All High School Chemistry Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #6 : Help With Titration Curves
You have a 500mL solution of a monoprotic acid with unknown concentration. You titrate it to completion with 36mL of 0.4M NaOH solution. What is ?
There is not enough information to solve
If we are working with a monoprotic acid, our chemical equation is:
Now we will calculate the moles of in our solution:
Now we will determine the concentration from the amount of moles and the volume
Example Question #7 : Help With Titration Curves
0.458g of an unknown diprotic acid is dissolved in water. It is then titrated with 21.5ml of a 0.500M NaOH solution to reach the second equivalence point. Determine the molecular weight of this unknown acid.
To find the molecular weight, we must determine the number of moles that correspond to the 0.458g sample. At the equivalence point, the moles of hydronium ions will equal the moles of hydroxide ions.
We need to use the molarity and volume of the NaOH that was added to find the number of moles of base added. This will tell us the moles of hydroxide ions.
Now, since we are working with a diprotic acid, two moles of base would be required for every one mole of the acid. The moles of acid would be:
Now that we know the moles of acid in the sample, we can use the given sample mass to find the molecular weight.
Example Question #1 : Phase Diagrams And Transitions
During the process of freezing, what do you know about changes in the temperature and entropy of water?
The temperature remains constant and the entropy increases
The temperature decreases and the entropy decreases
The temperature increases and the entropy decreases
The temperature remains constant and the entropy decreases
The temperature remains constant and the entropy remains constant
The temperature remains constant and the entropy decreases
The temperature of a sample during the process of a phase change will remain constant. Even though heat may be added or removed during this process, it is utilized to directly impact the formation and breaking of intermolecular interactions within the sample. The result is a change in the internal properties of the sample (the phase), with no actual change in temperature.
When a substance freezes it transitions from a liquid to a solid. The result is a much more ordered structure, as opposed to the fluidity associated with the liquid phase. Increasing order corresponds to a decrease in entropy because entropy is a measure of disorder.
Example Question #42 : Phases Of Matter
Which of the following is associated with freezing, for most substances?
Particles move more quickly and are closer together to each other
Particles move more slowly and are closer to each other
Particles move more quickly and are farther apart from each other
Particles move more slowly and are further apart from each other
Particles move more slowly and are closer to each other
When a substance freezes, the average kinetic energy of the particles decreases. This means that the particles will move more slowly. Most substances also contract when they cool to increase the organization of the molecules (crystallization). Thus, for most substances, particles will get closer together as they freeze. One notable exception is water, which expands as it freezes (the same mass of water that freezes into ice will float in liquid water due to an increase in volume).
Example Question #2 : Help With Melting And Freezing
The following is the phase diagram for .
What state change is occurring on from point A to point G?
Sublimation
Condensation
Melting
Freezing
Vaporization
Melting
The section point A is in is the solid portion of the phase diagram. At low temperatures and high pressures, substances form solids. Increasing the temperature while keeping pressure high, ice melts into water. Point G is in the liquid portion of the phase diagram.
Example Question #1 : Help With Condensation And Vaporization
Distillation requires which of the following?
Neither vaporization nor condensation
Vaporization and condensation
Vaporization only
Either vaporization or condensation
Condensation only
Vaporization and condensation
Distillation is the process by which liquids are purified of impurities. Distillation first requires vaporization of liquids to become pure gases. The gases are then cooled and turned back into pure liquids via condensation into a separate container. A good distillation will remove all impurities from the liquid. This is why distilled water is used for chemical solutions; it does not contain ions or other impurities that could interfere with reaction.
Example Question #502 : High School Chemistry
Which of the following occurs during vaporization?
Atoms get closer together and form a more rigid shape
Atoms become spaced further away from each other
Atoms become highly organized in patterns
Atoms disappear and are destroyed
Atoms become spaced further away from each other
Vaporization refers to the phase change from liquid to gas, also known as evaporation. When becoming a gas, atoms spread out and expand to fill whatever container they are in. Conservation of mass hold that atoms are never created nor destroyed. Atoms becoming more organized and forming a more rigid shape describes a phase change toward becoming solid.
Example Question #2 : Phase Diagrams And Transitions
The transition from a solid to a gas is known as __________.
an impossible process
evaporation
deposition
sublimation
sublimation
Some substances will transition from a solid to a gas and skip the liquid phase entirely at standard conditions. This change from a solid to a gas is called sublimation. The reverse process of a gas going to a solid is known as deposition. As an example, solid carbon dioxide (dry ice) will sublimate to produce gaseous carbon dioxide at room temperature.
Evaporation is the process by which a liquid transitions to a gas.
Example Question #1 : Help With Sublimation And Deposition
Under which of the following conditions would ice be most likely to sublimate?
Low temperature and high pressure
High temperature and high pressure
Low temperature and low pressure
High temperature and low pressure
High temperature and low pressure
Sublimation refers to the phase change whereby a substance goes directly from solid to gas. At high temperature and pressure water will be more likely to melt and than evaporate. At low temperature and low pressure, the water will likely stay solid. Likewise at low temperature and high pressure. At high temperature and low pressure, the ice will be most likely to sublimate. This is clear if one looks at the phase diagram for water. High pressure makes it energetically favorable for water to melt before evaporating. Keeping the pressure low, however, makes it more favorable to pass straight into the gaseous phase.
Example Question #1 : Phase Diagrams And Transitions
Which of the following is not a phase transition?
Fusion
Condensation
Decomposition
Deposition
Sublimation
Decomposition
There are six phase changes possible. Transition from solid to gas is sublimation, while transition from gas to solid is deposition. Transition from solid to liquid is melting, while transition from liquid to solid is fusion (freezing). Transition from gas to liquid is condensation, while transition from liquid to gas is vaporization (boiling). Each phase transition is considered a physical change, not a chemical change, because the identity of the compound remains unchanged.
Decomposition is a reaction type that involves a reactant being broken down into two or more products. This is a chemical change, since the identity of the reactant is changed.