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You may use this study guide to review for your test; practice your new skills or review old concepts. Each topic has several questions relating to it, this should help with giving you plenty of practice.

Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

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You may use this study guide to review for your test; practice your new skills or review old concepts. Each topic has several questions relating to it, this should help with giving you plenty of practice. Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide. Gram Formula Mass A. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

You may use this study guide to review for your test; practice your new skills or review old concepts.Each topic has several questions relating to it, this should help with giving you plenty of practice.

Page 2: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

Gram Formula

Mass

A B C

Gram to Mole

A B C

Balance Equations

A B C

Molarity

ABC

pH

A B C

Redox

A B C

Redox 2

A B C

Solubility

A B C

Vocabulary

A B C

Acids/Bases

A B C

Factors Affecting Solubility

A B C

Titration

A B C

Page 3: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

What is the gram formula mass for CaSO4?

136 g/mole

Page 4: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

What is the gram formula mass for Al(OH)3?

78 g/mole

Page 5: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

What is the gram formula mass for Cu(NO3)2?

188 g/mole

Page 6: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

How many moles are there in 55 g of H2O?

55 g H2O / 18 g/mole = 3.1 mole

Page 7: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

How many grams does 3.1 moles of H2SO4 contain?

3.1 mole x 98 g/mole = 303.8 g

Page 8: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

How many moles are contained in 2.65 g of O2?

2.65 g / 32 g/mole = 0.083 mole

Page 9: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

Balance the following equation:H2SO4 + NaBr → Na2SO4 + HBr

1:2:1:2

Page 10: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

Balance the following equation:Na + Cl2→ NaCl

2:1:2

Page 11: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

Balance the following equation:Cu + HBr → CuBr2 + H2

1:2:1:1

Page 12: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

What is the concentration of a solution containing 0.5 mole of NaCl in 2.4 L

of water?

0.21 M

Page 13: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

What is the formula for Molarity?

M = moles of solute/ L of solution

Page 14: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

What is the concentration of a 0.25 L solution with 44.5 grams of MgSO4?

44.5 grams/120g/mole= 0.37moles;0.37 moles/0.25L = 1.5 M

Page 15: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

How do we determine the pH of a solution?

You take the –log of the hydrogen ion concentration (molarity).

Page 16: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

What is the relationship between pH and pOH?

They are opposites; pH measures H ion concentration and pOH measures OH ion concentration, they add up to 14.

Page 17: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

If you have a M of 4.5 x 10-5 what is your pH?

pH = 4.3

Page 18: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

If an element is being reduced what is happening to it’s charge and to the electrons?

Reduced elements are gaining electrons and therefore their charge is becoming more negative.

Page 19: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

If an element is being oxidized what is happening to the electrons and the charge?

Oxidized elements are losing electrons and therefore their charge is becoming more positive.

Page 20: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

What is the relationship between an element being reduced and a

reducing agent?

They are opposites, if an element is being reduced it is gaining electrons and a reducing agent is losing electrons (it is the oxidized element)

Page 21: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

Given the following reaction identify the element that has been reduced.

CaI2 + Cl2→ CaCl2 + I2

Cl was the reduced element because it gained 1 electron.

Page 22: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

Using the following reaction identify which element was oxidized and what the reducing

and oxidizing agents are.2KClO3 → 2KCl + 3O2

O went from -2 to 0 so it lost 2 electrons and was oxidized. That makes it the reducing agent and the Cl the oxidizing agent.

Page 23: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

From the following reaction identify the oxidation numbers (charges) for all of the elements.

2Na + Cl2 → 2NaCl

2Na = 0; Cl2 = 0; NaCl= Na= +1, Cl= -1

Page 24: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

What is the Ksp for the following reaction?2HBr→ H2 + Br2

Ksp= [H2][Br2]/[HBr]2

Page 25: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

If a reaction has a Ksp of less than 1 what can we say about this solution?

The solid is relatively insoluble and the reaction will proceed to the left.

Page 26: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

Complete the following generalization:The higher the Ksp of a solution the _____soluble

the solute is.

more

Page 27: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

What does an oxidizing agent do?

An oxidizing agent pulls the electrons from a different element from within a chemical reaction.

Page 28: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

Explain the difference between a solute and a solvent.

The solute is the substance that you are dissolving and the solvent is what you are dissolving in and usually is the higher quantity.

Page 29: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

What is an oxidation number?

It is the charge that an ion has.

Page 30: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

What ions do acids and bases typically produce and do they always have to

produce those ions?Acids produce H ions and bases produce OH ions however you can also classify acids and bases by proton donor or acceptor. An acid is a proton donor and a base is a proton acceptor.

Page 31: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

What result should we get from an acid on the litmus test?

An acid should turn blue litmus red.

Page 32: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

If we have the same molarity of HCl and H2SO4 which acid will titrate a base to the

endpoint faster and why?

H2SO4 because it donates 2 H+ for every molecule.

Page 33: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

What are two factors that affect solubility of a solute in a solvent?

Ionic character of the solute, Concentration, Electrical nature

Page 34: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

Explain how concentration affects a solute’s solubility?

The more ions you have in a solution the more solvent is being used to dissolve the solute until you reach saturation.

Page 35: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

How does the electrical nature affect solubility?

A polar compound is likely to conduct an electrical charge while a nonpolar compound is not. And because of our “like dissolved like” rule you must have a conductor dissolved in a conductor or vice versa.

Page 36: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

What is titration?

The process of neutralizing an acid or base by using a solution with known concentration until an endpoint is reached. Usually indicated by an acid/base indicator.

Page 37: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

If we are neutralizing NaOH by using HBr what is the ratio of the ions to each

other?

1:1; for every one OH there is one H produced by HBr.

Page 38: Chemistry Unit 7 Study Guide

If we are neutralizing Al(OH)3 what will the ratio of HBr be and why?

1:3 because the base is producing 3 OH and our acid is only producing 1 H so we will need 3 times as much.