meh sounds good enoughNope you don't really do it in depth other than nuclear decay and production and uses of radioisotopes.
meh sounds good enoughNope you don't really do it in depth other than nuclear decay and production and uses of radioisotopes.
can't wait for da first topic. petroleum YEAYEA. apparently (production of materials, i think that's what it's called) has a lot of memorising. Y/N?I LOVED doing nuclear chem this year. True, you don't do much on it but you cover alpha, beta, and gamma radiation, production/uses of radioisotopes, ways to measure radiation, and my favourite your decay equations
Yes I would say it has quite a bit of memorising. Like the properties and uses of different polymers, knowing everything there is to know about ethanol and cellulose, unfortunately having to memorise everything there is to know about a biopolymer of your choice, but the worst of memorising - the structure, chemistry, cost and practicality of two types of electrochemical cells. But after a while of revising, most of it pretty much becomes second nature so it gets easiercan't wait for da first topic. petroleum YEAYEA. apparently (production of materials, i think that's what it's called) has a lot of memorising. Y/N?
so there's no logic/understanding behind it? 90% memorising?Yes I would say it has quite a bit of memorising. Like the properties and uses of different polymers, knowing everything there is to know about ethanol and cellulose, unfortunately having to memorise everything there is to know about a biopolymer of your choice, but the worst of memorising - the structure, chemistry, cost and practicality of two types of electrochemical cells. But after a while of revising, most of it pretty much becomes second nature so it gets easier
There is logic and understanding behind it - like logic will give you the reasons for why you'd use ethanol instead of petrol, and you can usually just BS the properties and uses of polymers, and a lot of nuclear chem is just logic. Just depends on how much the topic makes sense to you. Maybe 60% memorising? But if you like the petroleum sort of stuff, then a lot more of it would just be logic for you and less memorising.so there's no logic/understanding behind it? 90% memorising?
- equipment: filter paper, newspaper, cardboard, scissors, silver nitrate, sodium halides (sodium chloride, sodium bromide, sodium iodide etc.), petri dishes, sodium thiosulfateMetal - Francium
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SjowQJMS-W4
List method during the decomposition of AgCl practical and list any safety issues and all equipment (7 marks)
I don't think rust is a decomposition reaction.What is an everyday decomposition reaction?
Rust- O2 + Fe --> Fe2O3
2H2S+3O2 -->2SO2+2H2O
How many moles of which reactant will be left over after reacting:
1) 6 moles of H2S with 4 moles of O2
2) 0.16 moles of H2S with 0.2 moles of O2
Aren't these meant to be prelim questions?I have no idea how to approach D4rkfang's Q at the moment, so--
What is an example of an everyday decomposition reaction?
Cellular respiration, which involves the decomposition of glucose. C6H12O6(aq) + 6O2(g) ==> 6H2O(l) + 6CO2(g) + ATP (aka adenosine triphosphate)
And I just want to say that this thread has been quite helpful! Thanks to OP and to those who've hitherto participated.
(Three chem questions to give this thread a decent bump. For great justice.)
=Justify the use of a concentrated H2SO4 catalyst when converting ethanol to ethene, and dilute H2SO4 for ethene to ethanol. (3)
=A chemical is tested with three indicators, giving a yellow reading for methyl orange, a blue reading for bromothymol blue, and a colourless reading for phenolphthalein. Justify whether the solution is weakly acidic, strongly acidic, neutral, weakly basic, or strongly basic. (5) Bonus: With regards to the aforementioned indicators, name a possible pH range between which the solution pH is found. (1)
=Identify an example of each type of bonding, providing appropriate chemical formulas: (4)
- Covalent Molecular:
- Ionic:
- Covalent Network:
- Metallic:
Very true. A simple decomposition reaction could be:Rust is not a decomposition reaction. It's a synthesis reaction (X+Y-->XY)