C3H5O2¯ pH = pKa + log (0.054 / 0.031) = 4.89 + 0.24 = 5.13 2) a) three points 7.2 g H2O ÷ 18.0 g/mol = 0.40 mol H2O 0.40 mol H2O x (2 mol H / 1 mol H2O) = 0.80 mol H 7.2 L CO2 ÷ 22.4 L/mol = 0.32 mol CO2 0.32 mol CO2 x (1 mol C / 1 mol CO2) = 0.32 mol C OR n = PV ÷ RT = [(1 atm) (7.2 L)] ÷ [(0.0821 L atm mol¯1 K1) (273 K)] = 0.32 mol CO2 0.80 mol H ÷ 0.32 = 2.5 0.32 mol C ÷ 0.32 = 1 2.5 x 2 = 5 mol H 1 x 2 = 2 mol C empirical formula = C2H5 b) two points mol O2 for combustion = mol CO2 + 1/2 mol H2O = 0.32 + 0.20 = 0.52 mol O2 0.52 mol O2 x 32 g/mol = 17 g O2 alternate approach for mol O2 from balanced equation C2H5 + 13/4 O2 ---> 2 CO2 + 5/2 H2O other ratio examples: 1, 6.5 ---> 4, 5 0.25, 1.625 ---> 1, 1.25 73 mol O2 = 0.40 mol H2O x (13/4 mol O2 / 5/2 mol H2O) = 0.52 mol O2 Note: starting moles of C2H5 = 0.16 mol C2H5 c) three points MM stands for molar mass. T = (Kf (g/MM)) / kg of solvent 0.5 °:C = ((4.68 °:C kg mol¯:1) x (0.60 g / MM)) / 0.1 kg MM = (4.68 x 0.60) / (0.5 x 0.1) = 56 or 6 x 101 an alternate solution for (c) molality = 0.5 °:C / (4.68 0.5 °:C/m) = 0.107 m mol solute =( 0.107 mol / kg solvent) x 0.100 kg solvent = 0.0107 mol MM = 0.60 g / 0.0107 mol = 56 or 6 x 101 d) one point (56 g/mol of cmpd) / (29 g/mol of empirical formula) = 1.9 empirical formula per mol OR 6 x 101 / 29 = 2.1 empirical formula times 2 equals molecular formula = C4H10 3) a) four points rate = k [ClO2] [F2] one point - rate equation form, k one point - F2 order two points - ClO2 order 74 b) two points k = rate / ([ClO2] [F2]) = 2.4 x 10¯3 mol L¯1 sec¯1 / ((0.010 mol/L) (0.10 mol/L)) = 2.4 L mol¯1 sec¯1 one point - value consistent with equation in (a) one point - units consistent with equation in (a) c) one point 2 ClO2 + F2 ---> 2 ClO2F - d[F2] / dt = 1/2 (d[ClO2F] / dt) = 1/2 (9.6 x 10¯3) = 4.8 x 10¯3 mol L¯1 sec¯1 d) two points mechanism I defense: slow step is first order three equations add to proper stoichiometry Note: if ClO2 order in rate equation of part (a) is zero, mechanism II must be chosen to obtain credit. 4) a) Al2O3 + OH¯ ---> Al(OH)4¯ OR Al2O3 + H2O ---> Al(OH)3 (Personal note by John Park: I think the H2O in the second equation above comes from the fact that the NaOH concentration was not specified in the original problem. For example, suppose [OH¯] were 10¯12 M. Then the second equation becomes the predominate one.) 75 b) CaO + SO3 ---> CaSO4 c) H+ + OH¯ ---> H2O d) Ca + N2 ---> Ca3N2 e) CuS + O2 ---> Cu + SO2 (also CuO, Cu2O) f) H+ + Cl¯ + MnO2 ---> Mn2+ + Cl2 + H2O (one pt. for either redox product, two pts. for all three products) g) Zn2+ + NH3 ---> Zn(NH3)42+ OR Zn2+ + NH3 + H2O ---> Zn(OH)2 + NH4+ h) Cu2+ + SO42¯ + Ba2+ + OH¯ ---> Cu(OH)2 + BaSO4 A rare double precipitation. Partial credit was allowed for some alternate solutions, e.g. Cu2+ + OH¯ ---> Cu(OH)2 Ba2+ + SO42¯ ---> BaSO4 5) a) two points S will be negative. The system becomes more ordered as two gases form a solid. b) two points H must be negative. For the reaction to be spontaneous, G must be negative, so H must be more negative than -TS is positive. c) two points As T increases, -TS increases. Since S is negative, the positive -TS term will eventually exceed H (which is negative), making G positive. (In the absence of this, G = H - TS and general discussion of the effect of T and S gets 1 point.) 76 d) two points The equilibrium constant is 1. The system is at equilibrium at this temperature with an equal tendency to go in either direction. OR G = 0 at equilibrium so K = 1 in G = -RT ln K (In the absence of these, G = -RT ln K gets 1 point). The above concludes the AP scoring standards published in 1991. The following is simply alternate ways of answering which the AP readers may or may not have given full credit to. a) The amount of entropy goes down, S is negative. b) G = H - TS. If S is negative, then H must also be negative to get a negative G. c) Let us say G is positive when H is positive and S is positive. As T goes up - TS becomes more negative until it makes G (which equals H - TS) become negative. d) At the temperature when the direction changes, the rate forward = the rate reverse. Since K = kf / kr, this equals 1. 6) a) two points Mass of vaporized liquid (or liquid or substance) two of three in parts a or b atmospheric pressure volume of flask temperature of vapor (water) b) three points Procedure for: mass - the mass difference between flask + air and flask + vaporized liquid volume - volume of flask by filling with H2O and then using graduated cylinder for measuring. Flask containing liquid is heated until liquid disappears 77 c) one point mass ÷ mole where mole is determined from PV = nRT d) two points Molar mass is too high because the non-volatile impurity contribute additional mass (but insignificant volume). 7) a) two points Cl¯ is more easily oxidized than H2O H2O is more easily oxidized than Na+ no 2nd pt is awarded for H+ ---> H2 unless H2O is implied. no 2nd pt for Na(s) + H2O ---> Na + OH¯ unless H2 is indicated. b) two points Fe2+ requires 2 Faraday / mol Fe (s) or 1Faraday ---> 1/ 2 mol Fe(s) Fe3+ require 3 Faraday / mol Fe (s) or 1 Faraday ---> 1/3 mol Fe (s) for equal numbers of Faraday (1/2 : 1/3 as 1.5 : 1) (Or inverse relationship is clear) no 2nd point unless flow of e¯ to mass (moles) is clear and logically correct c) two points Le Châtelier's argument if [Zn2+ ] goes down; reaction shifts right, i.e. cell potential goes up if [Pb2+ ] goes down; reaction shifts left, i.e. cell potential goes down OR 78 Nernst Equation argument E = E° - RT ln Q with Q = [Zn2+ ] / [Pb2+ ] if [Zn2+ ] goes down Q < 1, therefore E > E° if [Pb2+ ] goes down Q > 1, therefore E < E° reasoning must indicate correct usage of equation d) two points [Zn2+ ] / [Pb2+ ] does not change; regardless of values; i.e. E=E° OR [Zn2+ ] / [Pb2+ ] = 1 so ln Q = 0; i.e. E=E° no pt is awarded for just stating concentrations are equal ratio or proportion concept is required for 2nd point 8) a) three points MgCl2 is ionic and SiCl4 is covalent. The electrostatic, interionic forces in MgCl2 are much stronger than the intermolecular (dispersion) forces in SiCl4 and lead to a higher melting point. Molten MgCl2 contains mobile ions that conduct electricity whereas molten SiCl4 is molecular, not ionic, and has no conductivity. b) two points MgF2 has a higher melting point than MgCl2 because the smaller F¯ ions and smaller interionic distances in MgF2 cause stronger forces and higher melting point. c) one point The bond length in Br2 is larger than in F2 because the Br atom is larger than the F atom. d) two points The bond length in N2 is less than in F2 because the N-N bond is triple and the F-F is single. Triple bonds are stonger and therefore shorter than single bonds. 79 9) a) two points When nucleons are combined in nuclei, some of their mass is converted to energy (binding energy) which is released and stabilizes the nucleus. (Key concepts: mass defect; binding energy) b) two points Alpha particles have a greater mass than beta particles. Thus their speed (penetrating potential) is less. (Alternate explanation could be based on charge.) c) two points The neutron/proton ratio in Sr-90 and Cs-137 is too large and they emit beta particles (converting neutrons to protons) to lower this ratio. d) two points Large amounts of energy are needed to initiate fusion reactions in order to overcome the repulsive forces between the positively charged nuclei. Large amounts of energy are not required to cause large nuclei to split. Copyright © 1991 by College Entrance Examination Board and Educational Testing Service. All rights reserved. 80