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All definitions

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Term
Definition
The mole   of a substance is the amount of the substance that contains as many particles as 12g of carbon-12  
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Molecular formula   of a compound is a formula showing the exact number of each type of atom present in the molecule  
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Empirical Formula   of a compound is a formula that gives the simples ratio between each atom in the compound or molecule  
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Isotope   is an atom of the same element that has the same atomic number but a different mass number e.g. C12, C13, C14  
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Relative atomic mass   is the average mass of the atoms of the element relative to 1/12 of the mass of the C-12 isotope  
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Relative molecular mass   is the average mass of molecules of the compound relative to 1/12 of the mass of the C-12 isotope  
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Standard solution   a solution whose concentration is known  
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Primary standard   is a substance that can be obtained in a stable, 100% pure and soluble solid form so that it can be weighed out accurately to give a solution of accurate known concentration  
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Arrhenius's theory of acids   a substance that dissociated in water to form H+ ions  
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Arrhenius's theory of bases   a substance that dissociates in water to form OH- ions  
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Monobasic acis   can donate one H+ ion per molecule  
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Dibasic acid   can donate two H+ ions per molecule  
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Tribasic   can donate three H+ ions per molecule  
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Strong acid/ base   dissociates fully in water  
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Weak acid/ base   does not dissociate fully in water  
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Bronstad-Lowry theory of acids   acid is a proton donor  
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Bronsted-Lowry theory of bases   base is a proton acceptor  
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Amphoteric   a substance that can act as both an acid and a base  
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Conjugate pairs   conjugate acid/base pair is an acid and a base that differ by one proton  
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A salt   is formed when the hydrogen of an acid is replaced by a metal (or ammonium ion)  
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Neutralisation   the reaction between an acid and a base to produce a salt and water  
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Oxidation (in terms of oxygen)   occurs when a substance gains an oxygen  
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Reduction (in terms of oxygen)   occurs when a substance loses an oxygen  
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Oxidation (in terms of electron transfer)   the loss of electrons  
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Reduction (in terms of electron transfer)   the gain of electrons  
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Oxidation (in terms of oxidation number)   the increase of oxidation number  
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Reduction (in terms of oxidation number)   the decrease of oxidation number  
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Redox reaction   a reaction where substances undergo oxidation and reduction  
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Oxidising agent   is a substance that brings about oxidation in other substances but is reduced itself  
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Reducing agent   is a substance that brings about reduction in other substances but is oxidised itself  
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Efflorence   loss of water  
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Hard water   water that doesn't form a lather easily with soap  
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Hardness   is caused by the presence of Ca2+ or Mg2+ ions dissolved in the water. These ions react with the soap to form a scum rather than a lather  
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Temporary hardness   can be removed by boiling. Caused by Ca(HCO3)2  
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Permanent hardness   cannot be removed by boiling. Caused by CaCl2, CaSO4, Ca(OH)2  
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Suspended solids   solids that are floating on top or solids that are mixed (suspended) throughout the sample of water (dirt particles). Removed by filtration  
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Dissolved solids   solids that are soluble in the liquid. Removed by evaporation  
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Screening   water is passed through graded screens/ wire mesh to remove twigs and rubbish etc.  
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Settling/ Sedimentation   water is pumped into the bottom of sedimentation tanks so as not to disturb the clearer water at the top (maximise settling). The suspended particles settle to the bottom  
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Flocculation   a flocculating agent (Aluminium sulphate) is added. This causes dirt, suspended solids to coagulate together. This helps sedimentation.  
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Filtration   water is passed through beds of graded sand and gravel. Layers are cleaned regularly. Water that comes out is colourless but not fit for drinking.  
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Chlorination   chlorine of sodium fluoride is added to prevent tooth decay  
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pH adjustment   too acidic -> a base: Calcium Hydroxide can cause corrosion of pipes too basic -> an acid: dilute Sulfuric acid can cause hard water  
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Edta   ethylene diamine tetra acetic acid  
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Eutrophication   is the enrichment of water with nutrients (Nitrates and Phosphates) which leads to the excess growth of algal bloom and results in the dissolved oxygen levels being lowered  
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B.O.D (biological oxygen demand)   amount of dissolved oxygen consumed by a biological action when a sample of water is kept in the dark @ 20°C for 5 days  
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The Winkler Method   the method used to determine the amount of dissolved oxygen in a sample of river water  
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Cumulative poisons   build up in the body over time  
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Free Chlorine   chlorine that exists in water as Hypochlorous acid (HOCl) and the Hypochlorite ion OCl-  
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Activation energy   is the minimum energy colliding particles require for a reaction to occur  
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Effective collision   is a collision that will result in a reaction between colliding particles and results in a product being formed  
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Catalyst   a substance that alters the rate of a chemical reaction but is not consumed by the reaction  
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Inhibitors   a catalyst that slows down the rate of reaction  
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Homogeneous catalyst   the reactants and the catalyst are in the same phase  
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Heterogeneous catalyst   the reactants and the catalysts are in different phases  
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Autocatalysis   occurs when one of the products formed catalysis the reaction******  
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Cathode rays   are streams of negatively charged particles called electrons  
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Atomic Radius   is half the distance between the nuclei of two atoms of the same element that are joined together by a single convalent bond  
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Ionisation energy   is the minimum energy required to remove the most loosely bound electron froma neutral gaseous atom in its ground state  
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Second ionisation energy   is the minimum energy required to remove the most loosely bound electron from a mono-positive ion  
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Energy level   a fixed energy value that an electron in an atom may have  
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Atomic Orbitals   is the region of space around the nucleus in which there is a high probability of finding an electron  
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Orbits   an orbit was used by Bohr to describe the papth of the electron travelling in a fixed path with a certain velocity at a precise distance from the nucleus  
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Quantisation   an electron can only have a specific energy value in a particular energy level  
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Continuous Spectrum   when white light is passes through a prism it is broken into an array of colours called a continuous spectrum  
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Lyman Series   n=1 ultra violet (high energy)  
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Balmer Series   n=2 visible spectrum  
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Pashen Series   n=3 Infrared  
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Electronegativity   is the force of attraction that an atom of an element has for a shared pair of electrons in a covalent bond  
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Electropositive elements   have a low electronegativity value  
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Pure covalent bond   if there is no difference between the electronegativity values of the two atoms  
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Polar covalent bond   if there is a difference of between 0 and 1.7 between the electronegativity values of the two atoms. Electrons not shared equally.  
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Ionic bond   if the difference between the electronegativity values of the two atoms is greater than 1.7  
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Polar Molecules   the partial positive and partial negative poles in the molecule are separated by a distance  
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Non-polar molecules   are where the bond dipoles balance each other producing a molecular dipole (vector sum) of zero  
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Intra Molecular Bonding   these are attractive forces holding the atoms together within the molecules  
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Inter Molecular Bonding   these are attractive forces between the molecules  
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Van Der Waal forces   a type of intermolecular bonding with very weak attractive forces which occurs between non-polar molecules, and result in the formation of temporary dipoles  
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Dipole   is a pair of separated opposite charges  
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Permanent Dipole-Dipole forces   are forces of attraction between the partial negative charge of one molecule and the partial positive charge of the other molecule in polar molecules  
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Hydrogen bonding   is where Hydrogen is bonded to a small highly electronegative element like oxygen, nitrogen or fluorine  
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V.S.E.P.R (valence share electron pair repulsion theory)   Electron pairs repel each other to be as far apart as possible and give a shape  
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Bond pair   a pair of electrons that are involved in bonding  
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Lone pair   a pair of electrons not involved in bonding  
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Bond energy   average energy required to break one mole of bonds and to separate the atoms in the gaseous state  
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Linear shape   2 bond pairs, 0 lone pairs, 180° angle  
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Triangular Planar shape   3 bond pairs, 0 lone pairs, 120° angle  
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Tetrahedral shape   4 bond pairs, 0 lone pairs 109.5° angle  
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Pyramidical shape   3 bond pairs, 1 lone pair 107° angle  
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V-shaped shape   2 bond pairs, 2 lone pairs 104.5° angle  
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D-block element   is where the electrons go into the d sublevel after an outer s sublevel  
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A transition metal   has an incomplete d sublevel and variable valencies  
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Valency   valency of an element is the number of atoms of hydrogen or any other mono-valent element with which the element combines  
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Covalent Bonding in terms of orbitals   is formed when two atomic orbitals overlap  
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A sigma bond   is a type of covalent bond when there is a head-on overlap of two orbitals  
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A Pi bond   is formed when there is a side-ways over-lap of two p-orbitals  
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Single bonds   contain one sigma bond only  
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Double bonds   contain one sigma and one pi bond  
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Triple bonds   contain one sigma bond followed by 2 pi bonds  
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Radioactivity   is the spontaneous breaking up of an unstable nuclei with the emission of alpha, beta and gamma particles  
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Alpha particles   have 2 protons and 2 neutrons stuck together, low penetrating power and can be stopped by a few cm of air or cardboard. positively charged- affected by magnetic/ electric fields e.g. Americium-241 used in smoke detectors  
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Beta particles   is simply an electron that is emitted from an unstable nucleus. Slight penetrating power, can be stopped by a sheet of Aluminium. Negatively charges- affected by magnetic/ electric fields e.g. used in carbon dating  
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Gamma particle   high energy electromagnetic radiation. Very penetrating, only stopped by a thick slab of lead. No charge, not affected by electric/ magnetic fields e.g. cobalt-60 used in cancer treatment  
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Half life   of an element is the time taken for half of the nuclei in any given sample to decay  
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Radioisotopes   are unstable, radioactive isotopes  
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Background radiation   more than half of background radiation is caused by radon gas which is formed by the decay of radioisotopes found in rocks  
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a gas   is a substance that has no well-defined boundaries but diffuses rapidly to fill any container in which it is contained  
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An ideal gas   is a gas which obeys all the assumptions of the kinetic theory of gases under all conditions of temperature and pressure  
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organic chemistry   is the study of the compounds of carbon  
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A Hydrocarbon   is a compound that contains Hydrogen and carbon only  
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A Homologous Series   is a group of compounds having the same general formula, same functional group, similar chemical properties, showing graduations in physical properties and each member differs from the previous member by a CH2 unit  
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Structural formula   of a compound shows the way the atoms are arranged in a molecule  
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Molecular Formula   tells us the actual number of atoms of each element in the molecule  
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Saturated Compounds   are compounds in which the C-C atoms are linked by single bonds only, contain no double/triple C-C bonds  
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Structural Isomers   are compounds with the same molecular formula  
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Alkanes   saturated hydrocarbons (all bonds are single)  
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Chloroalkanes   are compounds in which one or more of the hydrogen atoms in the alkane molecule have been replaced by a chlorine atom  
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Homolytic Fission   equal sharing of electrons- formation of radicals  
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Heterolytic fission   Unequal sharing of electrons- formation of ions  
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Unsaturated compounds   are compounds that contain at least one carbon to carbon double or triple bond  
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Alkenes   unsaturated hydrocarbons (containing at least one C-C double bond)  
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Alkynes   unsaturated hydrocarbons that contain a C-C triple bond  
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Aliphatic compounds   are organic compounds that consist of open chains of carbon atoms or closed chain compounds that resemble them in chemical properties. They do not contain a benzene ring  
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Aromatic compouns   are compounds that contain a Benzene ring structure in their molecules  
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Benzene   is not reactive is not an unsaturated compound, has bond lengths of between the length of a C-C single bond and a double bond. Highly toxic and carcinogenic. Non-polar, insoluble in (polar) water but soluble in cyclohexane  
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Delocalised electrons   do not belong to any particular atom  
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Crude oil   formed over hundreds of millions of years from the bodies of sea creatures that decayed under layers of sedimentary rock, as a result of pressure and heat  
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Fractional Distillation   involves the heating of crude oil and separating the various mixtures on the basis of their boiling points  
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Fractioning Column   is a tall cylindrical tower of steel, containing a series of trays to help collect the condensed liquid  
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LPG   Liquid Petroleum Gas  
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Mercaptons   are compounds containing sulphur that are added to gases to give them a distinct odour for safety purposes  
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Petrol and Naphta   fractions are used to make petrol. (winter: lower molecular mass components, more volatile. Summer: less volatile, not evaporate)  
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Kerosine   used for heating and aviation fuel and may be cracked to provide extra petrol  
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Gas oil   used to make diesel fuel for cars, trains etc. and can be cracked to produce extra petrol  
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Less Volatile tarry fractions   used to make candle wax, grease and bitimen for tarring roads  
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Smooth running of a car engine   depends on the petrol-air explosion occurring in the cylinder at just the right moment  
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Knocking/ Auto Ignition   is the tendency to premature ignition: petrol-air explosion too early-metallic noise from engine, caused by exploding when compressed as opposed to a spark for ignition, engine loses power and cylinders maybe damaged  
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Starting the egine   1. petrol vaporises 2. petrol vapour mixes with air in the carburetor 3. this mixture comes into the cylinder (inlet valves) and is compressed 4. spark from spark plug ignites the compressed gases 5. gases expand -piston moves down  
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  6. piston comes back up, gases are pushed out process repeats 7. up/down motion of piston is converted rotational movement drives the vehicle  
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Reduced knocking   straight chained alkanes ignite easily- causing knocking. Branched alkanes more efficient petrol  
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Octane number   of a fuel is a measure of the fuel to resist auto-ignition, measured by comparing performance to 2 reference hydrocarbons Heptane and 2,2,4trimethypentane. octane number 97 means 97% 2,2,4trimethylpentane and 3% heptane  
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Factors affecting octane number   short chain- high octane, more branched- high octane, cylic compounds (especially benzene) high octane  
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tetraethyl lead   used to reduce knocking in the past, but toxic to humans, and is a catalytic poison (inhibitor) in catalytic converter  
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new ways to increase octane number   1.Oxygenates: methanol ethanol MTBE 2. Reforming: using catalysts to form ring compounds 3.Isomerisation: using heat and catalysts to branch isomers  
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  4.Catalytic cracking: using heat and a catalyst to break down long chains into short chained hydrocarbons. At least one product is unsaturated  
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Bomb calorimeter   used in industry to accurately measure heats of combustion  
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Method of bomb calorimeter   1.A known mass of substance placed in crucible 2.Pressurised with oxygen 3.Bomb placed in known quantity of water 4.Ignited electrically 5.Heat produced => E=mc∆θ  
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Steam burn worse than boiling water   1.steam condenses on cold skin 2.excess energy of gaseous lost when turn to liquid  
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Heat of Combustion   heat given out when 1mole of a substance is burned in excess oxygen (kJ/mol)  
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Heat of Neutralisation   heat change that occurs when 1mole of H+ ions neutralise with 1mole of OH- ions (kJ/mol)  
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Heat of Formation   heat change that occurs when 1mole of a substance in its standard state is formed from its elements in their standard states (kJ/mol)  
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Heat of Reaction   heat change that occurs when the number of moles of reactants indicated in a balanced equation completely react (kJ/mol)  
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Kilogram Calorific Value   heat produced when 1kg of a fuel is burned in excess oxygen (kJ/mol)  
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Endothermic Reaction   heat is absorbed ∆H=+  
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Exothermic Reaction   heat is produced ∆H=-  
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Alll heat of neutralisation values same for strong acids   all strong acids all completely dissociate in solution, all have the same fundamental change (H+ + OH- -> H2O)  
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Heat of neutralisation values smaller for weaker acids   only dissociate slightly for neutralisation full dissociation must occur. Heat needs to be supplied- endothermic reaction. Value of heat of neutralisation smaller.  
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Chemical Equilibrium   is a state of dynamic balance where the rate of the forward reaction is equal to the rate of the reverse reaction  
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Dynamic   the reaction hasn't stopped products are being formed and returning to reactants constantly  
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Equilibrium Constant Kc   [products]/[reactants] affected only by a change in temperature  
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Haber Process   manufacture of Ammonia: 1.Iron catalyst 2.Low temp (idea but too slow) 3.Higher temp is used with Fe catalyst 5.High Pressure (safety)(cost)  
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Contact Process   preparation of Sulphuric Acid (H2SO4) equation: 2SO2 + O2 -> 2SO3 catalyst: Vanadiumm Pentoxide V2O5 High pressure (tends to liquify SO3)(cost)(safety)  
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pH   -log10[H+] where [] is concentration measures in moles per litre  
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The range of indicator   is the spread of pH over which the which indicator changes colour  
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An indicator   is a weak acid or weak base that changes colour according to the pH of the solution that it is put into  
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Primary Alcohol   is one where the carbon atom joined to the -OH group is attached to only one other carbon atom  
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Secondary Alcohol   is one where the carbon atom joined to the -OH group is attached to two other carbon atoms  
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Tertiary Alcohol   is one where the carbon atom joined to the -OH group is attached to three other carbon atoms  
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Denaturing agent   toxic methanol added to industrial alcohol to prevent consumption  
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Fehling's solution   Fehling's A: Copper Sulphate in water Fehling's B: Potassium Sodium Tarterate & NaOH  
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Tollens reagent (Ammoniacal Silver Nitrate) Silver Mirror Test   silver nitrate, NaOH (brown precipitate formed), Ammonia (precipitate dissolves). If stored explosive products may form.  
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Glacial Acetic Acid   solid form of pure ethanoic acid  
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Dimer   when two hydrogen bonds occur between the carboxylic acids  
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Inductive effect   C in C=O is slightly positive, and attracts electrons from the oxygen in the O-H group. electrons pulling facilitates ionisation of H in O-H lost more easily  
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Resonance Hybrid   the negative charge that is delocalised and shared over the three atoms  
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Acid & Base (A Bee)   Salt & Water (Swam West)  
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Acid & Metal (A Mouse)   H2 (g) & Salt (Had Sex)  
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Acid & Carbonate (A Crazy)   CO2 & Salt & Water (Cat Went South)  
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Elimination reaction (condensation reaction)   results in the loss of water  
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Euganol   oil found in cloves  
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Steam Distillation   distillation carried out in a current of steam to avoid too high a temperature during distillation as a high temperature may destroy the plant material  
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Emulsion   a cloudy milky liquid in which the oil droplets are dispersed throughout the water  
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Esterification   is the reacting of a carboxylic acid and an alcohol to form an ester and water  
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Solvent Extraction   add emulsion to cyclohexane- dissolves non-polar oils. use separating funnel to separate water from cyclohexane & oils. Evaporate off cyclohexane to get pure oil  
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Base Hydrolysis/ saponification   a substitution reaction used in the making of soap  
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Vegetable fats &oils   unsaturated (double bond)  
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Animal fats & oils   are saturated (only single bonds)  
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Glycerol   by-product of soap preparation used to manufacture explosive nitroglycerine  
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Brine   a solution of NaCl in water- dissolves excess NaOH  
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Polymers   are long chain molecules made by joining together many small molecules (monomers)  
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Electrolysis   is the use of electricity to bring about a chemical reaction  
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Electrolyte   compound which when molten or dissolved in water conducts electricity due to presence of ions  
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Electrodes   two rods dip into electrolyte and make electrical contact  
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Inert   do not react with electrolyte merely carry the current  
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Active   react with the electrolyte  
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