Haha. Well, imo I think I'm wrong (cause I did put D) - and I'm pretty sure electrochemical activity refers to reducing/oxidising ability. And Ag's ability to reduce is greater than Cd's/Ni's ability to oxidise..
But if you guys are right - awesome :)
lol. This is harder to explain than I thought..
Electrochemical activity refers to the oxidising/reducing power.
Activity series is only metals and thus your only taking into consideration the ability for it to oxidise and lose electrons.
Look at the image:
.. never saw it in textbooks either. But activity series is different to electrochemical series:
"E° values give you a way of comparing the positions of equilibrium when these elements lose electrons to form ions in solution.
The more negative the E° value, the further the equilibrium lies...
?
I'm pretty sure it is B (even though I put C)
You can see that Pd wants to give away electrons (reduce) moreso than Cd2+ gaining electrons (oxidise) since it requires a higher voltage - more likely to occur.
YEP. Everyone got Q.12 wrong - it is in fact B
Electrochemical activity includes both the ability to oxidise or reduce and therefore you havto take the absolute value and then rank it.
Arrhenius' theory is useful because it explains acidic/basic behaviour really well in aqueous media. The theory says that acids in aqueous media produce H+ whereas bases produce OH- ions.
It clearly explains neutralisation reactions, where equal amounts of H+ and OH- when combined produce water...
Yeah.. I said that too - but what if it was a strong diprotic acid?
Would that still produce the same amount of energy release as a monoprotic acid - why?
yeah. I'm pretty sure that would get you 1-2 marks.
I wrote about having a descriptive study - which is basically researching the disease itself (finding out the ages of people affected, the location/time period of affected people, their lifestyles, etc. ensuring that data was obtained from a...
+ 1
I did basically the exact same thing, except I talked about bats instead of whales.
I literally wrote like one sentence for the role of the brain - cause I wasn't sure. I just said the auditory nerve takes the electrochemical message from the ear to the temporal lobe (auditory cortex)...