Gen Chem 2 - ACS review

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122 Terms

1
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ideal gas law conditions

low pressure, high temperature

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boyle's law

p1v1=p2v2

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gases are highly _

compressible

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gases expand to fill the container they are placed in

spontaneously

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the distance between molecules in gases are _

far apart in gases

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1 mol of any gas at STP is

22.4 liters

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the lighter the gas, _

the faster the effusion rate

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the deviation from ideal behavior of a gas is most evident at high and low

pressure, temp

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Non reacting gas mixtures are homongeneous

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normal melting point at

760 torr or 1 atm

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the kinetic-molecular theory predicts that pressure rises as the temperature of a gas increases because_

both the gas molecules collide more frequently with the wall and the gas molecules collide more energetically with the wall

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hydrogen bonding

H with N,O,F

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isothermal means

at constant temperature

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STP

273.15 K and 1 atm

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the van der Waals equation

gas particles have non-zero volumes and interact with each other, molar volumes of gases of different types are different, the non-zero volumes of gas particles effectively decrease the amount of "empty" space between them, the molecular attractions between particles of gas decreases the pressure exerted by the gas

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viscosity is __

the resistance to flow

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viscosity increases as

temperature decreases, molecular weight increases, intermolecular forces increase

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a volatile liquid is one that

readily evaporates

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the vapor pressure of any substance at its normal boiling point is

1 atm

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as intermolecular forces increase, vapor pressure ___

decreases

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as intermolecular forces increase, normal boiling point ___

increases

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as intermolecular forces increase, heat of vaporization ___

increases

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as intermolecular forces increase, surface tension ___

increases

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how are boiling points affected by intermolecular forces?

stronger intermolecular forces between molecules make it more difficult for those molecules to be pulled apart. Therefore, stronger intermolecular forces result in higher boiling points

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solid to liquid

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solid to liquid

melting

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freezing

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liquid to gas

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gas to liquid

evaporation

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condensation

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solid to gas

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gas to solid

sublimation

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depostition

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low vapor pressure

higher surface tension

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higher vapor pressure

lower boiling point

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large intermolecular forces in a substance are manifested by

low vapor pressure, high boiling points, high heats of fusion, high critical temperatures and pressures

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the stronger the forces between the particles,

the higher the melting point

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the higher the boiling point

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the lower the vapor pressure

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the higher the viscosity

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the greater the surface tension

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an unsaturated solution is one that

has a concentration lower than the solubility

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a solution with a concentration higher than the solubility is

supersaturated

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molarity varies with

temperature

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a saturated solution

contains dissolved solute in equilibrium with undissolved solute

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which of the following substances is more likely to dissolve in CH3OH?

the one with hydrogen bonding

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which of the following substances is more likely to dissolve in CCl4

the one with London dispersion bonding

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what are the five principle factors that influence the rate of chemical change

  1. chemical nature
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  1. ability of the reactants to come in contact with each other
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  1. concentration of reactants
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  1. temperature
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  1. availability of rate-acceleration agents called catalysts
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for a given reaction, adding a catalyst increases the rate of reaction by

providing an alternate reaction pathway that has a lower activation energy

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doubling the concentration of the 1st order

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doubling the concentration of the 2nd order

doubles the rate

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quadruple the rate

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lightest gas will have

lowest partial pressure

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the rate of reaction depends on but the rate constant does not

concentration

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for a reaction that is first order with respect to reactant A, and third-order overall

rate=k(A)(B)2

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the rate determining step is

the slowest step

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the mechanism is

produced in one step and consumed in the other and won't be final product

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the difference between the energy of the starting molecule and the highest energy along the reaction pathway is known as the

activation energy

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when the direction of an equation is reversed

the new equilibrium constant is the reciprocal of the original

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when the coefficients in an equation are multiplied by a factor

the equilibrium constant is raised to the power equal to that factor

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The equilibrium law for a heterogeneous reaction is written without concentration terms for

pure solids or pure liquids

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When K is very large:

The reaction proceeds far toward completion. The position of equilibrium lies far to the right, toward the products.

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When K ≈ 1:

The concentrations of reactants and products are nearly the same at equilibrium. The position of equilibrium lies approximately midway between the reactants and products.

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When K is very small:

Extremely small amounts of products are formed. The position of equilibrium lies far to the left, toward the reactants.

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at equilibrium

the rates of the forward and reverse reactions are equal

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Which one of the following will change the value of an equilibrium constant?

changing temperature

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Amphoteric Molecules

Can Function as either acids or bases, depending on reaction conditions.

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Brønsted-Lowry Acid =

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Brønsted-Lowry Base =

Proton donor

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Proton acceptor

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Nitric acid is a strong acid. This means that

HNO3 dissociates completely to H+ (aq) and NO3- (aq) when it dissolves in water

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Which one of the following processes produces a decrease in the entropy of the system?

freezing water to form ice

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A reaction that is not spontaneous at low temperature can become spontaneous at high temperature if ΔH is and ΔS is .

+,+

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For a reaction to be spontaneous under standard conditions at all temperatures, the signs of ΔH° andΔS° must be and , respectively

-,+

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If ΔG° for a reaction is greater than zero, then

K<1

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A reducing agent does what with electrons

gives up electrons causing another substance to be reduced

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oxidation

loss of electrons

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reduction

gain of electrons

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Which one of the following statements is true about the equilibrium constant for a reaction if ΔG° for the reaction is negative

K>1

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density equation:

d=(MW)(P)/RT

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ideal gas

PV=nRT

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Charles law

v1/t1=v2/t2

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combined

p1v1/t1=p2v2/t2

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Gay lus

p1/t1=p2/t2

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kinetic molecular theory:

molecules are in random motion, elastic collisions, volume of molecules too small to notice, no attractive forces

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Urms=

sqrt(3RT/Mkg), with R=8.314

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effusion

leaking out small hole

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Grahams Law:

rate gas A/rate gas B = sqrt(MWb/MWa)

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IMF strength from weakest to strongest

London dispersion, dipole-dipole, hydrogen, ionic

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London dispersion

everything has London dispersion, stronger if MW is high

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dipole-dipole

polar molecules, stronger is big EN difference

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Hydrogen bonding

H-F

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H-O

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H-N

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Ionic bonding

polar, ionic pair

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higher pressure means

higher BP