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WORKBOOK ANSWERS AQA AS/A-level Chemistry Inorganic and organic chemistry 1 This Answers document provides suggestions for some of the possible answers that might be given for the questions asked in the workbook. They are not exhaustive and other answers may be acceptable, but they are intended as a guide to give teachers and students feedback. Inorganic chemistry Topic 1 Periodicity Classification Physical properties of period 3 elements 1 C Sulfur has 16 electrons and its electron configuration is 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 2p4. Its outer electrons are in the p-subshell. A p-block element has its outer electrons in a p-subshell. 2 D Across the third period the atomic radius decreases, the ionisation energy increases, the melting point increases to Si and then decreases. The correct trend is D — the nuclear charge is increasing and so there is similar shielding as the electron is being removed from the same shell. Hence there is a smaller atomic radius, as the outermost electron is held closer to the nucleus by the greater nuclear charge because there is an increase in nuclear attraction. 3 S8 molecules have a larger Mr than Cl2 molecules. Hence there are stronger van der Waals forces between the molecules and so they are held more tightly together and need more energy to break. 4 Silicon is a giant covalent structure and more energy is needed to break the many strong covalent bonds than is needed to break the weaker metallic bonds in aluminium. Notice that in this answer it is important that you mention the type of bonding in each element, and compare their strength. © Alyn G. McFarland and Nora Henry 2015 Philip Allan for Hodder Education 1 Topic 2 Group 2, the alkaline earth metals B 1 2 a Ba2+ CO32− The first ionisation energy, melting point and solubility of sulfates decrease down the group. b Barium is a very reactive element. c Ba(s) + 2H2O(l) → Ba(OH)2(aq) + H2(g) Always include brackets in Ba(OH)2 , BaOH2 is incorrect. Remember it is an aqueous solution. d MgSO4 The solubility of sulfates decreases down the group. Hence, the most soluble sulfate is magnesium sulfate. Remember to work out the formula correctly: the magnesium ion is Mg2+ and the sulfate ion is SO42− so the formula is MgSO4. e It is taken as a ‘barium meal’ as it absorbs X-rays and allows the gut to be seen. It is insoluble and so, although toxic, safe to use. f In calcium the delocalised electrons are closer to cations, as the cation has fewer electron shells and is smaller. Hence there is a stronger attraction between the cations and the delocalised electrons and stronger metallic bonding. In this case the converse argument is also accepted — barium has more electron shells and so the attraction between the delocalised electrons and the cation is smaller and so it takes less energy to pull atoms apart and for the solid to melt. © Alyn G. McFarland and Nora Henry 2015 Philip Allan for Hodder Education 2 Topic 3 Group 7, the halogens Trends in properties Uses of chlorine and chlorate(I) Tests for ions A 1 The question says dilute sulfuric acid: do not get confused with concentrated sulfuric acid which reacts differently from dilute sulfuric acid. The dilute sulfuric acid will only react with the carbonate. 2 D 3 Dissolve in water Sodium chloride — white ppt which is soluble in dilute ammonia Sodium bromide — cream ppt which is insoluble in dilute ammonia 4 a NaCl + H2SO4 → NaHSO4 + HCl b Br− ions are bigger than Cl− ions Therefore Br− ions more easily oxidised / lose an electron more easily. ci Purple vapour / gas (white solid goes to) black or black-grey or black-purple solid Bad egg smell (any two) c ii The iodide ion(s) lose (an) electron(s) 2I− → I2 + 2e– Note that this question needs answered in terms of electrons; oxidation numbers are not acceptable. The I− changes to I by losing an electron. c iii Oxidation state of S changes from +6 to −2 H2SO4 + 8H+ + 8e– → H2S + 4H2O H2SO4 → H2S Balance the oxygen by adding H2O. H2SO4 → H2S + 4H2O Balance the hydrogen by adding H+ to the left-hand side. © Alyn G. McFarland and Nora Henry 2015 Philip Allan for Hodder Education 3 H2SO4 + 8H+ → H2S + 4H2O Write down the charge on each side of the equation. LHS = + 8 RHS = 0 Add 8 electrons to the LHS to balance the charge. H2SO4 + 8H+ + 8e– → H2S + 4H2O 5 Cl2 + 2I− → 2Cl− + I2 a Solution changes from colourless to brown. Remember that all group 1 and group 2 halides in solution are colourless. Iodine in solution is brown. 2NaOH + Cl2 → NaCl + NaClO + H2O bi Products are sodium chloride, sodium chlorate(I) and water b ii Cl2(g) + H2O(l) ⇌ HCl + HClO Products are hydrochloric acid and chloric(I) acid The oxidation numbers are essential in the names and the equilibrium arrows are essential in the second equation. To work out the oxidation number of chlorine in NaClO, it is a compound so the sum of the oxidation numbers is zero, Na has oxidation number +1 and O is −2. Hence 0 = oxidation no. Na(+1) + oxidation no. Cl + oxidation no. O (−2) 0 = +1 + oxidation no. Cl −2 0 + 2 −1 = + 1 = oxidation no. Cl Exam-style questions 1 B 2 B 3 a Mg + 2H2O → Mg(OH)2 + H2 Magnesium reacts with cold water to give magnesium hydroxide — note that magnesium oxide is only produced if the magnesium reacts with steam. b Mg(OH)2 + 2HCl → MgCl2 + H2O Used in antacid / indigestion tablets ci TiCl4 + 2Mg → Ti + 2MgCl2 Titanium is reduced The oxidation number of titanium decreases from +4 to 0. A decrease in oxidation number means reduction. © Alyn G. McFarland and Nora Henry 2015 Philip Allan for Hodder Education 4 When working out the oxidation number of titanium, remember that the sum of the oxidation numbers in a compound equals zero and the oxidation number of chlorine is −1. Hence 0 = oxidation no. of titanium + 4 × oxidation no. of Cl (−1) 0 = Ti − 4 Ti = +4 You must include the signs for oxidation numbers. c ii Mg + H2SO4 → MgSO4 + H2 The magnesium sulfate is soluble and the Ti solid can be filtered off. This reaction is an acid and metal reaction, producing a salt and hydrogen. Hydrogen is diatomic. 4 a A Bromide Ag + + Br− → AgBr B Sulfate Ba2+ + SO42− → BaSO4 C Chloride Ag+ + Cl− → AgCl b To remove any carbonate ions which may interfere with the test. c Magnesium / calcium © Alyn G. McFarland and Nora Henry 2015 Philip Allan for Hodder Education 5 Organic chemistry Topic 1 Introduction to organic chemistry Nomenclature 1 a pentane b 1,3-dichloropropane c 2-chloropropane d 2-methylpropane e 2-chloro-2,3,3-trimethylpentane f 3,3-dichloro-2,2,4-trimethylhexane Note that the longest chain includes the C2H5 and that chloro is alphabetically before methyl (ignore the tri). g 2-bromo-1-chloro-3-ethylpentane h propan-2-ol i propanal j pentan-3-one k butanoic acid l propene m but-2-ene n 3-bromobutanoic acid o propan-1-ol p 2-methylpropene q 2,2-dimethylpropane r buta-1,3-diene 2 a © Alyn G. McFarland and Nora Henry 2015 Philip Allan for Hodder Education 6 b c d e 3 a CnH2n+1OH b CnH2n+2 c CnH2n a C5H12 C5H12 b C4H8O2 C2H4O a butane alkane b but-1-ene alkene c butanoic acid carboxylic acid d butan-1-ol alcohol e pentan-2-one ketone f propan-2-ol alcohol 4 5 © Alyn G. McFarland and Nora Henry 2015 Philip Allan for Hodder Education 7 Isomerism Exam-style questions B 1 The criteria for E–Z isomers are that a carbon=carbon double bond must be present and each carbon in the double bond must be attached to two different groups. B has a C=C and on each carbon there is an H and a CH3 (i.e. 2 different groups). B 2 3-methylbut-1-ene has five carbon atoms. 3 C 4 A There are 5 carbons in the longest chain — pent. The methyl group is at position two and the double bond between carbon 1 and 2. Remember to choose the smallest combination of numbers and to count both the side group and double bond from the same end of the chain. 5 a C=C OH b 6 c Lack of rotation about the C=C d Structural isomers are compounds with the same molecular formula but different structural formulae. The right-hand carbon of the double bond has a C attached which has a higher atomic number than H so the CH2Br has higher priority. The left-hand carbon of the double bond has a carbon attached in each group, so consider the atoms one bond further away. C H H from the propyl group are attached to one carbon and have higher atomic number than the H H H attached to the carbon of the methyl group. The propyl group has priority. The highest priority group –CH2CH2CH3 and –CH2Br are on the same side so it is a Z isomer. There are 6 carbons in the longest chain — hex, with a bromo on carbon one, a methyl on carbon 3 and the double bond on carbon 2. (Z)-1-bromo-3-methylhex-3-ene. © Alyn G. McFarland and Nora Henry 2015 Philip Allan for Hodder Education 8 Topic 2 Alkanes Fractional distillation of crude oil Modification of alkanes by cracking 1 Allow CxHy to be the hydrocarbon and then write down the formula of the products using the information in the question: CxHy → C2H4 + C4H8 + C8H18 Then insert the number of moles given in the question: CxHy → 2C2H4 + C4H8 + C8H18 Remember that the equation must balance so the number of the carbons and hydrogens on both sides must equal. x = (2 × 2) + 4 + 8 = 16 y = (2 × 4) + 8 + 18 = 34 C16H34 → 2C2H4 + C4H8 + C8H18 High pressure High temperature (it is thermal cracking) 2 a C8H18 → C2H4 + C3H6 + C3H8 Propane Zeolite b Petroleum / crude oil Fractional distillation c Octane and propane are both molecular covalent structures, in which the molecules are held together by van der Waals forces. Boiling these substances means breaking the van der Waals forces. Octane has a higher Mr and so more electrons and stronger van der Waals forces. Octane has a higher Mr and more electrons. Hence it has stronger van der Waals forces between the molecules. © Alyn G. McFarland and Nora Henry 2015 Philip Allan for Hodder Education 9 Combustion of alkanes Chlorination of alkanes 1 C To answer this question you need to realise that alkanes combust completely to produce carbon dioxide and water. Then write the balanced symbol equation. Butane has four carbons and its formula is C4H10. C4H10 + 6.5O2 → 4CO2 + 5H2O To balance the equation 6.5 moles of oxygen are required. 2 B 3 Propane C3H8 Butane C4H10 4 They have the same general formula. They show similar chemical properties. They show a gradual change in physical properties from propane to butane. (Any two) 5 CnH2n+2 6 They contain carbon and hydrogen atoms only They only contains single C–C bonds — there are no C=C bonds. 7 8 Propane Because it has a lower boiling point as it has lower Mr and weaker van der Waals forces between its molecules C2H6 + 3½O2 → 2CO2 + 3H2O or 2C2H6 + 7O2 → 4CO2 + 6H2O Note that complete combustion results in the formation of carbon dioxide and water. 9 C4H10 + 4.5 O2 → 4CO + 5H2O 10 Sulfur dioxide SO2 + CaCO3 → CaSO3 Neutralisation © Alyn G. McFarland and Nora Henry 2015 Philip Allan for Hodder Education 10 The major impurity present in most fuels is sulfur. When sulfur burns it produces sulfur dioxide S + O2 → SO2 which is a toxic acidic gas. On passing through calcium carbonate the sulfur dioxide is neutralised. The pressure and high temperature in the combustion engine causes the normally unreactive nitrogen in the air to react with oxygen / N2 + O2 → 2NO2 11 Harm caused — React with unburned hydrocarbons to produce smog / Dissolve in water to form acid rain. Incomplete combustion in very limited oxygen can produce carbon particles. Carbon particles exacerbate asthma. Note that nitrogen(IV) oxide is NO2 where the oxidation number of nitrogen is +4. Exam-style questions 1 C 2 D A radical has an unpaired electron. In CH4 all electrons are used in bonding so it cannot have an unpaired electron. 3 a C3H8 + Br2 → C3H8Br + HBr UV light / high temp b 2-bromopropane c Initiation: Br2 → 2Br• Propagation: Br• + CH3CH2CH3 → CH3CH2CH2• + HBr or CH3CH2CH2• + Br2 →CH3CH2CH2Br + Br• Termination: CH3CH2CH2• + CH3CH2CH2• → CH3CH2CH2CH2CH2CH3 or Br• + Br• → Br2 CH3CH2CH2• + Br• → CH3CH2CH2Br © Alyn G. McFarland and Nora Henry 2015 Philip Allan for Hodder Education 11 Be careful with the position of the radical dot — it must be to the side or above of the last carbon CH3CH2CH2• — if it is beside the CH3 or in the middle of the chain it is incorrect. 4 a Molecular formula C10H22 Empirical formula C5H11 Alkanes have the general formula CnH2n+2. n is the number of carbon atoms so n = 10. Hence 2n + 2 = 22 so decane is C10H22. The empirical formula is the simplest ratio of atoms so it is C5H11. b Fractional distillation c C10H22 + 10½O2 → 10CO + 11H2O d C8H18 + 25NO → 8CO2 + 12½N2 + 9H2O Platinum or rhodium e CH3SH + 3O2 → CO2 + 2H2O + SO2 © Alyn G. McFarland and Nora Henry 2015 Philip Allan for Hodder Education 12 Topic 3 Halogenoalkanes Nucleophilic substitution and elimination Ozone depletion C 1 This is an elimination reaction in which HBr is removed forming an alkene. B 2 A nucleophile is a lone pair donor. CH4 does not have any lone pairs and cannot act as a nucleophile. 3 a 1-iodobutane The C–I bond has the lowest bond enthalpy / strongest bond. Bond enthalpy decreases down the group with increasing size of the halogen atom. b CH3CH2CH2CH2Br + NaOH → CH3CH2CH=CH2 + NaBr + H2O But-1-ene Elimination 4 a The curly arrows show movement of electrons and must come from the lone pair on the oxygen of the OH− to the hydrogen and from the middle of the C–H bond to the C–C bond. b It has the same molecular formula but a different structural formula. c 2-methylbut-1-ene 2-methylbut-2-ene Two different isomers can be formed here depending on which H bonds to the hydroxide ion. d CH3CH2CH2CH2Br + NaOH → CH3CH2CH2CH2OH + NaBr + H2O Butan-1-ol © Alyn G. McFarland and Nora Henry 2015 Philip Allan for Hodder Education 13 This is a substitution reaction, since it occurs in aqueous solution. The bromine is replaced by OH. e Nucleophilic substitution f The halogen is more electronegative than the carbon. The electrons in the covalent bond are attracted more to the halogen and form a partial negative charge on the halogen. 5 a The reaction is exothermic and adding conc acid slowly with stirring controls the reaction and prevents dangerous spitting. b Bromine The solid potassium bromide reacts with the conc sulfuric acid to form hydrogen bromide which is further oxidised by the conc sulfuric acid to form bromine. This is a reaction of a solid halide with conc sulfuric acid. NaBr + H2SO4 → NaHSO4 + HBr 2HBr + H2SO4 → Br2 + SO2 + 2H2O c Repeated boiling of a liquid and condensing of the vapour d To remove acidic impurities e Shake in a separating funnel Invert and release the pressure periodically Allow to settle and run off bottom layer — discard the aqueous layer. f To remove water © Alyn G. McFarland and Nora Henry 2015 Philip Allan for Hodder Education 14 Topic 4 Alkenes Structure, bonding and reactivity Addition reactions of alkenes Addition polymers C 1 Hydrocarbons which contain a double bond, are alkenes and have the general formula C nH2n. 2 A 3 a But-1-ene butane b The double bond is a centre of high electron density and can undergo attack by electrophiles. c Bromine water Orange to colourless © Alyn G. McFarland and Nora Henry 2015 Philip Allan for Hodder Education 15 di CH3CH=CHCH3 + Br2 → CH3CHBrCHBrCH3 d ii Electrophilic addition 2,3-dibromobutane e Major product is 2-bromobutane. Minor product is 1-bromobutane. But-1-ene is an unsymmetrical alkene and as a result two different carbocations may form in the mechanism depending on which carbon the hydrogen from the HBr adds on to. The major product is formed from the most stable carbocation — the secondary carbocation is more stable than the primary carbocation. If you have studied the complete A level, you will realise that 2-bromobutane can also exist as two enantiomers as there are four different groups on one of its carbon atoms. f Poly(but-2-ene) Exam-style questions 1 C A hydrocarbon contains the elements carbon and hydrogen only. Hence there is 84.7 g of carbon present and 100 − 84.7 = 15.3 g of hydrogen. To find the empirical formula it is best to first calculate the number of moles of carbon and of hydrogen present. Moles C = 84.7/12.0 = 7.1 moles H = 15.3/1.0 = 15.3 Hence the ratio of moles of carbon to hydrogen is 1 : 2 and the empirical formula is CH 2. This rules out answers A and B and D — in D the empirical formula works out to be C2H5. Finally, the Mr of C4H8 in C works out to be 56.0 which answers the question. 2 D When hydrogen bromide reacts with ethene, an addition reaction occurs and the product is bromoethane, which does not contain any double bonds and is saturated. The mechanism for © Alyn G. McFarland and Nora Henry 2015 Philip Allan for Hodder Education 16 this reaction is electrophilic addition, which has a carbocation present in the transition state, which is therefore not neutral. The hydrogen bromide splits into two ions. There is only one position for the bromine atom. Hence there are no isomers formed. 3 a A hydrolysis reaction is a reaction in which bonds are broken (C–X) by water molecules. b Equal amounts of each halogenoalkane Use halogenoalkanes with the same chain length. Equal amounts of ethanol Same temperature (Any two) c d Silver chloride white Silver bromide cream Silver iodide yellow The halogenoalkane is hydrolysed and an alcohol is formed. Halide ions are released. The halide ions react with the silver ions in silver nitrate. An insoluble ppt is formed. Ag+ + X− → AgX where X = Cl, Br or I The halogen in the halogenoalkane is bonded covalently and does not react with silver nitrate. As the halogenoalkane hydrolyses a halide ion is released and this then reacts with the silver nitrate to form a precipitate. e Iodoalkane The C–I bond is weakest. f The ethanol is the solvent for the halogenoalkane. The ethanol is the solvent, making sure the halogenoalkane (insoluble in water) and the aqueous silver nitrate mix together and react. 4 a Dichlorodifluoromethane There is one carbon so it is meth, the side groups are chloro and fluoro. Remember to place these in alphabetical order. b UV light c CF2Cl2 → CF2Cl• + Cl• d Cl• + O3 → O2 + ClO• © Alyn G. McFarland and Nora Henry 2015 Philip Allan for Hodder Education 17 ClO• + O3 → 2O2 + Cl• The chlorine radical is not destroyed and can act as a catalyst. 5 a CH2=CHCl + NaCN → CH2=CHCN + NaCl b Molecular formula C3H3N. Empirical formula C3H3N. ci c ii It contains a C=C which can break and allow molecules to add on. © Alyn G. McFarland and Nora Henry 2015 Philip Allan for Hodder Education 18 Topic 5 Alcohols Alcohol production 1 a C6H12O6(aq) → 2CH3CH2OH(aq) + 2CO2(g) b Yeast produces an enzyme which converts glucose to ethanol and carbon dioxide. A temperature of 35°C. The enzyme in yeast works best around this temperature. Above this the enzyme is denatured, below this the reaction is too slow. Air is kept out to prevent the oxidation of the ethanol formed to ethanoic acid (vinegar). ci Fractional distillation. c ii C2H5OH + 3O2 → 2CO2 + 3H2O di A carbon-neutral activity is one which has no net annual emissions of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere. d ii Mention any process: for example, harvesting, planting, transport of materials, distilling the ethanol solution, producing fertilisers for crops. The specified process burns (fossil) fuel that releases CO 2. d iii It is a renewable resource. d iv It uses up land which could be used for crops for food./Production of crops is slow. ei CH2=CH2 + H2O ⇌ C2H5OH In this reaction you must include equilibrium arrows. Concentrated phosphoric acid / concentrated sulfuric acid © Alyn G. McFarland and Nora Henry 2015 Philip Allan for Hodder Education 19 e ii Electrophilic addition e iii Excess ethene OR Excess steam / water OR remove the ethanol as it forms OR recycle the ethane 60 atm pressure 600 K temperature It is an equilibrium reaction so using excess ethene or steam causes the reaction to move to the right producing ethanol. If the ethanol is removed as it is formed, again the reaction moves to the right to replace it. Oxidation of alcohols Elimination 2 a butan-2-ol: secondary propan-1-ol: primary 2-methylbutan-2-ol: tertiary b c orange to green butan-2-one orange to green propanoic acid stays orange no oxidation C4H9OH → C4H8 +H2O © Alyn G. McFarland and Nora Henry 2015 Philip Allan for Hodder Education 20 Topic 6 Organic analysis Identification of functional groups by testtube reactions Mass spectrometry Infrared spectroscopy 1 a Warm with acidified potassium dichromate(VI). Pentan-1-ol changes from orange to green. In this example you must realise that pentan-1-ol is a primary alcohol and 2-methylpentan-2-ol is tertiary and cannot be oxidised. Hence there is no colour change. b Bromine water Propene changes it from orange to colourless. Propene is an alkene and is unsaturated and will react with bromine water. c Warm with Fehling’s solution / Tollens’ reagent. Butanal — silver mirror / red ppt Add sodium carbonate — effervescence with the acid Butanal is an aldehyde and can be oxidised by Fehling’s solution or Tollens’ reagent (or even potassium dichromate(VI)) but butanone, a ketone cannot. The butanoic acid reacts with solid sodium carbonate producing bubbles of carbon dioxide. 2 (2 × N) and (1 × O): 2(14.00307) + 15.99491 = 44.00105 propane is C3H8 = 44.0 carbon dioxide is CO2 = 44.0 dinitrogen oxide is N2O = 44.0 They have the same Mr (to 1 decimal place) and would give the same molecular ion peak. The molecular ion value gives the relative molecular mass — it is 44.00105. To show that this is N2O simply add together the precise relative atomic mass values of (2 × N) and (1 × O). 2(14.00307) + 15.99491 = 44.00105. You then need to calculate the relative atomic mass of each of these molecules using the relative atomic masses given to 1 decimal place in your periodic table: © Alyn G. McFarland and Nora Henry 2015 Philip Allan for Hodder Education 21 propane is C3H8 = (3 × 12.0) + (8 × 1.0) = 44.0 carbon dioxide is CO2 = (1 × 12.0) + (2 × 16.0) = 44.0 dinitrogen oxide is N2O = (2 × 14.0) + (1 × 16.0) = 44.0 They have the same Mr (to 1 decimal place) and would give the same molecular ion peak. A is ethanol as it has a broad OH absorption between 3230 and 3550. 3 B is ethanoic acid as it has an OH (acid) between 2500 and 3000 and a C=O between 1680 and 1750. C is propanone as there is no OH absorption but a C=O absorption at 1680–1750. Exam-style questions C 1 The alcohol has four carbons so it is named but-. The OH group is on the second carbon so it is butan-2-ol and a secondary alcohol which is oxidised to a ketone. B 2 To answer this question draw out each structure. The alcohol which has the methyl group and the OH on the same carbon is the one which is a tertiary alcohol — it has three alkyl groups bonded to the carbon that is bonded to the OH group. 3 D 4 The broad 3350 peak indicates an alcohol. moles C = 70.6/12.0 = 5.88 moles H = 13.7/1.0 = 13.7 moles O =15.7/16.0 = 0.98 Ratio 5.88/0.98 = 6.0; 13.7/0.98 = 14.0; 0.98/0.98 = 1.0 so C6H14O m/z = Mr = 102 = (C6H14O) n = 102n. n = 1 so the molecular formula = C6H14O hexan-1-ol hexan-2-ol hexan-3-ol 5 a Repeated heating to evaporate a liquid and cooling to condense a vapour. Vapour escapes from the liquid mixture, condenses and returns to the liquid mixture where it is in contact with the oxidation agent again. This ensures complete oxidation of propanol and any propanal formed. b CH3CH2OH + H2O → CH3COOH + 4H+ + 4e− c Acidified potassium dichromate(VI) © Alyn G. McFarland and Nora Henry 2015 Philip Allan for Hodder Education 22 Orange to green d Change the apparatus for distillation. Use a still head containing a thermometer with the condenser horizontal. Collect sample at the boiling point of propanal. e Propanal: add Tollens’ reagent and warm silver mirror Or add Fehling’s solution orange red ppt Absence of propanoic acid — add sodium hydrogencarbonate or sodium carbonate No effervescence observed f Alcohol OH absorption in different place (3230−3550 cm−1 ) from acid OH absorption (2500−3000 cm−1) or different fingerprint region (any two) © Alyn G. McFarland and Nora Henry 2015 Philip Allan for Hodder Education 23