Con Review WKSHT
Con Review WKSHT
Con Review WKSHT
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: What Is Chemistry
Complete each statement below by underlining the correct word or phrase in brackets.
Holt Chemistry
Name
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24. Explain how chemicals and chemical reactions are an important part of your
life.
25. In the spaces below draw and label a microscopic view showing the particles
in a solid, a liquid, and a gas.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Describing Matter
Answer the following questions in the space provided.
5. What special meaning does the slope of a graph of mass versus volume have?
7. What are the differences between physical and chemical properties? Give an
example of a chemical property.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
______ 9. To say that the mass of a gold nugget is 5.0 grams is to use a
quantitative term.
Solve the following problems, and write your answer in the space provided.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: How is Matter Classified?
Write the name of the element for each chemical symbol listed below.
1. C __________________________________________________________________
2. S ___________________________________________________________________
3. N __________________________________________________________________
4. Au _________________________________________________________________
5. Hg _________________________________________________________________
6. Sn __________________________________________________________________
Write the symbol of each element listed below.
______ 7. silver
______ 8. lead
______ 9. potassium
______10. iron
______11. sodium
______12. copper
Write the answer to the following questions in the space provided.
Holt Chemistry
Name
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18. Briefly explain why a beaker containing sand and water is a mixture although
sand itself is a pure substance.
_______________________________________________________________________________
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Energy
Complete each statement below by writing the correct term in the space provided.
properties is a
change.
3. A change that occurs when one or more substances change into new
change.
9. What is heat?
Holt Chemistry
Name
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b. 293.15 K
c. 55C
d. 459 K
e. 3 K
f. 39C
14. Substance A has a specific heat of 0.650 J/gK, and substance B has a specific
heat of 0.325 J/gK. If 100 J of energy is applied to a 10 g sample of each
substance, which substance will have a higher temperature? Why?
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
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Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Studying Matter and Energy
Answer the following questions in the space provided.
4. What is a variable?
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
______ 7. hypothesis
______ 8. theory
______10. law of
conservation
of mass
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Measurements and Calculations in Chemistry
Answer the following questions in the space provided.
______ a. 4 001.006 g
______ b. 3 cars
______ e. 100 g
______ j. 20 students
Holt Chemistry
Name
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5. Perform the following operations. Express your answers with the correct
number of significant figures.
a. 37.26 m 2.7 m 0.0015 m
b. 256.3 mL 2 L 137 mL 10 L
c. 300. kPa 274.57 mL / 547 kPa
d. 346 mL 200 K / 546.4 K
6. Convert the following to scientific notation.
a. 0.000 003 6 mm
b. 1 450 000 mg
c. 2340 m
d. 111.34 g/cm3
7. Perform the following calculations. Express your answers in scientific
notation.
a. 4.5 106 3.9 108
b. (3.9 103)(6.7 102)
c. 3.01 1023 / 2.56 106
d. 5.6 107 2.3 106
e. 6.7 1012 7.8 1012
f. 3.7 1012 2.1 1012
g. (6.02 1023)(2.00)
h. 6.02 1023 / 3.00
8. Three chemistry students measured the length of a copper bar. The recorded
lengths were 5.05 cm, 5 cm, and 5.1 cm. What is the average length of the bar?
Holt Chemistry
Name
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11. Find the average volume from the following volume readings: 3.00 mL, 2.0 mL,
2.987 mL, and 3.4856 mL.
Holt Chemistry
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Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Substances Are Made of Atoms
In the blank at the left of each word or phrase, write the letter of the expression
on the right that is most closely related.
b. This states that atoms are the building blocks of all matter.
b.
c.
d.
e.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
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Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Structure of Atoms
In the blank at the left of each word or phrase, write the letter of the expression
on the right that is most closely related.
______ 2. anode
______ 4. cathode
______ 6. electron
______ 7. proton
______ 8. isotope
______10. neutron
______11. nucleus
Holt Chemistry
Name
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12. In Thomsons cathode-ray experiment, what evidence led him to believe that
the ray consisted of particles, and why did he conclude that the ray was
negatively charged?
Holt Chemistry
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volume
nucleus
small
alpha
positive
deflected
mass
undeflected
particles were directed at a thin gold foil. It was found that most of the
particles passed through the foil
of particles were
of an atom is
empty space but that there was a central core with a charge that repelled the
particles. This core is a very
atom. It contains most of the
part of an
of the atom and is called the
.
19. Complete the following table.
Isotope
Number of
protons
Number of
electrons
Number of
neutrons
Number of
particles in
nucleus
Symbol
for
isotope
Hydrogen-2
Helium-3
Lithium-7
Beryllium-9
Boron-11
Holt Chemistry
Name
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Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Electron Configuration
In the blanks at the left of each word or phrase, write the letter of the expression
on the right that is most closely related.
______ 1. electromagnetic
spectrum
______ 2. electron
configuration
______ 6. line-emission
spectrum
______ 7. orbital
______ 9. quantum
number
______12. photoelectric
effect
Holt Chemistry
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moving
15. To define the region in which electrons can be found, scientists have assigned
four
16. Using the quantum theory, how does one determine the location of an atoms
electrons?
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
19. List the four quantum numbers, and describe their significance.
20. Use the Pauli exclusion principle and the aufbau principle to write the electron configuration for the following atoms.
a. Chlorine
b. Nitrogen
c. Calcium
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
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Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Counting Atoms
In the blanks at the left of each word or phrase, write the letter of the expression
on the right that is most closely related.
______ 3. mole
5. Which isotope defines the atomic mass unit, and how is the atomic mass unit
defined?
7. What is the relationship between an atoms atomic mass and one mole of that
atom?
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
11. How many molecules are in one mole of carbon dioxide, CO2?
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
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Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: How are Elements Organized?
Answer the following questions in the space provided.
1. Why do Li, Na, K, Rb, Cs, and Fr all react with Cl in a 1:1 ratio forming substances with similar properties?
2. Explain the method that John Newlands used to organize the elements.
3. What method did Dmitri Mendeleev use to arrange his periodic table?
4. Why did Mendeleev have gaps in his table? How did he use these gaps?
Holt Chemistry
23
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10. How is the electron configuration similar for each element in a period?
Holt Chemistry
24
Name
Class
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Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Tour of the Periodic Table
Complete each statement below by choosing a term from the following list.
Terms may be used more than once.
main-group elements
halogens
metals
transition metals
alkali metals
hydrogen
noble gases
1. The
energy level.
2. The
3. All the
have two valence electrons and get to a
stable electron configuration by losing two electrons.
4. Unlike the main-group elements, each group of the
does not have the identical outer electron configuration.
5. The
, the most reactive group of non-metals,
achieve stable electron configurations by gaining one electron.
6. The
energy level.
7. The
8. The
metals.
9. In general, the
are metals that are less reactive
than the alkali metals and the alkaline earth metals.
10. The
are metals that lose one electron when they
react with water to form alkaline solutions.
11. Most elements are
Holt Chemistry
25
Name
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15. Why are Group 2 elements less reactive than Group 1 elements?
16. Explain why a helium atmosphere is used in welding instead of an oxygenrich atmosphere.
17. Using electron configurations, explain why the halogens readily react with the
alkali metals to form salts.
18. Why is an iron alloy, such as steel, preferred over pure iron?
Complete each statement below by writing the correct word or words in the space
provided.
19. The
through
.
20. Elements in Groups
through
, including the two long rows below the table, are
Holt Chemistry
26
Name
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through
.
23. In the
24. In the
25. The
radioactive.
Holt Chemistry
27
Name
Class
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Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Trends in the Periodic Table
Complete each statement below by writing the correct word or words in the space
provided.
called the
2. The
4.
5. As the nuclear charge increases across a period, the effective nuclear charge
Holt Chemistry
28
Name
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12. Explain the large decrease in atomic radii as you move across a period from
Group 1 to Group 14.
Holt Chemistry
29
Name
Class
Date
Down a group
Ionization energy
Atomic radius
Electronegativity
Ionic size
Electron affinity
Holt Chemistry
30
Name
Class
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Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Where Did the Elements Come From?
Complete each statement below by writing the correct terms or terms.
, and
2. Immediately after the big bang, temperatures were extremely high and only
could exist.
3. As the universe began to cool, energy was converted to
, in the form of
, and
4. As the universe continued to cool, these particles joined and formed the first
two elements,
and
nuclei with one another, forming elements of still higher atomic numbers.
6. Massive atoms such as iron and nickel form by repeated
.
7. When a massive star has converted almost all its core hydrogen and helium
Holt Chemistry
31
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elements.
10. The special equipment that scientists use to create elements are called
.
Answer the following questions in the space provided.
11. There are 93 naturally occurring elements, yet the periodic table contains 113
elements. Briefly explain the difference in the two numbers.
12. Why are there limits to the synthetic elements that a cyclotron can produce?
Holt Chemistry
32
Name
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Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Simple Ions
Complete each statement below by choosing a term from the following list.
Terms may be used more than once.
10
11
ion
octet
12
13
anion
cation
and
protons,
neutrons,
electrons.
3. In most chemical reactions, atoms tend to match the outer electron configura-
rule.
charge.
electron
configurations.
7. A cation is an ion with a
charge.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
11. How many valance electrons do atoms in Group 1, Group 2, Group 15, Group
16, and Group 17 have?
13. Ions of calcium, fluorine, magnesium, and iodine have electron configurations
that are similar to which noble gases?
14. Explain why the properties of ions differ from those of their parent atoms.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Ionic Bonding and Salts
Complete each statement below by writing the correct term or phrase.
1. The arrangement of ion in sodium chloride shows that each ion is surrounded
by
oppositely-charged ions.
2. The attractive force between sodium ions and chloride ions results in an
3. In the sodium chloride crystal arrangement, the net effect is that the
the
and
of the ions.
Complete each statement below by choosing a term from the following list.
lattice energy
salt
unit cell
crystal lattice
5. The specific way in which atoms are arranged in an ionic compound is called
the
6. The
.
is the simplest repeating unit of a crystal structure.
7. A
is a compound that results when an ionic bond is formed
between a cation and an anion.
8. When 1 mole of a salt is formed from gaseous ions,
released.
is
9. Briefly describe why the structure of ionic compounds causes the compounds
to be hard.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
13. Why do ionic compounds have high melting points and high boiling points?
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
17. How do these five properties relate to the nature of ionic bonds?
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Names and Formulas of Ionic Compounds
Complete each statement below by choosing a term from the following list.
Terms may be used more than once.
cations
electroneutrality
-ide
polyatomic
ionic
subscript
Roman numerals
.
2. An electrically charged group of two or more bonded atoms that functions as
a single ion is a
ion.
3. Collections of
are never found without a similar number of
anions (or sometimes electrons) nearby to effectively neutralize the charges.
4. The names for
formed.
5. When an element forms two or more positive ions, the ions are distinguished
by using
6. The name of a simple anion is formed by changing the ending of the element
name to
7. A
is a whole number written below and to the right of an
elements symbol, and it is used to denote the number of atoms in a formula.
8. Any chemical compound that is composed of oppositely charged ions is called
a(n)
compound.
9. potassium bromide
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Write the names of the following, and include Roman numerals if needed.
16. Cu+
24. Fe2O3
17. Cl
25. Mg3N2
18. O2
26. ZnO
19. P 3
27. NaI
20. Na
28. Cu2O
21. Mg 2
29. CaCl2
22. NaCl
30. CrCl3
23. ZnS
31. HgO
33. How do the formulas for atomic salts relate to their names?
Holt Chemistry
Name
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Column A
Column B
______35. monohydrogen
______36. dihydrogen
Write the name for the following compounds that contain polyatomic ions.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
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Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Covalent Bonds
Answer the following items in the space provided.
2. Why is the H2 molecule more stable than two separate hydrogen atoms?
3. Explain why the stability described in item 2 does or does not hold true for
most covalent bonds.
Holt Chemistry
Covalent Compounds
Name
Class
Date
6. Describe the potential energy change that occurs when two hydrogen atoms
approach each other and form a covalent bond.
Holt Chemistry
Covalent Compounds
Name
Class
Date
Complete each statement below by choosing a term from the following list.
Terms may be used more than once.
energy
electronegativity
dipole
nonpolar covalent
length
ionic
polar covalent
10. Bond
is defined as the average distance between two bonded
atoms at their minimum potential energy.
11. Bond
is defined as the energy required to break the chemical
bond between two atoms and separate them.
12. The tendency of an atom to attract bonding electrons to itself when it bonds
13. A
bond is an attraction between two atoms in which bonding
electrons are shared equally between the atoms.
14. A
bond is an attraction between two atoms in which bonding
electrons are localized on the more electronegative atom.
Holt Chemistry
Covalent Compounds
Name
Class
Date
17. If the electronegativity difference between two atoms is between 0.5 and 2.1,
18. If the electronegativity difference between two atoms is greater than 2.1, the
bond formed is
19. Predict the type of bond that is present between sodium and fluorine in
sodium fluoride, NaF, which is used in fluoridation of drinking water.
20. Predict the type of bond present between carbon and hydrogen in
polyethylene.
21. Predict the type of bond present between carbon and sulfur in vulcanized
rubber.
22. Predict the type of bond present between carbon and fluorine in the polymer
Teflon.
23. Predict the type of bond that is present between phosphorus and oxygen in a
DNA molecule.
Holt Chemistry
Covalent Compounds
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Drawing and Naming Molecules
Complete each statement below by choosing a term from the following list.
Terms may be used more than once.
triple
double
single
resonance
Lewis
valence
unshared
electron.
a(n)
structure.
3. A possible Lewis structure of a molecule for which more than one Lewis
structure.
4. A covalent bond in which two atoms share two pairs of electrons is called
a(n)
bond.
5. A covalent bond in which two atoms share three pairs of electrons is called
a(n)
bond.
pair.
Answer the following items in the space provided.
9. Propane, C3H8, is a common fuel for gas barbecue grills. Draw the Lewis
structure for propane.
Holt Chemistry
Covalent Compounds
Name
Class
Date
12. Draw the Lewis structure for the rocket propellant nitryl fluoride, NO2F.
14. Explain the difference between single, double, and triple bonds.
Holt Chemistry
Covalent Compounds
Name
Class
Date
15. PbCl2
16. KCl
17. LiO2
18. As2O3
19. PBr3
20. SF4
21. N2O5
Holt Chemistry
Covalent Compounds
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Molecular Shapes
Answer the following items in the space provided.
2. Draw the Lewis structure for each of the following molecules, and use the
VSEPR theory to predict the shape of each.
a. CH4
b. CCl4
c. NO2
3. How does one unbonded pair of electrons affect the shape of a molecule?
Holt Chemistry
Covalent Compounds
Name
Class
Date
5. What evidence is there to support the idea that opposite polar ends of
molecules attract each other?
Holt Chemistry
Covalent Compounds
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Avogadros Number and Molar Conversions
Solve the following problems, and write your answer in the space provided.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
9. A sample of lead has a mass of 150.0 g. What amount of lead in moles does
the sample contain?
10. A sample of gold has a mass of 5.00 103 g. What amount of gold in moles
does the sample contain?
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Relative Atomic Mass and Chemical Formulas
Solve the following problems, and write your answer in the space provided.
1. Calculate the average atomic mass of rubidium if 72.17% of its atoms have a
mass of 84.91 amu and 27.83% of its atoms have a mass of 86.91 amu.
2. Calculate the average atomic mass of chlorine if 75.77% of its atoms have a
mass of 34.97 amu and 24.23% of its atoms have a mass of 36.96 amu.
4. Calculate the molar mass of rutile, TiO2, a mineral used in coloring glass.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Formulas and Percentage Composition
Solve the following problems, and write your answer in the space provided.
2. What is the empirical formula for a compound of aluminum and fluorine that
is 32% aluminum and 68% fluorine?
4. What is the empirical formula for a compound that is 33.36% calcium, 26.69%
sulfur, and 40.00% oxygen?
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Holt Chemistry
Name
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Date
10. The empirical formula of a compound is CH. The experimental molar mass is
26.04 g/mol. Determine the molecular formula of the compound.
11. Quartz has the chemical formula SiO2. What is the percentage composition of
this compound?
12. Urea, a component in fertilizer, has the chemical formula, CO(NH2)2. What is
the percentage composition of this compound?
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Describing Chemical Reactions
Answer the following items in the space provided.
2. Give three examples of a chemical change that has occurred in your home.
a. __________________________________________________________________
b. __________________________________________________________________
c. __________________________________________________________________
3. State nine observations that suggest that a chemical reaction has occurred.
a. __________________________________________________________________
b. __________________________________________________________________
c. __________________________________________________________________
d. __________________________________________________________________
e. __________________________________________________________________
f. __________________________________________________________________
g. __________________________________________________________________
h. __________________________________________________________________
i. __________________________________________________________________
4. What laboratory evidence do you need to show that a chemical reaction has
taken place?
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
7. If you slide a safety match across an untreated striking surface, will it light?
Explain.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
of
of
Meaning
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Balancing Chemical Equations
Answer the following items in the space provided.
2. Using the law of conservation of mass, explain why the following reaction is
wrong: HCl NaOH NaCl.
4. Consider the following balanced equation for the reaction between iron metal
and water:
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
5. Water vapor and nitrogen dioxide gas, NO2, are combined to manufacture
ammonia. A byproduct of this reaction is oxygen gas. Write the balanced
chemical equation for this reaction.
6. Iron can be obtained by reacting the naturally occurring ore hematite, Fe2O3,
with carbon. The carbon is converted to CO2. Write the balanced chemical
equation for this reaction.
7. Granules of zinc oxide, ZnO, will react with hydrochloric acid, HCl, to form
zinc chloride, ZnCl2, and water. Write the balanced chemical equation for this
reaction.
8. A reaction between copper and nitric acid, HNO3, produces copper(II) nitrate,
Cu(NO3)2, nitrogen monoxide, NO, and water. Write the balanced chemical
equation for this reaction.
9. Ethane, C2H6, reacts with molecular oxygen to produce carbon dioxide and
water. Write the balanced chemical equation for this reaction.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Classifying Chemical Reactions
Answer the following items in the space provided.
1. Your reactants are two elements. Your product is a binary compound. What
type of reaction do you have?
2. Your reactants are a hydrocarbon and oxygen. Your products are carbon
dioxide and water. What type of reaction do you have?
3. You have one reactant and two elements for products. What type of reaction
do you have?
5. Your reactants are two compounds composed of ions. What type of reaction
do you probably have?
Classify the reaction type for each of the following reactions. Briefly explain the
reason for your selection.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Determine whether each of the following reactions can occur. If the reaction does
occur, write the complete, balanced equation. If the reaction does not occur,
explain why not.
14. Write a balanced chemical equation for the reaction of hydrochloric acid and
magnesium metal. One of the products is magnesium chloride, MgCl2. Be sure
to include states of matter. What kind of reaction is this?
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Writing Net Ionic Equations
Answer the following items in the space provided.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Calculating Quantities in Reactions
Complete each statement below by writing the correct term or phrase.
the
numbers of moles of
5. The conversion factor for converting between mass and moles is the
of the substance.
6. In making calculations involving
to mass.
of the
as
In the blanks at the left, write the letter of the choice that best completes the
statement or answers the question. Consider the following problem when
answering:
What mass of sulfuric acid is required to neutralize 2.65 g of potassium hydroxide?
The products of the reaction are potassium sulfate and water.
______ 9. What should you do first after reading the problem carefully?
a. Estimate the answer.
b. Calculate the molar mass of sulfuric acid.
c. Write a balanced chemical equation.
d. Convert all masses to moles.
______10. What should you do before setting up the problem?
a. Determine the densities.
b. Calculate molar masses.
c. Convert all masses to moles.
d. Estimate the answer.
Copyright by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved.
Holt Chemistry
Stoichiometry
Name
Class
Date
14. Determine the number of grams of phosphorus formed for each 1.00 g of
Ca3(PO4)2 used in the production of phosphorus in an electric furnace.
15. How many grams of aluminum chloride are produced when 18 g of aluminum
are reacted with an excess of hydrochloric acid?
Holt Chemistry
Stoichiometry
Name
Class
Date
17. How many moles of oxygen are required for the combustion of 25.5 g of
magnesium?
18. How many grams of CO2 are produced from the burning of 1.0 mol of amyl
alcohol?
19. How many moles of nitromethane are needed to form 500.0 g of chloropicrin,
CCl3NO2, a chemical used in the production of insecticides?
Holt Chemistry
Stoichiometry
Name
Class
Date
21. How many grams of potassium chloride are formed by the decomposition of
sufficient potassium chlorate to yield 3.4 L of oxygen? Remember that the
density of oxygen is 1.33 g/L.
22. How many liters of phosphine gas are produced when 910 g of calcium
phosphide react with water? The density of phosphine gas is 1.517 g/L.
23. How many grams of air are required to complete the combustion of 93 g of
phosphorus to diphosphorus pentoxide, assuming the air to be 23% oxygen by
mass?
Holt Chemistry
Stoichiometry
Name
Class
Date
25. If 100. mL of carbon disulfide (density 1.26 g/mL) is burned completely, how
many liters of SO2 and of CO2 are formed?
Holt Chemistry
Stoichiometry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Limiting Reactants and Percentage Yield
Complete each statement below by choosing a term from the following list.
Terms may be used more than once.
excess
product
limiting
percentage
actual
theoretical
stoichiometric
1. A(n)
cal reaction.
2. A(n)
quantity of
reaction.
reactant.
calcula-
reactant.
is to the
9. The
yield
yield.
yield must be measured experimentally.
10. The percentage yield figures can be used to predict what the
11. When 3.00 g of Mg is ignited in 2.20 g of pure oxygen, what is the limiting
reactant? What is the theoretical yield of MgO?
Holt Chemistry
Stoichiometry
Name
Class
Date
13. What is the limiting reactant when 154 g of Ag reacts with 189 g of HNO3?
What is the theoretical yield in grams of AgNO3?
14. A student used 1.34 g of silver to produce silver nitrate. The actual yield was
2.01 g. Calculate the percentage yield.
15. To prepare the paint pigment chrome yellow, PbCrO4, a student started with
5.552 g of Pb(NO3)2. The actual yield of PbCrO4 was 5.096 g. Calculate the
theoretical yield and the percentage yield.
Holt Chemistry
Stoichiometry
Name
Class
Date
17. Determine the actual yield of Fe2O3 when 10.0 g of iron(II) sulfide is burned
in air. The percentage yield of the reaction is 88.1%.
18. Determine the actual yield in grams of CCl4 if 175.0 g of Cl2 reacts with
methane. The percentage yield of the reaction is 75.4%.
Holt Chemistry
Stoichiometry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Stoichiometry and Cars
In the blanks at left, write the letter of the choice that best answers the question.
______ 1. How many moles of N2 gas are generated from 0.50 mol of NaN3 used
in an air bag? The reaction equation is 2NaN3(s) 2Na(s) 3N2(g).
a. 3.0
b. 1.5
c. 0.75
d. 2.0
______ 2. How many moles of isooctane will produce 6.0 mol of H2O? The reaction equation is 2C8H18(g) 25O2(g) 16CO2(g) 18H2O(g).
a. 3.0
b. 0.67
c. 9.0
d. 2.0
______ 3. How many moles of carbon dioxide are produced when 5.0 mol of O2
is used in the reaction 2C8H18(g) 25O2(g) 16CO2(g) 18H2O(g)?
a. 80
b. 0.40
c. 1.6
d. 3.2
______ 4. How many moles of sodium oxide are produced if 0.5 mol of Fe is produced in the reaction 6Na(s) Fe2O3(s) 3Na2O(s) 2Fe(s)?
a. 6.0
b. 0.75
c. 1.5
d. 12
______ 5. Why do designers of air bags use stoichiometry?
a. to ensure that air bags inflate correctly
b. to ensure that air bags do not overinflate
c. to ensure that air bags inflate quickly enough
d. All of the above
Holt Chemistry
Stoichiometry
Name
Class
Date
6. Use the concept of limiting reactants to explain why fuel-air ratios affect the
performance of an engine.
7. What mass of sodium azide must be included in an air bag to generate 68.0 L
of N2? Use 0.916 g/L as the density of nitrogen gas.
8. How many grams of air must react with 375 mL of isooctane for complete
combustion to occur? Assume the air to be 23% oxygen by mass. The density
of oxygen is 1.33 g/L, and the density of isooctane is 0.692 g/mL.
9. Nitrogen dioxide from exhaust reacts with oxygen to form ozone. How many
grams of ozone, O3, could be produced from 4.30 g of NO2?
Holt Chemistry
10
Stoichiometry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Energy Transfer
Complete each statement below by choosing a term from the following list. Use
each term only once.
intensive
enthalpy
heat
higher
extensive
temperature
physical
lower
properties.
, and is repre-
Holt Chemistry
Causes of Change
Name
Class
Date
Celsius is
12. Calculate the energy needed to raise the temperature of 180.0 g of water from
10.0C to 40.0C. The molar heat capacity for water is 75.3 J/Kmol.
13. How many joules would be required to change the temperature of 250.0 g of
aluminum from 15.0C to 75.0C? The molar heat capacity of aluminum is 24.2
J/Kmol.
14. How much energy is required to raise the temperature of 68.0 g of tin from
25.0C to 80.0C? The molar heat capacity of tin is 11.1 J/Kmol.
15. The molar heat capacity of nitrogen, N2, is 29.1 J/Kmol. How much energy is
required to raise the temperature of 40.5 g of nitrogen 45 K?
Holt Chemistry
Causes of Change
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Using Enthalpy
Complete each statement below by writing the correct term in the space provided.
. The
,or
3. A
.A
process.
4. The science that examines the energy changes that accompany chemical and
Solve the following problems and write your answers in the space provided.
5. How much does the molar enthalpy change when 147 g of water cools from
90.0C to 17.0C? The molar heat capacity for water is 75.3 J/Kmol.
6. How much does the molar enthalpy change when 432 g of water is heated
from 18.0C to 71.0C? The molar heat capacity for water is 75.3 J/Kmol.
Holt Chemistry
Causes of Change
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Changes in Enthalpy During Chemical Reactions
Complete each statement below by writing the correct term in the space provided.
and
C, or
K.
of formation.
2. Explain how the two types of calorimeters are used to measure the energy
released or absorbed in a chemical reaction.
Holt Chemistry
Causes of Change
Name
Class
Date
4. What is the enthalpy change for the following reaction? Is the reaction
exothermic or endothermic?
5. What is the enthalpy change for the following reaction? Is the reaction
exothermic or endothermic?
Holt Chemistry
Causes of Change
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Order and Spontaneity
Complete each statement below by writing the correct term in the space provided.
1. The property of a system that makes a process occur consists of two driving
state and a
state.
.
3. The symbol for standard entropy is
used are
spontaneously is
Complete each statement below by writing the correct term in the space provided.
with temperature.
9. At
11. Because the atoms in a diamond are in a more ordered state than in graphite,
Holt Chemistry
Causes of Change
Name
Class
Date
.
.
in Gibbs energy.
Holt Chemistry
Causes of Change
Name
Class
Date
27. Calculate the change in Gibbs energy for the following reaction at 25C. Is the
reaction spontaneous?
28. Calculate the change in Gibbs energy for the given reaction at 25C. Is the
reaction spontaneous?
Holt Chemistry
Causes of Change
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: States and State Changes
Complete each statement below by choosing a term from the following list. Use
each term only once.
solid
cohesion
melting
surface tension
liquid
adhesion
evaporation
boiling point
gas
deposition
condensation
melting point
viscous
freezing
sublimation
freezing point
1. The particles in a
2. Because particles in a
have enough kinetic energy to be
able to move past each other easily, they take the shape of their container.
While many liquids flow readily, many are resistant to flowing, or are
.
3. Because they are held close together, liquid particles are more affected by
forces between particles. They have attraction for each other, or
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
solid is called
occurs is the
for a substance.
6. The particles of solids may become gas particles without first melting in a
process called
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Intermolecular Forces
Write the answers to the following questions in the space provided.
1. Why do ionic compounds tend to have higher boiling and melting points than
molecular compounds have?
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
6. What effect does hydrogen bonding have on the physical properties of water?
10. Explain the role of particle size and shape on the strength of attractive forces.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Energy of State Changes
Complete each statement below by writing the correct word or words in the space
provided. Refer to Figure 1, below, to answer items 16.
220
E
240
Water
vapor
260
280
C
A
Liquid water
Ice
300
250
Figure 1
300
350
400
Temperature, T (K)
are the
5. The enthalpy of vaporization for nitric acid is 30.30 kJ/mol, and the molar
entropy of vaporization is 84.4 J/molK. Calculate the boiling point of nitric
acid.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
6. It takes a lot [more, less] heat to vaporize the water than to melt ice.
7. Heat must be [absorbed, released] to raise the temperature of ice, water, or
water vapor.
8. The enthalpy changes accompanying a change of state are much [smaller,
greater] than those that accompany the heating of the substance at each state.
9. The tendency to [lower, higher] energy is seen in thermodynamics as positive
H values, and a(n) [increase, decrease] in disorder is seen as negative S
values.
10. During changes of state, changes in enthalpy and entropy [oppose, complement] each other. The relative values of H and TS determine which state is
preferred.
11. During evaporation, a liquid becomes a gas at a temperature [at, well below]
its boiling point.
12. Evaporation is a [endothermic, exothermic] process.
13. Gibbs energy relates entropy and enthalpy changes to the [spontaneity, rate]
of a phase transition.
14. A process is spontaneous if G is [positive, negative].
15. All spontaneous processes occur with a(n) [increase, decrease] in Gibbs
energy.
16. When G is exactly zero, the system is in a state of [flux, equilibrium].
17. The melting point of a solid equals the enthalpy of fusion [divided, multiplied]
by the entropy of fusion.
18. Boiling occurs when the tendency toward [order, disorder] overcomes the
tendency to lose energy.
19. [Condensation, evaporation] occurs when the tendency to lose energy overcomes the tendency to increase disorder.
20. Boiling points are pressure dependent because pressure has [no, a large]
effect on the entropy of a gas.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Phase Equilibrium
Complete each statement below by choosing a term from the following list. Use
each term only once.
phase
triple point
vapor pressure
equilibrium
critical point
phase diagram
supercritical fluid
1. A
is a region that has the same composition and properties
throughout. When particles are constantly moving between two or more
phases, yet no net change in the amount of substance in either phase occurs,
2. A graph of the relationship between the physical state of a substance and the
.
.
,
3. What physical factor does the average kinetic energy of molecules depend on?
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
5. Use the phase diagram for water in your text to complete the table below and
items 68.
Description of point
Temperature
Pressure
Point
6. Name the phases that water will exhibit if the pressure is kept constant at
110 kPa and the temperature is gradually increased from 10C to 110C.
7. Name the phases that water will exhibit if the pressure is kept constant at
0.31 kPa and the temperature is gradually increased from 10C to 110C.
What term is given to the phase transformation of water that occurs under
these conditions?
8. Along which line segment do solids and liquids coexist? Describe the slope of
this line for water. What will an increase in pressure do to waters melting
point?
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Characteristics of Gases
Complete each statement below by underlining the correct word or phrase in
brackets.
1. Gases have unique properties because the distance between gas particles is
much [greater than, smaller than] the particles of a liquid or a solid. In contrast to solids and liquids, gases [partially, completely] fill their containers.
2. Gases are considered [liquids, fluids] because their particles [can, cannot]
move past each other easily and are thus able to flow. Gas particles can be
forced closer together by applying pressure to them, thus [decreasing,
increasing] their volume.
3. Gases have much [higher, lower] densities than do liquids and solids. Because
of the [large, small] distance between gas particles, much of the space occupied by a gas is [vibrating, empty].
4. According to the kinetic-molecular theory, gas particles travel relatively [long,
short] distances before colliding with each other. These collisions with each
other and with the walls of their container result in [pressure, fluid]. These
collisions are perfectly elastic; that is, energy is [completely, inversely] transferred from one particle to another.
5. Although gases [are, are not] dense, they [do, do not] have mass, therefore in
a gravitational field they also [have, do not have] weight. As gas particles are
attracted by Earths gravity, they collide with each other and with Earths
surface, creating [the atmosphere, air pressure]. Pressure is the amount of
force exerted per unit area of [volume, surface].
6. Air is [less dense, denser] as you move closer to Earths surface because the
weight of atmospheric gases at any elevation compresses the gases below
them. At high altitudes, less dense air exerts [more, less] pressure.
7. The kinetic-molecular theory states that particles of matter are in constant
rapid, random motion. The average kinetic energy of random motion is [proportional, inversely proportional] to temperature in kelvins. This means that
heat [decreases, increases] the energy of random motion of a gas.
Holt Chemistry
Gases
Name
Class
Date
______ 8. pressure
Holt Chemistry
Gases
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: The Gas Laws
Refer to Figure 1, below, to complete items 15. Assume the gas in the cylinder is
at constant temperature.
Pressure
Volume
1/ V
2
2P
1/ V
3
3P
Figure 1
1. In general, as the pressure increases, the volume
, and as
.
2. Name and state the law that describes the behavior of the gas in the cylinder.
3. Complete the table, given the initial pressure and volume of the gas in the
cylinder.
Pressure (kPa)
Volume (L)
100
0.500
Pressure Volume, PV
200
0.167
Holt Chemistry
Gases
Name
Class
Date
Solve the following problems and write your answers in the space provided.
6. A sample of gas occupies 20 L under a pressure of 1 atm. What will its volume
be if the pressure is increased to 2 atm? Assume the temperature of the gas
sample does not change.
Holt Chemistry
Gases
Name
Class
Date
Volume
Temperature
T
2V
2T
3V
3T
Figure 2
9. In general, as the temperature increases, the volume
, and
.
10. Name and state the law that describes the behavior of the gas in the cylinder.
11. Complete the table, given the initial pressure and volume of the gas in the
cylinder.
Temperature (K)
Volume (mL)
100
199
402
Volume/Temperature, V/T
2.01
300
12. The data in item 11 show that the volume of a given sample of gas divided by
, is a(n)
. The
and is known as
Holt Chemistry
Gases
Name
Class
Date
14. How does a change in temperature affect the pressure of a gas when its
volume is kept constant? Use equations to express this relationship when
more than one set of pressure-temperature conditions are applied to the same
gas sample at a fixed volume.
Solve the following problems and write your answers in the space provided.
15. What is the volume of a gas at 253 K if the gas occupies 50.0 mL at a temperature of 273 K? Volume and mass are held constant.
16. A gas at 300 K exerts a pressure of 99 kPa. What pressure is exerted by the
same gas at 273 K? Volume and mass are held constant.
17. A gas occupies 50.0 mL at standard temperature. What volume will it occupy
at 335C with the pressure unchanged? (Be sure to convert the Celsius temperature to kelvins.)
Holt Chemistry
Gases
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Molecular Composition of Gases
In the space provided, write the letter of the description that best matches the
term or phrase.
______ 3. effusion
______ 4. diffusion
Solve the following problems and write your answers in the space provided.
Holt Chemistry
Gases
Name
Class
Date
9. The volume of a gas is 20.0 mL under a pressure of 97.3 kPa and at a temperature of 297 K. What would the volume be if it were measured under 95.7 kPa
and at 286 K?
10. Given 20.0 L of ammonia at 278 K and 101.325 kPa, determine its volume at
303 K and 1.05 atm.
Holt Chemistry
Gases
Name
Class
Date
;;;;
;;;;
;;
Cork
;
;;
;;
;;
Cotton soaked in
concentrated HCl
Cotton moistened
with ammonia water
Figure 3
12. Compare the speed of effusion of H2(g) with that of Br2(g) under the same
conditions.
13. Under constant pressure, a small basketball pump is filled with helium, He,
gas; the helium is then forced out of a small aperture in 2 seconds. The same
pump is filled with hydrogen bromide, HBr, gas. Under the same pressure,
how long will it take to force this gas out?
Holt Chemistry
Gases
Name
Class
Date
H2
380 mm
O2
380 mm
H2
O2
??? mm
Figure 4
16. Use Gay-Lussacs law of combining volumes to determine the volumes of the
reacting gases in the following equations:
volumes
volumes
volumes
volumes
volumes
Holt Chemistry
10
Gases
Name
Class
Date
19. The equation for the reaction of sodium with water is as follows:
Holt Chemistry
11
Gases
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: What Is a Solution?
In the space provided, write the letter of the description that best matches the
term or phrase.
______ 1. suspension
______ 2. colloid
______ 3. solution
c. a mixture in which large particles are temporarily suspended throughout a liquid or gas
______ 4. solvent
______ 5. solute
______ 6. aqueous
______ 7. milk
______12. ink
______ 8. gasoline
______14. bronze
______10. steel
______15. brass
______11. coffee
throughout a
Holt Chemistry
Solutions
Name
Class
Date
.
22. A
24. To
a mixture, simply pour the liquids off and leave the
settled solids behind.
25. A centrifuge separates mixtures into components that have different
.
26. The force created by a centrifuge pushes denser substances to the
of the tube.
27. During
, liquid and solid particles smaller than the holes in
filter paper pass through the filter paper and form a filtrate.
28. Paper chromatography employs
surface of a liquid to the surface of a solid.
points.
31. During distillation, as one component reaches its boiling point, its
by distillation.
Holt Chemistry
Solutions
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Concentration and Molarity
Complete each statement below by choosing a term from the following list.
Use each term only once.
concentration
moles
solute
solution
molality
molarity
ratios
1.
liter
; it is the ratio of
amount (in
of
, such as
(m = mol solute/kg
Solve the following problems and write your answer in the space provided.
2. What is the molarity of a hydrochloric acid solution that has a volume of 1500
mL and contains 441 g of HCl?
3. What is the molarity of a sugar solution that has a volume of 0.500 L and
contains 17.1 g of ordinary sugar (C12H22O11)?
Holt Chemistry
Solutions
Name
Class
Date
Holt Chemistry
Solutions
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Solubility and the Dissolving Process
Complete each statement below by underlining the correct word or phrase in
brackets.
1. Two liquids that are soluble in each other in all proportions are said to be
[miscible, immiscible].
2. Whether A dissolves in B depends on a [imbalance, balance] between favorable entropy and favorable enthalpy.
3. Two compounds that are both polar or both nonpolar are likely to be [immiscible, miscible].
4. Two compounds that can form hydrogen bonds with each other are likely to
be [immiscible, miscible].
Complete each statement below by choosing a term from the following list. Use
each term only once.
Henrys law
solubility
maximum
solvent
solution
saturated
decreases
supersaturated
miscibility
equilibrium
solute
pressure
5. A(n)
. The substance
6. The
of a solute is defined as the
amount
of that solute that will dissolve in a given amount of a solvent under specified
conditions.
7. A(n)
given conditions.
8. According to
10. A(n)
solution contains more than the amount of solute
specified by the solubility at a given set of conditions.
Holt Chemistry
Solutions
Name
Class
Date
In the space provided, write the letter of the term or phrase that best completes
each statement or best answers each question.
______13. Fats, greases, and oils are difficult to remove from fabrics by simple
washing because they are
a. polar.
b. nonpolar.
c. miscible.
d. soluble.
______14. Nonpolar solvents will dissolve materials that are themselves
a. nonpolar.
b. polar.
c. insoluble.
d. None of the above
______15. The best dry-cleaning fluid to remove a polar stain from fabric would
most likely be a
a. polar liquid solvent.
b. polar liquid solute.
c. nonpolar liquid solvent.
d. nonpolar liquid solute.
______16. Vitamin C is easily transported by the blood and easily excreted by the
kidneys because it
a. is immiscible.
b. forms a suspension.
c. is water-soluble.
d. forms a precipitate.
______ 17. It is possible to take too much vitamin A but not vitamin C because
a. vitamin A is water soluble.
b. vitamin C is fat soluble.
c. vitamin A is fat soluble and builds up in body fat.
d. the kidneys are less effective at processing small, water-soluble
molecules.
Holt Chemistry
Solutions
Name
Class
Date
18. [Distillation, Dissociation] occurs when ions separate from the crystals of
ionic compounds during the solution process.
19. [Hydration, Dissociation] occurs when water molecules attach themselves to
the ions of the solute during the solution process.
20. For the aqueous ionic solution represented by the equation NaCl(s)
Na(aq) Cl(aq), how does the tendency toward minimum energy compare
with the tendency toward maximum entropy? They are [equal, unequal].
21. Though [easy, difficult] to predict, the solubilities of ionic compounds are
quite [easy, difficult] to measure.
22. [All, Few] compounds containing nitrate ions or ammonium ions are [soluble,
insoluble] in water.
23. Unlike the solubility of gases, the solubility of most ionic compounds
[increases, decreases] with temperature.
24. In a saturated solution, some excess solute remains, and the amount that
dissolves is [equal, unequal] to the solubility value for that temperature. Some
supersaturated solutions are able to contain [more, less] than the solubility
indicates would normally be possible as long as [there is no excess, there is
an excess] of undissolved solute remaining.
Holt Chemistry
Solutions
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Physical Properties of Solutions
Write the answer to the following questions in the space provided.
1. Separately, neither NaCl nor H2O can conduct electricity, but if you put them
together in the form of an aqueous solution, you have a conductor. Explain
why.
2. Explain why you should not seek shelter under a tree during a thunderstorm.
In the space provided, write the letter of the term or phrase that best completes
each statement or best answers each question.
Holt Chemistry
Solutions
Name
Class
Date
vapor pressure
total number
reduced
solute
less
colligative
decrease
increase
nature
freezing-point depression
particles
concentration
boiling-point elevation
properties
greater
to escape from a solution. For example, the proportion and escaping tendency
of water molecules is
Holt Chemistry
Solutions
Name
Class
Date
a(n)
12. The decrease in the vapor pressure of a solvent resulting from the addition of
.
13. The
, the
the freezing-
______19. soap
______20. surfactant
b. any mixture of two or more immiscible liquids in which one liquid is dispersed in the
other
______21. emulsion
Holt Chemistry
10
Solutions
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Reversible Reactions and Equilibrium
Answer the following questions in the space provided.
1. What is the difference between a reversible reaction and one that goes to
completion?
Holt Chemistry
Chemical Equilibrium
Name
Class
Date
______ 6. When an automobile battery is used for power, chemicals are consumed in the process of furnishing electricity. When the battery is
recharged, the original chemicals are regenerated
______ 7. A reaction between solutions of sodium chloride and silver nitrate
produces an insoluble white precipitate, silver chloride.
______ 8. In the reaction between hydrochloric acid and potassium hydroxide,
water is practically un-ionized.
______ 9. Salt crystals in a saturated solution demonstrate crystal growth.
Refer to Figure 1 to answer items 1012.
Complete each statement below by circling the
correct term.
Rate decreasing with time
Reaction rates
10. Initially, the concentration of each product, C and D, is [0, 0], and the rate of the
reverse reaction is [0, 0]. At the same
time, the concentration of each reactant, A
and B, is at a [minimum, maximum], and
the rate of the forward reaction is the
[minimum, maximum] rate.
A + B C + D
Equilibrium
C + D A + B
Rate increasing with time
t0
t1
Time
Holt Chemistry
Chemical Equilibrium
Name
Class
Date
[CoCl4]2
complex ion
16. A(n)
[Co(H2O)6]2
ligands
metal
CoCl2
colored
reverse
2
[Cu(NH3)4]
copper
ammonia
atom or ion is bonded to more than one atom or molecule. Many complex ions
formed from transition metals are
changes in humidity. When humidity is high, [CoCl4]2 reacts with water vapor
in the air and forms a pink complex ion that has six water molecules bonded to
cobalt,
forms.
Holt Chemistry
Chemical Equilibrium
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Systems at Equilibrium
Answer the following item in the space provided.
Circle the term or phrase in the brackets that best completes each sentence.
2. The [molarity constant, equilibrium constant], Keq , has a unique value for
each equilibrium system at a specific temperature.
3. We can assume that pure solids and pure liquids are [important, not important] to equilibrium systems because they do not appear in the equilibrium
expression.
4. Changing the temperature of an equilibrium system [does not change,
changes] both the concentration of the participants and the value of Keq .
5. At constant temperature, changing the equilibrium concentrations [does, does
not] affect Keq . When the concentration of one of the participants is changed,
the concentration of the others varies in a way that maintains a constant
value for Keq .
Complete each statement below by writing the correct term from the following list.
Keq 1
Keq > 1
Keq < 1
6. If
, reactants of the forward reaction are favored; the
forward reaction occurs only very slightly before equilibrium is established.
7. If
, the products of the concentrations in the numerator and
denominator have the same value.
8. If
, products of the forward reaction are favored; a large
value indicates an equilibrium in which the original reactants are largely
converted to products.
Holt Chemistry
Chemical Equilibrium
Name
Class
Date
9. What is the Keq value for the following reaction at equilibrium at a temperature
of 298 K if the concentrations (in mol/L) of the reactants and products are
[N2O4] 0.0450 and [NO2] 0.0161?
N2O4(g) 2NO2(g)
10. What is the Keq value for the following reaction if the equilibrium concentrations at 721 K are [H2] 0.46, [I2] 0.39, and [HI] 3.0?
11. What is the Keq value for the following reaction if the gaseous mixture in a 4 L
container reaches equilibrium at 1000 K and contains 4.0 mol of N2, 6.4 mol of
H2, and 0.40 mol of NH3?
12. At 328 K, the Keq for the reaction 2NO2(g) N2O4(g) is 1.5. Calculate the
concentration of N2O4 present in equilibrium when [NO2] 0.50.
Holt Chemistry
Chemical Equilibrium
Name
Class
Date
14. Quantities of PCl3 and Cl2 were placed in a reaction chamber and heated to
503 K at 1 atm. At equilibrium, Keq 0.0205; and [PCl5] 0.235 and
[PCl3] 0.174. Calculate the concentration of Cl2.
15. Consider a slightly soluble salt with the general formula AaBb. The equilibrium
system in a saturated solution of the salt is shown by the following equation.
Holt Chemistry
Chemical Equilibrium
Name
Class
Date
18. If the concentration of chloride ion remaining in solution after silver chloride
has been precipitated is 0.2 M, what is the concentration of the silver ion? Ksp
of AgCl is 2.8 1010.
19. What is the experimental Ksp of CaCO3 if the residue after evaporation of a
1.00 L saturated solution is found to have a mass of 0.006 90 g?
20. For a saturated silver chromate solution, the molar concentration of CrO 24 is
6.54 105 M, and the Ksp of Ag2CrO4 is 1.12 1012 at equilibrium.
Calculate the concentration of Ag in the solution.
Holt Chemistry
Chemical Equilibrium
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Equilibrium Systems and Stress
Answer the following item in the space provided.
3. Consider the following system at equilibrium, and complete the tables below,
indicating the systems response to a given stress to restore equilibrium.
Direction of shift
Increase
Decrease
left favored
NO2
N2O4
Lowering temperature
Raising temperature
Pressure
Results
Stress
Direction of shift
Increase
Decrease
Pressure increase
right favored
N2O4
NO2
Pressure decrease
Pressure
Results
Stress
Direction of shift
Increase
Decrease
Increase [N2O4]
left favored
NO2
N2O4
Increase [NO2]
Decrease [N2O4]
Decrease [NO2]
Holt Chemistry
Chemical Equilibrium
Name
Class
Date
increase
endothermic
left
increases
decrease
exothermic
right
decreases
4. In general, a(n)
in pressure shifts a system at equilibrium in
the direction that produces the smaller number of moles of gases, and a(n)
8. The excess
is formed.
.
ion.
14. NaBr has an ion in common with AgBr; hence the name
Holt Chemistry
Chemical Equilibrium
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: What Are Acids and Bases?
In the space provided, write the letter of the description that best matches the
term or phrase.
______ 2. amphoteric
______ 4. Brnsted-Lowry
acid
______ 5. Brnsted-Lowry
base
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
a. conjugate acid
b. conjugate base
In the space provided, write the letter of the term or phrase that best completes
each statement or best answers each question.
a. as a weak acid
b. as a strong acid
c. as a weak base
d. as a strong base
______ 17. How would you classify sodium hydroxide (NaOH) in the equation
below?
NaOH(s) Na(aq) OH(aq)
a. as a weak acid
b. as a strong acid
c. as a weak base
d. as a strong base
b. generates OH
d. all of the above
______19. How would you classify nitric acid (HNO3) in the equation below?
HNO3(l) H2O(l) H3O(aq) NO
3 (aq)
a. as a weak acid
b. as a strong acid
c. as a weak base
d. as a strong base
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Acidity, Basicity, and pH
Complete each statement below by choosing a term or formula from the following
list. Use each term only once.
H3O
OH
[H3O]
equal
constant
acid
concentration
[OH ]
equilibrium
base
system
14
1.00 10
system in which
amounts of
ions and
ions are
, Kw , is called the
. In the self-ionization of water and in any
involving
and
must equal
No. 2
2
No. 3
4
No. 4
No. 5
6
7
No. 6
No. 8
No. 9
10
12
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
1014
pH
10
12
14
Neutral
aggggeebeeggggc
Basic
aggggebeggggc
Acidic
8
No. 7
[H ]
higher
inversely
increases
10
decreases
lower
hydronium ion
pH
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
related. As [H3O]
from 8 to 10. In
. A solution
5. Explain how a mixture of indicators, like those in pH paper, is used to determine pH.
6. Describe a pH meter, and briefly describe how such a device measures pH.
Solve the following problems, and write your answer in the space provided.
7. Determine the [OH] of a solution that contains 1 105 mol of H3O per
liter.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Neutralizations and Titrations
Complete each statement below by choosing a term from the following list. Use
each term only once.
unknown
hydronium
titration
equivalence point
water
equivalent
standard
hydroxide
neutralization
salt
1. A
solution,
concentration until
the chemical reaction between the two solutions is complete. The most
common titration involves the reaction of an acidic solution with a basic
solution and is called a(n)
and
2. In theory, during the titration of a strong acid with a strong base, the standard
, the number of
ions from the added base solution equals the
number of
In the blank at the left of each of the following statements, write the letter from Figure 1 that best matches
that statement.
Acid
buret
Base
buret
B
C
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
14
14
12
12
10
10
8
6
pH
pH
Equivalence
point
8
6
0
0
0
0
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Equivalence
point
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
mL NaOH added
mL NH3(aq) added
Figure 2
Figure 3
to
. Because of the
would be a
good indicator.
Solve the following problem, and write your answer in the space provided.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Equilibria of Weak Acids and Bases
Refer to Table 7, Relative Strengths of Acids and Bases, in your textbook to answer
the following items.
5. Of NH
4 and HCOOH, the weaker acid is
6. Of NH
4 and HOCl, the weaker acid is
11. In an acid-base reaction, the conjugate base of the [stronger, weaker] acid is
the weaker base, and the conjugate acid of the [stronger, weaker] base is the
weaker acid.
12. The [higher, lower] the Ka of an acid, the weaker the conjugate base; and the
[higher, lower] the Ka of an acid, the stronger the conjugate base.
Solve the following problems, and write your answer in the space provided.
13. Calculate Ka for 0.100 M acetic acid at 25C. Its [H3O] is 1.3 103 mol/L.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
15. A [buffer, acid] solution is made from a weak [acid, base] and its conjugate
[acid, base] that neutralizes small amounts of acids and bases added to it. It is
not necessary that they be present in equal amounts.
16. If a [acid, base] is added to a buffer solution, it will react with H3O removing
[H3O, OH] from solution. According to [Le Chteliers, Avogadros] principle, the equilibrium will adjust by shifting to the right to make more [H3O,
OH]. This prevents the pH from changing very much.
17. A [buffer, acid] is most efficient when its two components have [equal,
unequal] concentrations, but this is not required for a buffer to work.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: What Affects the Rate of a Reaction?
Complete each statement below by choosing a term from the following list. Use
each term only once.
1.
time
chemical kinetics
volume
acidity
appearance
mass
decrease
positive
disappearance
reaction rate
reactant or the
of a
4. Three properties can be used to monitor the reaction rate in the following
chemical reaction:
in
of H2
5. The minus sign in the reaction-rate equation makes the decrease in reactant
concentration a
number.
Holt Chemistry
Reaction Rates
Name
Class
Date
a. temperature
c. nature of reactants
b. concentration
d. surface area
______ 8. A piece of steel wool heated in air (20% oxygen by volume) burns
slowly, but when heated in pure oxygen, it undergoes rapid combustion, as evidenced by a dazzling shower of sparks.
______ 9. Storing foods and milk in a refrigerator helps to slow down reactions
that ordinarily result in spoilage and souring.
______10. Powdered iron in melted sulfur reacts more rapidly than a lump of iron
in melted sulfur.
______11. When a piece of magnesium ribbon is placed in a beaker of dilute
hydrochloric acid, a rapid evolution of hydrogen gas occurs; when a
piece of iron is placed in the same acid, hydrogen gas is evolved
slowly, and the iron disappears at a relatively slow rate.
______12. Pressure cookers are used so that the reactions involved in cooking
food will take place at a faster rate.
Write your answer to the following questions in the space provided.
13. If the concentrations of the products in a reaction are increasing would the
signs of their rate expressions be positive or negative?
14. During a given chemical reaction explain how the following conditions may
affect the reaction rate in all states of matter.
a. concentration
b. pressure
c. temperature
Holt Chemistry
Reaction Rates
Name
Class
Date
Solve the following problems, and write your answer in the space provided. Refer
to Table 1 (Concentration Data and Calculations for the Decomposition of N 2O5)
for concentration data.
16. Calculate the reaction rate of the decomposition of N2O5 between the time
intervals of 40.0 to 60.0 seconds.
17. Calculate the reaction rate of the decomposition of N2O5 between the time
intervals of 20.0 to 40.0 seconds.
Holt Chemistry
Reaction Rates
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: How Can Reaction Rates Be Explained?
Refer to the following reaction and rate law expressions, and use their symbols
and chemical principles to complete items 19.
and
and
and
is to
and
.
may be zero, a
and
.
10. What is the order of the following reactions with the given rate law expressions?
Holt Chemistry
Reaction Rates
Name
Class
Date
A2 2B 2AB
rate k[A2][B]0
12. We know that the rate expression for the following reaction is
2C D2 2CD
rate k[C][D2]2
by
13. We know that the rate expression for the following reaction is
2NO O2 2NO2
rate k[NO]2[O2]
Two experiments involving this reaction are carried out at the same
temperature. If during the second experiment the initial concentration of NO
is doubled, the initial concentration of O2 must be multiplied by a factor of
for the reaction rate to stay the same. The overall reaction
order is
14. Explain why the energy and orientation of the collision of atoms and molecules
is important in chemical reactions.
15. Determine the rate-law equation for the following reaction, given the
experimental data shown below.
2AB A2 2B
Trial run
[AB]
Reaction rate
2.0 M
0.25 M/s
4.0 M
0.50 M/s
Holt Chemistry
Reaction Rates
Name
Class
Date
3B C
Trial run
[B]
Reaction rate
0.4 M
2.0 M/s
0.8 M
8.0 M/s
17. Determine the rate law equation for the following reaction, given the experimental data shown below.
A2 2B 2AB
rate k[B]n[A2]m
Trial run
[A2]
[B]
Reaction rate
1.0 M
1.0 M
4.0 M/s
1.0 M
2.0 M
4.0 M/s
2.0 M
3.0 M
8.0 M/s
18. Determine the overall balanced equation for a reaction having the following
proposed mechanism:
Holt Chemistry
Reaction Rates
Name
Class
Date
Step 1
Step 2
Refer to Figure 1 to answer questions 2226.
Potential energy (kcal)
50
40
30
20
10
Time
Examine the potential energy changes taking place when diatomic molecules A2
react with molecules B2 and form AB. The reactions general equation is
A2(g) B2(g) 2AB(g)
21. What is the activation energy, Ea , needed for the reaction to proceed in the
forward direction?
22. What is the activation energy, Ea , needed for the reaction to proceed in the
reverse direction?
thermic.
thermic.
Holt Chemistry
Reaction Rates
Name
Class
Date
Column A
Column B
______26. catalysts
______28. enzymes
______29. lactose
e. natures catalysts
______31. lactase
Complete each statement below by choosing a term from the following list.
catalytic converter
regenerated
accelerate
Holt Chemistry
Reaction Rates
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Oxidation-Reduction Reactions
Choose the statement from Column B that best matches the term in Column A, and
write the corresponding letter in the space provided.
Column A
Column B
______ 1. reduction
______ 2. oxidation
______ 6. half-reaction
Determine the oxidation number for each atom in the following chemical formulas.
8. ZnCl2
9. SO3
10. HNO3
11. Al2(SO4)3
12. PbO
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
16. Identify which of the following reactions is a reduction reaction and which is
an oxidation reaction. Write the balanced overall ionic equation for the redox
reaction between these two.
Mg Mg 2 2e
O2 4e 2O2
Balance the following equations using the half-reaction method.
2
2
17. MnO
(in acidic solution)
2 SO2 SO4 Mn
2
18. NO
(in acidic solution)
3 Cu NO Cu
20. In this equation identify which atoms where reduced and which were oxidized.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Introduction to Electrochemistry
Complete the following statements by choosing a term from the following list.
Use each term only once.
electric current
voltage
1. The
electrochemical cell
electrode
amperes
3. A(n)
a circuit.
4. A(n)
Choose the statement from Column B that best matches the term in Column A, and
write the corresponding letter in the space provided.
Column A
Column B
______ 5. electrolytes
______ 6. metals
______ 7. electrode
______ 8. cathode
______10. anode
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
solution.
15. The anode is wherever
is going on.
is going on.
Solve the following problems, and write your answers in the space provided.
18. Explain how electrons move between the negative and positive terminals in a
typical flashlight battery.
19. Write an electrode reaction in which you change Zn(s) to Zn2(aq). Would
this reaction happen at an anode or a cathode?
20. Write an electrode reaction which would occur at a cathode and which
involves Cu2. Is this reaction oxidation or reduction?
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Galvanic Cells
Complete each statement by underlining the correct word in brackets.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
20. Calculate the voltage of a cell for the reaction between a silver electrode in a
solution containing silver ions and a zinc electrode in a solution containing
zinc ions. Identify the anode and the cathode.
21. Calculate the voltage of a cell for the reaction between a copper electrode in
a solution containing copper(II) ions and a lead electrode in a solution containing lead(II) ions. Identify the anode and the cathode.
22. Write the electrochemical equation for the reaction that will naturally occur in
a cell that contains a zinc, Zn2/Zn, electrode and a copper, Cu2/Cu, electrode.
23. Write the electrochemical equation for the reaction that will naturally occur in
a cell that contains a chlorine, Cl2, electrode and an iodine, I2, electrode.
24. Write the electrochemical equation for the reaction that will naturally occur in
a cell that contains a silver, Ag/Ag, electrode and a copper, Cu2/Cu, electrode.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
26. List the three ingredients generally required in the corrosion of metals.
27. Explain why corrosion is more likely to occur when two different metals are
in contact with one another. Give an example.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Electrolytic Cells
For questions 18, complete each statement below by referring to Figure 1 and
choosing a term from the following list. Use each term only once.
e
Figure 1
e rich
e poor
electrode
electrode
Reduction Oxidation
reaction
reaction
uses
supplies
electrons
electrons
Electrolyte
Cathode
Anode
cathode
electrolysis
negative
anode
nonspontaneous
electrical
oxidation
released
consumed molten
of
process and is
at the anode (
) and
at the cathode (
); therefore, electrons
to
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
9.
10. The
at the cathode.
12. An
is added to water to make it an effective conductor
during electrolysis, but the electrolyte does not undergo any redox reactions.
13. Electrolytic cells are used to
metals.
Column A
Column B
______15. bauxite
______16. Hall-Hroult
______ 17. 5%
d. ore of aluminum
______19. carbon-lined
tank
______21. 95%
______22. electroplating
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Atomic Nuclei and Nuclear Stability
Answer the following questions in the space provided.
1. What is a nucleon?
2. What is a nuclide?
Holt Chemistry
Nuclear Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Holt Chemistry
Nuclear Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
per nucleon
less
large
mole
nucleus
maximum
highest
separate
stable
protons
mass
24
12 Mg
repulsions
mass number
attraction
56
26 Fe
nuclear binding
increase
mass defect
11. The
converted
is formed from protons and
from 8 mol of protons and 8 mol of neutrons, the resulting 1 mol of nuclei
would have a mass that is 0.137005 g
1 mol of
12. Consider a graph that plots average binding energy per nucleon versus mass
around mass
. The nuclei with the
for added
among the particles, and
. The most
Holt Chemistry
Nuclear Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
nucleus is at a
compared with the energy changes that take place in ordinary chemical reactions.
15. During the formation of a nucleus, energy is produced at the expense of
Refer to the rules for predicting nuclear stability. Complete each statement by
underlining the correct word in brackets.
16. All 256 of the known stable nuclei, represented by red dots, form a pattern
called the band of [stability, nuclear bonding].
17. Above atomic number 20, the most stable nuclides have [more, fewer] neutrons than protons.
18. Except for the smallest nuclei, all stable nuclei contain a number of neutrons
that is [less than or equal to, equal to or greater] than the number of protons.
19. Almost [60%, 90%] of all stable nuclei have even numbers of protons and
neutrons.
20. Nuclei with even numbers of protons and neutrons (an even-even combination) are particularly [unstable, stable].
40
88
21. 16
18O, 20Ca, and 38Sr are nuclei with so-called magic numbers of nucleons and
tend to be very [unstable, stable].
Holt Chemistry
Nuclear Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Nuclear Change
Answer the following questions in the space provided.
1. What is radioactivity?
Holt Chemistry
Nuclear Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Beta-particle emission
electron capture
positron emission
alpha particle emission
Write balanced nuclear equations for the following, and name the type of radioactive emission formed when each occurs.
0
7. 51
24Cr 1 e
emission:
8. 226
88 Ra
42 He
emission:
9. 239
93 Np
10 e
emission:
10. 234
91 Pa
10 e
emission:
49
11. 49
24Cr 23 V
emission:
234
12. 238
92 U 90 Th
emission:
214
13. 214
83 Bi 84 Po
emission:
Categorize each nuclear equation below by writing the correct term from the
following list. Terms may be used more than once.
electron capture
positron emission
annihilation of matter
type:
15. 11 p 10 n 10e
type:
0
37
16. 37
18 Ar 1 e 17 Cl +
type:
234
4
17. 238
92 U 90 Th 2 He
type:
type:
Holt Chemistry
Nuclear Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
19. Nuclei that have an excess of neutrons can become stable by emitting
.
20. Any time a particle collides with an
, all of the mass of the
two particles is converted into electromagnetic energy.
21. A positron colliding with an electron results in the conversion of all the
masses of the two particles into gamma rays; this process is known as the
.
22.
23. In
25. None of the elements above atomic number 83 and mass number 126 have
.
.
Complete each statement below by choosing a term from the following list.
Use each term only once.
fission
fusion
sustains
chain reaction
neutrons
binding energy
spontaneous
critical mass
28. Nuclear
fuse
of the material.
Holt Chemistry
Nuclear Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
energy.
Categorize each nuclear equation below as fission or fusion.
30. 31 H 21 H 42 He 10 n
type:
1
90
147
1
31. 239
94 Pu 0 n 38 Sr 56 Ba 30 n
type:
0
90
144
1
32. 235
92 U 38 Sr 58 Ce 0 n 41 e
type:
type:
Holt Chemistry
Nuclear Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Holt Chemistry
Nuclear Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Uses of Nuclear Chemistry
Answer the following in the space provided.
1. Define half-life.
In the blanks at the left, write the letter of the choice that best completes the
statement or answers the question.
0
40
______ 3. The equation 40
19 K 1 e 18 Ar represents the decay of
potassium-40 by
to argon-40.
a. beta emission
b. electron capture
c. positron emission
d. alpha decay
Holt Chemistry
10
Nuclear Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
______10. During a PET scan, gamma rays are detected by a scanner, which converts the information into
.
a. a three-dimensional picture of a persons organs
b. an image of a persons heart
c. a photographic image of bone repair
d. None of the above
Holt Chemistry
11
Nuclear Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
15. What similarities do you notice about the nuclear reactions used in medicine
that are mentioned in the text?
Holt Chemistry
12
Nuclear Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
12
Radon remaining
Solve the following problems, and write your answer in the space provided.
19. You find an ancient artifact with a ratio of carbon-14 to carbon-12 that is one
quarter the ratio in a similar object today. About how old is the artifact?
20. The half-life of polonium-218 is 3.0 minutes. What percentage of the original
sample remains after 4 half-lives?
Holt Chemistry
13
Nuclear Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Compounds of Carbon
Answer the following questions in the space provided.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
6. What characteristics does carbon have that enables it to form more known
compounds than all the other elements combined?
7. What is a hydrocarbon?
8. The prefix used for naming an organic compound that has a ring structure is
.
9. Cyclobutane is the name of the ring compound with
atoms.
10.
carbon
compounds.
Copyright by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
alkane
alkene
alkyne
isomers
alcohol
aldehyde
halide
amine
carboxylic acid
ester
ether
ketone
.
.
14. A compound that has the same chemical composition but a different structure
17. The
functional group is an O double-bonded to a carbon
and an OH single-bonded to the same carbon.
18. The
functional group is an O double-bonded to a carbon
and an H single-bonded to the same carbon.
19. The
more carbon atoms.
20. The
carbon.
21. Why are functional groups often responsible for how an organic compound reacts?
22. Explain how the structural difference between isomers is related to the
difference in their properties.
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Names and Structures of Organic Compounds
1. Complete the table below for straight-chain hydrocarbons.
Number of carbon atoms
Prefix
meth-
2
propbut5
6
7
8
9
10
Answer the items below in the space provided.
CH3CH2CH2CH3
CH2CHCH3
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
6. propyne
7. ethane
8. ethene
9. 1-butene
Complete each statement below by writing the correct term from the following list.
-ol
-al
amino-
-one
-oic acid
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
16. What are the structural and molecular formulas for phenol?
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Organic Reactions
Answer the following items in the space provided.
1. What is an addition reaction?
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
8. What is hydrogenation?
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
12. What is the difference between polyethylene and a similar polymer with an
ethane side chain?
Holt Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Carbohydrates and Lipids
Complete each statement below by choosing a term from the following list. Terms
may be used more than once.
carbohydrate
monosaccharide
disaccharide
polysaccharide
condensation
hydrolysis
lipid
sugar
glycogen
polymer
starch
cellulose
1. A
2. A
3. A
is an organic compound made of carbon, hydrogen, and
oxygen that provides nutrients to the cells of living things.
4. A
8. The carbohydrate
comes from wood fiber and is the most
abundant organic compound on Earth.
9. A monosaccharide and a disaccharide are both examples of a simple
.
10. A polysaccharide or other large, chainlike molecule found in living things is
called a biological
11. A
reaction is one in which two or more molecules combine,
producing water or another simple molecule in the process.
12. A
reaction is one in which the decomposition of a
biological polymer takes place along with the breakdown of a water molecule.
13. Many monosaccharides or disaccharides can combine to form a long chain
called a
.
.
Holt Chemistry
Biological Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Structure
Role
polysaccharide
disaccharide
table sugar
monosaccharide
starch
glycogen
cellulose
sucrose
glucose
fructose
lactose
maltose
chitin
amylose
Answer the following items in the space provided.
Holt Chemistry
Biological Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Proteins
Complete each statement below by choosing a term from the following list. Terms
may be used more than once.
protein
amino acid
polypeptide
enzyme
denature
disulfide
primary
secondary
tertiary
quaternary
pleated sheet
helix
active site
substrate
trypsin
peptide
1. A(n)
is any one of twenty organic molecules that contain a
carboxyl and an amino group and that combine to form proteins.
2. A(n)
is an organic compound made up of one or more
chains of amino acids that is a principal component of all cells.
3. A(n)
bond is one that forms between the carboxyl group of
one amino acid and the amino group of another amino acid.
4. A(n)
polypeptides.
5. Coils and folds that are often held in place by hydrogen bonds give a protein
its
structure.
structure.
Holt Chemistry
Biological Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
, makes
it.
17. A protein-splitting enzyme called
is used in the small intestine to help break down proteins into amino acids through hydrolysis.
Complete each item below in the space provided.
18. Describe how amino acids form proteins through condensation reactions.
Holt Chemistry
Biological Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Nucleic Acids
Complete each statement below by choosing a term from the following list. Terms
may be used more than once.
nucleic acid
DNA
RNA
gene
clone
recombinant DNA
uracil
triplet
nitrogenous
genetic code
DNA fingerprint
autoradiograph
stem cell
PCR
deoxyribose
helix
characteristics is called
3. A(n)
is an organic compound, either RNA or DNA, whose
molecules are made up of one or two chains of nucleotides that carry genetic
information.
4. A(n)
is a segment of DNA in a chromosome that codes for a
specific hereditary trait.
5. Protein synthesis begins with a cell making a(n)
codes for a specific protein.
6. RNA has the base
7. The
amino acids.
strand that
bases.
9. The pattern of bands that results when a persons DNA sample is fragmented,
12. A(n)
is an organism that is produced by asexual reproduction and that is genetically identical to its parent.
13. A(n)
is an undifferentiated cell that has not yet specialized
to become a specific tissue in an animal.
Holt Chemistry
Biological Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
sources is called
is a biological
, indicates a partic-
17. An image that shows the DNAs pattern of nitrogenous bases is a(n)
.
18. Nucleic acids are formed from equal numbers of three chemical units: a sugar,
base.
20. A segment of DNA has the base sequence TAC TTT TCG AAG AGT ATT.
a. What is the base sequence in a complementary strand of RNA?
Holt Chemistry
Biological Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Holt Chemistry
Biological Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
Skills Worksheet
Concept Review
Section: Energy in Living Systems
Complete each statement below by choosing a term from the following list. Terms
may be used more than once.
photosynthesis
respiration
ATP
chlorophyll
exothermic
glycolysis
Krebs
synthetic
mechanical
transport
carbon
cellular
1. In the
cycle, reactions involving carbon compounds give
plants and animals the energy they need.
2. Plants and animals use glucose to produce chemical energy in the form of a
substance called
3. Green plants get energy directly from the suns rays through a process called
.
4. Most plants use
capture the suns energy.
, a magnesium-containing molecule, to
5. The entire process of getting oxygen into body tissues and allowing it to react
6. Chemical, or
, respiration takes place in the cells of a plant
or animal and is fueled by glucose and oxygen.
7. Respiration is a(n)
, in which a
cycle,
Holt Chemistry
Biological Chemistry
Name
Class
Date
14. Explain how animals indirectly gather energy from the sun.
Holt Chemistry
Biological Chemistry
Answer Key
Concept Review: What Is
Chemistry?
25.
slightly
unfixed, fixed, loosely, can
unfixed, unfixed, far apart, not
strongly attracted
physical, physical
chemical
reactant, product, chemical
chemical, same, are not, does not
bubbles, odor
cloudy
increases, decreases
chemical, new
C
C
P
C
P
P
C
P
C
C
Everything around us, including ourselves and things we cannot see, are
made of chemicals. Chemical reactions are also taking place all around
and inside us. They are necessary for
life and for almost everything in our
lives.
Solid
Liquid
Gas
Holt Chemistry
131
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
carbon
sulfur
nitrogen
gold
mercury
tin
Ag
Pb
K
Fe
Na
Cu
Atoms are the smallest unit of which
elements are made.
14. Molecules consist of two or more
atoms joined to each other chemically.
15. An allotrope is one of a number of different molecular forms of an element
in the same state.
16. when it is made up of only one kind of
atom or molecule
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
Additional Problems
CONVERSIONS
1. a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
2. a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
3. a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
4. a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
12 750 km
2.77 m
3.056 hectares
0.008 19 m2
300 Mm
620 m
3 875 000 mg
3.6 L
342 kg
68 710 L
0.000 856 kg
0.001 21 kg
6.598 cm3
0.0806 mm
0.010 74 L
7930 cm3
590 cm
4.19 dm3
74 800 cm2
197 L
Holt Chemistry
132
Answer Key
Concept Review: Energy
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
energy
physical
chemical
endothermic
exothermic
kinetic
transferred
In any chemical or physical change,
the total quantity of energy remains
constant. Energy cannot be created or
destroyed.
Heat is the enegy transferred between
objects that are at different temperatures.
Temperature is a measure of how hot
or cold something is; specifically, a
measure of the average kinetic energy
of the particles in a sample of matter.
Heat is the energy transferred between
objects that are at different temperatures, and temperature is the measurement of the average kinetic energy of
the particles in a sample of matter.
a. 373.15 K
b. 20C
c. 328.15 K
d. 185.85C
e. 270.15C
f. 234.15 K
Specific heat is the amount of heat
required to raise the temperature of
1 g of a substance by 1 K.
Substance B will have the higher temperature. Each gram of substance B
requires half as much energy to raise
its temperature as does substance A.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
Concept Review:
Measurements and
Calculations in Chemistry
1. Accuracy is the extent to which a
Holt Chemistry
109
Additional Problems
SIGNIFICANT FIGURES
1. a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
h.
i.
2. a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
3. a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
4. a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
3
4
3
2
2
1
3
4
5
5 490 000 m
0.013 479 3 mL
31 950 cm2
192.67 m2
790 cm
389 278 000 J
225 834.8 cm3
49 000 cm2
3.1 kg/L
12.3 L/sec
170 000 cm3
41 m3
3.129 g/cm3
90.2 J
0.0006 m
900 g
31.1 kPa
278 dL
1790 kg
5. a. 307 cm2
b. 30 700 mm2
c. 0.0307 m2
6. a. 1800 cm3
b. 0.0018 m3
c. 1 800 000 mm3
7. a. 1300 kg/m3
b. 1.3 g/mL
c. 1.3 kg/dm3
8. a. 130 mm3
b. 430 cm3
c. 5.0 m
d. 4000 m3
9. 26 000 000 m3
10. a. 13.38 g
b. 100. mg
c. 0.015 L
d. 315 cm2
e. 14.47 kg
f. 353 mL
11. 1.09 kg/L
12. 0.43 g/m; 2.3 m
13. 2000 m2
14. 26 300 kJ/min; 439 kJ/s
15. a. 15.8 m3
b. 9800 L/min
c. 590 m3/h
16. a. 7.5 kgm2
b. 67.22 cm
c. 2.4 kgm2/s2
d. 19.9 m2
e. 970 000 m/h
f. 139 cm2
SCIENTIFIC NOTATION
1. a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
h.
i.
j.
2. a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
1.58 105 km
9.782 106 L
8.371 108 cm3
6.5 109 mm2
5.93 103 g
6.13 109 m
1.2552 107 J
8.004 106 g/L
1.0995 102 kg
1.05 109 Hz
9.49 103 kg
7.1 102 mg
9.8 103 m3
1.56 107 m
3.18 106 J
9.63 1027 molecules
7.47 106 cm
Holt Chemistry
110
Answer Key
Concept Review:
Substances Are Made
of Atoms
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
b
a
d
c
a. All matter is composed of extremely
small particles called atoms, which
cannot be subdivided, created, or
destroyed.
b. Atoms of a given element are identical in their physical and chemical
properties.
c. Atoms of different elements differ
in their physical and chemical
properties.
d. Atoms of different elements combine in simple, whole-number ratios
to form compounds.
e. In chemical reactions, atoms are
combined, separated, or rearranged
but are never created, destroyed, or
changed.
13.
14.
15.
16.
h
a
f
b
j
c
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
17.
18.
e
k
i
g
d
19.
Number
of
protons
Number
of
electrons
Number
of
neutrons
Number
of
particles
in
nucleus
Hydrogen-2
2
1H
Helium-3
3
2 He
Lithium-7
7
3 Li
Beryllium-9
9
4 Be
Boron-11
11
Isotope
Symbol
for
isotope
11
5B
Holt Chemistry
55
Nitrogen: 1s22s22p3
Calcium: 1s22s22p63s23p64s2
in the nucleus
mass number: number of particles in
the nucleus
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
j
e
c
b
l
a
f
g
d
h
i
k
waves
decreases
quantum
Electrons within an energy level are
located in orbitals. The quantum numbers tell the main energy level, the
shape of the orbital, the orientation of
the orbital, and the orientation of an
electrons magnetic field.
17. Rutherfords electrons moved in circular orbits, like those of planets. Bohrs
equations gave the regions of space,
called orbitals, where the electrons
were most likely to be found. The
quantum model uses numbers to
define the regions in which electrons
are likely to be found.
18. Electrons release energy to move to
lower energy levels. This energy is
released as light that has a specific
wavelength.
19. principal quantum number: indicates the main energy level occupied
by an electron
angular momentum quantum number: indicates the shape of the orbital
magnetic quantum number: indicates the orientation of orbitals
around the nucleus
spin quantum number: indicates the
orientation of an electrons magnetic
field relative to an outside magnetic
field.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
d
a
b
c
carbon-12; an amu is 1/12th of the
mass of one carbon-12 atom.
A mole is used because working with
great numbers can be difficult.
One mole of atoms has a mass in
grams numerically equal to the atoms
mass in the atomic mass unit.
The atomic mass is the average of the
atomic masses of naturally occurring
isotopes. Since the atomic mass of
lithium is nearly 7 amu, the mass of
most atoms of lithium must be 7 amu
and the mass of some atoms of lithium
must be 6 amu. Therefore, lithium-7
must be a much more common isotope than lithium-6.
18.9984 amu
3.155 1023 g
6.022 1023
44.01 g
Holt Chemistry
56
Answer Key
Concept Review: How Are
Elements Organized?
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
alkali metals
main group elements
alkaline earth metals
transition metals
halogens
noble gases
noble gases
halogens
transition metals
alkali metals
metals
hydrogen
Groups 1, 2, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18
The electron configurations of maingroups elements are regular and
consistent.
Group 2 must lose two electrons and
Group 1 must lose one electron to
achieve the noble gas configuration.
Because losing two electrons requires
about twice the energy required to
lose one electron, Group 2 elements
are less reactive.
Helium is unreactive and will not
cause an undesirable combustion reaction. The fuel-to-oxygen ratio is also
carefully controlled to achieve the
best result in the welding process.
The halogens need one electron to
achieve the noble gas configuration.
The alkali metals have one electron
that is easily removed; therefore, they
combine readily in a 1:1 ratio to form a
salt.
Iron alloys, such as steel, are harder,
stronger, and more resistant to
corrosion than pure iron.
metals
3, 12
d, d-block
non-metals, 13, 16
lanthanides
actinides
actinides
Holt Chemistry
60
10.
11.
12.
13.
ionization energy
bond radius
electron affinity
electronegativity
increases, decreasing
d
a
c
The electron cloud model is based on
the probability of finding an electron
at a specific location. As you move farther out from the nucleus, the probability of finding electrons becomes
less and less. With this model there is
not a well-defined boundary of the
individual atom.
Na; because it has one more energy
level than Li.
Electron shielding is the reduction of
the attractive force between a positively charged nucleus and its outermost electrons due to the cancellation
of some of the positive charge by the
negative charge of the other electrons.
As the outermost electrons are pulled
closer to the nucleus, they also get
closer to one another and repulsion
gets stronger. At Group 13, the electrons will not come closer to the
nucleus because the electrons repel
each other.
Each element has one more occupied
energy levels than the one above it.
Therefore, the outermost electrons are
farther from the nucleus as you move
down a group. Also, each successive
element contains more electrons
between the nucleus and the outermost electrons. These innermost electrons shield the outermost electrons
from the full attractive force of the
nucleus, thereby making it easier to
remove valence electrons.
15.
Ionization Energy
Atomic Radius
Electronegativity
Ionic Size
Electron affinity
General
Across a
Period
increases
decreases
increases
decreases
increases
Trend
Down a
Group
decreases
increases
decreases
increases
decreases
neutrons
hydrogen, helium
helium
fusion reactions
supernova
transmutation
synthetic
particle accelerators
The 93 naturally occurring elements
are found on Earth or on stars. The
remaining 20 elements are synthetic.
12. Cyclotrons cannot accelerate particles
fast enough because as the particles
accelerate, they become more massive, making it increasingly difficult to
achieve further acceleration.
13. A synchrotron times its energy pulses
to match the acceleration of the
particle, thereby accelerating particles
to enormous speeds.
14. Only a few atoms are created and they
last for tiny fractions of a second.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
Holt Chemistry
61
Answer Key
Concept Review:
Simple Ions
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
ion
11, 11, 10
octet
negative
valence
different
positive
noble gas
Ions of groups 1 and 2 have the electron configuration of the noble gas in
the previous period. Group 15, 16, and
17 ions have the electron configuration of the noble gas following them
on the periodic table.
Group 1: all 1, Group 2: all 2;
Group 15: all 3, Group 16: all 2,
Group 17: all 1
Group 1: 1, Group 2: 2; Group 15: 5,
Group 16: 6, Group 17: 7
The tendency of atoms of elements to
gain or lose electrons so that their
outer s and p orbitals are full with
eight electrons.
calcium: argon; fluorine: neon;
magnesium: neon; iodine: xenon
Ions have different electron configurations than their parent atoms, so they
act more like atoms with their electron configuration than they do their
parent atoms.
The energy required to remove electrons to form cations with a noblegas
electron configuration is less than the
energy required to add electrons to
form an anion.
Nonmetals form anions because the
energy required to add electrons so
that their ions have a noble-gas electron configuration is less than the
energy required to remove enough
electrons. Therefore, atoms of nonmetals form anions.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
six
crystal lattice
attraction, repulsion
size, ratio
crystal lattice
unit cell
salt
lattice energy
The bond structure is very strong, and
as long as the ions remain lined up in
the lattice, it is very difficult to break.
The repulsive force between the layers
will cause the layers to break apart.
Because opposite charges attract,
cations and anions attract each other,
and an ionic bond is formed.
A salt is a compound resulting from
the formation of an ionic bond
between a cation and an anion
Ionic compounds have high melting
and boiling points because each ion
has a strong bond to each neighboring
ion and these bonds must be broken
for melting and boiling to occur
The ions in ionic solids are not free to
move around and conduct the current.
Salts are excellent conductors of
electricity when they are liquid or in
solution.
Five properties of ionic bonds: 1. They
are solids at room temperature. 2.
They are hard and brittle. 3. They do
not conduct electricity in solid form. 4.
They are good conductors in a liquid
state or when dissolved in water. 5.
They have high melting and boiling
points.
Most of the properties of ionic compounds are the result of ionic bonds
being extremely strong. It is hard to
break the compound apart, which
leads to the four of the five properties.
When the bonds are finally broken,
however, the charged particles are
good conductors of electricity.
Holt Chemistry
54
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
copper(I) oxide
calcium chloride
chromium(III) chloride
mercury(II) oxide
The endings -ite and -ate indicate
oxygen. The presence of hydrogen is
indicated by an ion name starting with
hydrogen. The prefixes mono- and dialso indicate hydrogen. The prefix
thio- means replace an oxygen by a
sulfur.
33. The formula lists the correct numbers
of cations and anions in the polyatomic ion. You can figure out the
cations and anions from the name of
the salt. The formula reflects that the
salt is electrically neutral.
34. b
35. a
36. d
37. c
38. potassium dichromate
39. potassium chlorite
40. iron(III) chlorate
41. sodium sulfate
42. sodium sulfite
43. potassium permanganate
44. lead(II) nitrate
45. Pb(CrO4)2
46. NaClO
47. Mg(NO3)2
48. Na 2O2
49. HCN
50. Al(OH)3
51. (NH4)2SO4
electroneutrility
polyatomic
cations
cations
Roman numerals
-ide
subscript
ionic
KBr
BaF2
SnO2
CsBr
CoBr2
Hg2S
AlI3
copper(I) ion
chloride ion
oxide ion
phosphide ion
sodium ion
magnesium ion
sodium chloride
zinc sulfide
iron(III) oxide
magnesium nitride
zinc oxide
sodium iodide
Holt Chemistry
55
Answer Key
Concept Review: Covalent
Bonds
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
valence
Lewis
resonance
double
triple
single
unshared
H
HICIOIH
9.
H
H H H
HICICICIH
H H H
Holt Chemistry
41
Covalent Compounds
10. HIOIH
11. CK O
12. OJ NIF OINIF
O
13.
O
S
O
HICIH
O
H
b.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
Cl
ClICICl
Cl
c. OINJ O OJNIO
a. shape: tetrahedron
b. shape: tetrahedron
c. shape: bent
3. The electrons in the unbonded pair
Holt Chemistry
42
Covalent Compounds
Answer Key
Concept Review:
Avogadros Number and
Molar Conversions
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
Additional Problems
85.47 amu
35.45 amu
310.18 g/mol
79.88 g/mol
84.01 g/mol
94.12 g/mol
26.04 g/mol
18.02 g/mol
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
0.026 mm
3.21 L
0.80 g/cm3
21.4 g/cm3
30 boxes
a. 1.73 L
0.120 m 0.120 m 0.120 m
b. 9.2 g; 5.0 cm3
c. 60.4 kg; 1.88 104 dm3
d. 0.94 g/cm3; 5.3 104 m3
e. 2.5 103 kg; 2.7 106 cm3
2.8 g/cm3
a. 0.72 m
b. 2.5 103 atoms
1300 L/min
1.3 106 cal/h
5.44 g/ cm3
2.24 104 cm3
32 000 uses
2500 L
9.5 L/min
MOLE CONCEPT
1. a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
2. a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
3. a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
CdS
AlF3
K2Cr2O7
CaSO3
CaSO4
C6H6
C2H4O2
P4O10
B2H6
C2H2
Si 46.75%, O 53.25%
19.99% C, 26.64% O, 46.65% N, 6.73% H
39.99% C, 6.73% H, 53.28%
(NH4)3PO4 has the greater percentage
of nitrogen.
15. Sphalerite, ZnS, has the greater percentage of zinc.
Holt Chemistry
109
Answer Key
Concept Review: Describing
Chemical Reactions
10. reactant
11. produces or yields, reversible reaction,
heat
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
Holt Chemistry
76
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
3. a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
4. a.
a synthesis reaction
a combustion reaction
a decomposition reaction
a displacement reaction
a double-displacement reaction
combustion reaction; oxygen reacts
with hexane to produce water and carbon dioxide.
synthesis reaction; the iron (III) oxide
product is more complex than either
the iron or oxygen reactants.
a decomposition reaction; aluminum
chloride breaks down into less complex products, aluminum and chlorine.
2C2H2(g) 5O2(g) 4CO2(g)
2H2O(g)
Yes; chromium is more active than tin;
2Cr(s) SnCl4(aq) Sn(s)
2CrCl2(aq)
No. Nickel has a lower activity than
magnesium and, therefore, cannot
replace it.
Yes. Zn(s) CdCl2(aq) ZnCl2(aq)
Cd(s)
No. Ag has a lower activity than Zn
and, therefore, cannot replace it.
2HCl(aq) Mg(s) MgCl2(aq)
H2(g). This is a displacement
reaction.
Holt Chemistry
77
Answer Key
22. 910 g Ca3P2 1 mol Ca3P2 /182.18 g
Concept Review:
Calculating Quantities in
Reactions
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
mole
balance
relative
coefficients
molar mass
liquids
density
Avogadros number
c
b
b
c
c
1.00 g Ca3(PO4)2
1 mol Ca3(PO4 )2 /310.18 g Ca3(PO4)2
2 mol P/1 mol Ca3(PO4)2
30.97 g P/1 mol P 0.200 g P
18 g Al 1 mol Al/26.98 g Al
2 mol AlCl3 /2 mol Al
133.33 g AlCl3 /1 mol AlCl3
89 g AlCl3
1150 g C6H12O6 1 mol
C6H12O6 /180.18 g C6H12O6
2 mol C2H5OH/1 mol C6H12O6
46.08 g C2H5OH/1 mol C2H5OH
588 g C2H5OH
25.5 g Mg 1 mol Mg/24.30 g Mg
1 mol O2 /2 mol Mg
0.525 mol O2
1.0 mol C5H11OH 10 mol CO2 /2 mol
C5H11OH 44.01 g CO2 /1 mol CO2
220 g CO2
500.0 g CCl3NO2 1 mol
CCl3NO2 /164.37 g CCl3NO2 1 mol
CH3NO2 /1 mol CCl3NO2
3.042 mol CH3NO2
122 g KClO3 1 mol KClO3 /122.55 g
KClO3 32.00 g O2 /1 mol O2 3 mol
O2 /2 mol KClO3 1 L O2 /1.33 g O2
35.9 L O2
3.4 L O2 1.33 g O2 /1 L O2 1 mol
O2 /32.00 g O2 2 mol KCl/3 mol O2
74.55 g KCl/1 mol KCl 7.0 g KCl
excess
limiting, product
limiting
stoichiometric
limiting
excess
percentage
actual; theoretical
actual
actual
3.00 g Mg (1 mol Mg/24.30 g Mg)
0.123 mol Mg
2.20 g O2 (1 mol O2/32.00 g O2)
0.688 mol O2
0.0688 mol O2 (2 mol Mg/1 mol O2)
0.138 mol Mg needed.
Mg is limiting.
0.123 mol Mg (2 mol MgO/2 mol Mg)
(40.30 g MgO/1 mol MgO) 4.96 g
MgO
Holt Chemistry
86
Stoichiometry
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
Concept Review:
Stoichiometry and Cars
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
c
b
d
b
d
If there is too much oxygen and not
enough gasoline, the engine will stall.
If, on the other hand, gasoline is in
excess and there is not enough oxygen, lack of oxygen may prevent the
mixture from igniting.
68.0 L N2 (0.916 g N2 /1 L N2) (1
mol N2 /28.02 g N2) (2 mol NaN3 /3
mol N2) (65.02 g NaN3 /1 mol NaN3)
96.4 g NaN3
375 mL C8H18 (0.692 g C8H18 /1 mL
C8H18) (1 mol C8H18 /114.26 g
C8H18) (25 mol O2 /2 mol C8H18)
(32.00 g O2 /1 mol O2) (1 L O2 /1.33 g
O2) (100 g air/23 g O2)
2.97 103 g air
4.30 g NO2 (1 mol NO2 /46.01 g NO2)
(1 mol O3 /1 mol NO2)
(48.00 g O3 /1 mol O3) 4.49 g O3
octane: (2.5 L)(0.700 g/ml)(1000 ml/
1 L) (2.5)(700 g) 1750 g
MW octane 114.231 g/ml
2.5 L octane (1750 g)(1
mol/114.23092) 15.319845 mol
2.5 L octane yields 8(15.319845 mol)
122.559 mol CO2
MW CO2 44.0098 g/mol
(122.559 mol CO2)(44.0098 g/mol)
5394 g CO2
Additional Problems
STOICHIOMETRY
1. 15.0 mol (NH4)2SO4
2. a. 51 g Al
b. 101 g Fe
c. 1.83 mol Fe2O3
3. 0.303 g H2
4. H2SO4 2KOH K2SO4 2H2O;
1.11 g H2SO4
5. a. H3PO4 2NH3 (NH4)2HPO4
b. 0.293 mol (NH4)2HPO4
c. 970 kg NH3
6. a. 90.0 mol ZnCO3; 60.0 mol C6H8O7
b. 13.5 kg H2O; 33.0 kg CO2
Holt Chemistry
87
Stoichiometry
Answer Key
Concept Review: Energy
Transfer
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
physical
higher, lower, heat, temperature
intensive, extensive
enthalpy
Kelvin
Celsius
273.15 K
the same
joules
200
273.15
q CnT T 40.0C 10.0C
30.0C is equal to 30.0 K
75.3 J/Kmol 180.0 g H2O/18.02
g/mol H2O 30.0 K 2.26 104 J
13. q CnT T 75.0C 15.0C
60.0C is equal to 60.0 K
24.2 J/Kmol 250.0 g Al/26.98 g/mol
Al 60.0 K 1.35 x 104 J
14. q CnT T 80.0C 25.0C
55.0C is equal to 55.0 K
11.1 J/K mol 68.0 g Sn/118.71g/mol
Sn 55.0 K 350. J
15. q CnT; q 29.1 J/K mol 1.44
mole 45 K; q 1894 J
2.
3.
4.
6.
5.
CT
positive, endothermic, negative,
exothermic
thermodynamics
H CT
T 17.0C 90.0C 73.0C
73.0 K
H 75.3 J/Kmol 73.0 K
5.50 kJ/mol
H CT
T 71.0C 18.0C 53.0C
53.0 K
H 75.3 J/Kmol 53.0 K
4.00 kJ/mol
entropy, energy
standard entropy
S, J/Kmol
Gibbs energy, H-TS
positive
Holt Chemistry
84
Causes of Change
Answer Key
Concept Review: States and
State Changes
1. solid, melting, melting point
2. liquid, viscous
3. cohesion, adhesion, surface tension,
evaporation
4. gas, boiling point, condensation
5. freezing, freezing point
6. sublimation, deposition
Concept Review:
Intermolecular Forces
1. Ionic substances consist of separate
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8. London forces
9. London forces and dipole forces are
Holt Chemistry
105
Holt Chemistry
106
Answer Key
Concept Review:
Characteristics of Gases
1. greater than, completely
2. fluids, can, decreasing
3. lower, large, empty
4. long, pressure, completely
5. are not, do, have, air pressure, surface
6. denser, less
7. proportional, increases
8. c
9. a
10. b
11. d
12. e
13. 0.9868 atm
Concept Review:
The Gas Laws
the volume occupied by a given sample of gas varies inversely with the
applied pressure.
3.
Volume
PV
100
0.500
0.50
200
0.250
0.50
299.4
0.167
0.50
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
Temperature
Volume
V/T
100
199
1.99
202
402
2.01
300
597
1.99
1. decreases, increases
2. Boyles law: At constant temperature,
Pressure
11.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
c
b
a
d
e
2.174 103 kPa or 21.5 atm
88 g/mol
4 mol
19.6 mL
20.8 L
Near point C; the less massive NH3
molecules diffuse more rapidly than
the HCl molecules.
vA
vB
m
37 6.082
1.475
17 4.123
m
B
A
NH3 gas molecules diffuse approximately 1.5 times more rapidly than the
HCl molecules.
12. H2 effuses 8.9 times as rapidly as Br2.
13. HBr will take 4.5 times as long to
effuse.
Holt Chemistry
135
Gases
16.
17.
18.
19.
Additional Problems
GAS LAWS
1. a. 105 kPa
b. 5.0 mL
c. 42.4 kPa
d. 6.78 103 dm3
e. 1.24 atm
f. 1.5 m3
2. 8.0 m3
3. 0.0258 atm
4. 8.01 102 dm3
5. a. 234 K
b. 1.2 dm3
c. 269.17C
d. 8.10 102 L
e. 487 cm3
f. 67.9 m3
6. 1.45 cm3
7. 40.C
8. a. 208.6C
b. 5.5 kPa
c. 2.61 atm
d. 297C
e. 35.6 atm
f. 39 K
9. 0.899 atm
10. 2.23 atm
11. 7.98 K
12. a. 2.02 L
b. 75.8 kPa
c. 110 K
d. 4.69 103 mm3
e. 72C
f. 2.25 atm
13. 379 cm3
14. 98 kPa
15. 1.00 atm; use Boyles law to find the
16. 285 mL
17. 89 cm3 The pressure in the bottle on
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
Holt Chemistry
136
Gases
Answer Key
Concept Review:
What Is a Solution?
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
c
f
e
a
d
b
Ht
H
Ht
H
Ht
H
H
H
H
H
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
homogeneous
heterogeneous
solvent
phase
solution
suspension
colloids
decant
densities
denser
filtration
capillary action
least
boiling
vapor
fractions
Concept Review:
Concentration and Molarity
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
miscible
balance
miscible
miscible
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
Holt Chemistry
141
Solutions
a
b
d
e
21.
22.
23.
Additional Problems
24.
CONCENTRATION OF SOLUTIONS
1. a. 60.0 g KMnO4; 440.0 g H2O
b. 220 g BaCl2
c. 457 g glycerol
d. 0.0642 M K2Cr2O7
e. 1.27 m CaCl2
f. 0.234 g NaCl
g. 541 g glucose; 2040 g total
2. 10.6 mol H2SO4
3. 0.486 m linoleic acid
4. a. 13.0 g Na2S2O3
b. 0.0820 mol
c. 0. 328 M
5. 338 g CoCl2
6. 0.442 L
7. 203 g urea
8. 18.8 g Ba(NO3)2
9. add 3.5 g (NH4)2SO4 to 96.5 g H2O
10. 54 g CaCl2
11. 1.25 mol; 1.25 M
12. 93.6 g/mol
13. 49.6 kg water; 0.5 kg NaCl
14. 8.06%
15. 1.4 L ethyl acetate
16. CdCl2(aq) Na2S(aq) CdS(s) 2
17.
18.
19.
20.
DILUTIONS
1. 0.0948 M
2. 0.44 mL
3. a. 3.0 M
b. 0.83 L
c. 1.5 103 g
4. 6.35 mL
5. 348 mL
6. 0.558 M
7. a. 850 mL; 2.4 mL; 86 mL
b. 1.3 L concentrated HNO3
c. 1.16 L concentrated HCl
8. 0.48 M
9. 2.72 M
10. Dilute 4.73 mL of the 6.45 M acetic
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
NaCl(aq)
a. 0.196 mol CdCl2
b. 0.196 mol CdS
c. 28.3 g CdS
34.4 g H2SO4
1.54 105 mol HCl
85.7 mL BaCl2 solution
a. Measure out 9.39 g CuSO45H2O and
add 90.61 g H2O to make 100. g of
solution. The 9.39 g of CuSO45H2O
contributes the 6.00 g of CuSO4
needed.
b. Measure out 200. g CuSO45H2O,
dissolve in water, then add water to
make 1.00 L. Water of hydration
does not have to be considered here
as long as the molar mass of the
hydrate is used in determining the
mass to weigh out.
c. Measure out 870 g CuSO45H2O
and add 685 g H2O. The hydrate
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
COLLIGATIVE PROPERTIES
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
9.88C ; 102.7C
103.3C
201.6C
50. g ethanol
82 g/mol
18.2C
15.5 g/mol
66.8 g/mol
183.3C
Holt Chemistry
142
Solutions
Answer Key
Concept Review: Reversible
Reactions and Equilibrium
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
changes
does not
Keq 1
Keq 1
Keq 1
Keq (0.0161)2/0.0450 0.005 76
Keq (3.0)2/(0.46)(0.39) 50.
All mole values need to be divided by
4 to get moles per liter.
Keq (0.10)2/(1.0)(1.6)3 0.0024.
1.5 [N2O4]/[NO2]2
[N2O4] 1.5 (0.50)2 0.38 M
43.5 [HI]2/[H2][I2]
[I2] (0.009 98)2/(0.000867)(43.5)
0.002 64M
0.0205 = [PCl3][Cl2]/[PCl5]
[Cl2] (0.0205)(0.235)/0.174 0.0277 M
Ksp [Ax]a [By]b
Ksp [Ag] [Cl]
[Ag] [Cl] 2.68 105
Ksp (2.68 105)2 7.18 1010
Ksp [Ag][Cl]
[Ag+] [Cl] 0.000 013 mol/L
Ksp (0.000 013)2 1.7 1010
Ksp [Ag][Cl]
[Ag] Ksp/[Cl]
[Ag] 2.8 1010/0.2 1.4 109 M
Ksp [Ca2][CO23]
[Ca2] [CO32] 0.00690 g/102 6.76
105
Ksp (6.89 105)2 4.58 109
Ksp [Ag]2 [CrO24]
(1.12 1012)
(6.54 105)
1.31 104 M
[Ag]
Concept Review:
Equilibrium Systems
and Stress
Holt Chemistry
95
Chemical Equilibrium
Temperature
Results
Stress
Direction Increase
of shift
Lowering right
tempera- favored
ture
N2O4
Raising left
tempera- favored
ture
NO2
Decrease
NO2
Additional Problems
EQUILIBRIUM
N2O4
1.
2.
3.
4.
Pressure
5.
Results
Stress
Direction Increase
of shift
Pressure right
increase favored
N2O4
Pressure left
decrease favored
NO2
Decrease
6.
7.
NO2
8.
N2O4
9.
Pressure
Results
Stress
Direction Increase
of shift
Decrease
Increase
[N2O4]
left
favored
NO2
N2O4
Increase
[NO2]
right
favored
N2O4
NO2
10.
11.
12.
Decrease right
[N2O4]
favored
N2O4
NO2
13.
Decrease left
[NO2]
favored
NO2
N2O4
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
increase, decrease
exothermic, increases, left, right
decreases
increases
bromide
left
AgBr
silver
decreases
less
common ion effect
14.
15.
1.98 107
2.446 1012
3.97 105
a. 8.13 104 M
b. 0.0126 M
a. The concentrations are equal.
b. K will increase.
0.09198 M
a. 0.7304 M
b. 6.479 104 M
a. [A] [B] [C] 1/2[A]initial
b. [A], [B], and [C] will increase
equally. K remains the same.
a. Keq [HBr]2/[H2][Br2]
b. 2.11 1010 M
c. Br2 and H2 will still have the same
concentration. HBr will have a
much higher concentration than the
two reactants; at equilibrium, essentially only HBr will be present.
1.281 106
4.61 103
a. Keq [HCN]/[HCl]
b. 3.725 107 M
a. The reaction yields essentially no
products at 25C; as a result, the
equilibrium constant is very small.
At 110 K, the reaction proceeds to
some extent.
b. 2.51 M
0.0424
0.0390
Holt Chemistry
96
Chemical Equilibrium
Answer Key
Concept Review: What Are
Acids and Bases?
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
d
f
b
c
g
e
a
a. HSO4
b. H2O
9. a. H2PO4
b. H2O
10. base
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11. acid
12. a. H3O
b. HSO4
13. a. H2O
b. NH3
14. d
15. b
16. c
17. d
18. b
19. b
concentration
2. constant, ion product of water, system,
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
A
B
C
7, 4, 10, phenolphthalein
7, methyl orange
10, 10, 10
a. 0.340 M
b. no
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
H2O, water
OH
2
H2O, H2PO4 , HCO
3 , HPO4
HCOO
NH
4
NH
4
ClO
HCOOH
It increases.
It decreases.
stronger, stronger
higher, lower
1.71 105
4.0 1010
buffer, acid, base
base, H3O, Le Chteliers, H3O
buffer, equal
Problem Solving
pH
Concept Review:
Neutralization and Titration
1. titration, standard, unknown,
hydroxide, hydronium
3. D
1. a. [OH] 0.05 M,
[H3O] 2 1013 M
b. [OH] 2.0 1012 M,
[H3O] 5.0 103 M
c. [OH] 0.013 M,
[H3O] 7.7 1013 M
d. [OH] 6.67 1014 M,
[H3O] 0.150 M
e. [OH] 0.0400 M,
[H3O] 2.50 1013 M
f. [OH] 2.56 1014 M,
[H3O] 0.390 M
g. 10, 2.3, 12.11, 0.824, 12.602, 0.409
2. [OH] 0.160 M
[H3O] 6.25 1014 M
3. 0.08 M
Holt Chemistry
165
Answer Key
Concept Review: What
Affects the Rate of a
Reaction?
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
Reaction rate
chemical kinetics
disappearance, appearance, time
decrease, mass, acidity, volume
positive
reaction rate 1/1 [Mg]/t
1/2 H3O/t 1/1 [H2]/t
average rate (0.002 mol Mg)/20s
0.0001 mol/s
b
a
d
c
a
positive
a. usually the reaction rate will
increase as the concentration of the
reactants increases in all states of
matter.
b. has almost no effect on reactions in
the liquid or solid states. In the gas
phase, an increase in pressure
increases the concentration, therefore increasing the reaction rate.
c. in almost all cases and in all states
of matter, an increase in temperature will increase the reaction rate.
For reactions on surfaces an increase
in surface area increases the reaction
rate. This is due to the fact that the
reaction rate is proportional to the
surface area, a higher surface area
allows an increased amount of the
reaction to occur.
4.775 105 M/s
5.275 105 M/s
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
n, m
n, m
n
B
n, m
n, m
a. 1
b. 32
c. 2,
d. 3
increase, 2
increase, 27
1
4, 3
In order for a reaction to occur, the
molecules or atoms must collide with
sufficient energy to overcome the activation energy barrier. And the collision
must occur in the correct orientation,
or in most cases at a particular end of
a molecule or atom, in order for a
reaction to occur.
rate k[AB]
rate k[B]2
rate k[A2]
2NO H2 N2 H2O2
Step 1, the slower step
O3 O2 O rapid
O O3 2O2 slow
15 kcal
35 kcal
The label should be placed at the peak
of the curve.
exoendoa
b
e
c
f
d
catalytic converter
lower activation energy, accelerate
regenerated
1.
2. k
3. [A], [B]
Copyright by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved.
Holt Chemistry
59
Reaction Rates
Answer Key
Concept Review: OxidationReduction Reactions
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
a
c
b
e
d
g
f
Zn: 2, Cl: 1
S: 6, O: 2
H: 1, N: 5, O: 2
Al: 3, S: 6, O: 2
Pb: 2, O: 2
C: 4, O: 2
H: 1, S: 6, O: 2
H2O2(aq) 2H(aq) 2e 2H2O(l)
oxidation, reduction, 2Mg O2
2Mg2 2O2 ; Mg O2 2MgO
2
2MnO
4 5SO2 2H2O 2Mn
2
5SO4 4H
2
2NO
3 3Cu 8H 2NO 3Cu
4H2O
8H2S 16NO
3 16H 16NO2
S8 16H20
K is oxidized and Cl is reduced.
Concept Review:
Introduction to
Electrochemistry
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
voltage
electric current, ampere
electrode
electrochemical
c
b
e
d
f
a
h
g
cathode
electrolyte
oxidation
reduction
Concept Review:
Galvanic Cells
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
simple
two, outside, two, thin
indirectly, inefficient
directly, simple, efficient
possible
galvanic
chemical, electrical
portable
acidic
alkaline
carbon
alkaline
steel
lead
lead(II) sulfate
galvanic, electrolytic
rechargeable
galvanic
Daniell
Ag, cathode; Zn, anode; 1.5614 V
Cu, cathode; Pb, anode;
0.4681 V
2e
2
Zn(s) Cu (aq) Zn2(aq)
Cu(s), spontaneously to the right
E (0.34) (0.76)
1.10 V
2e
Cl2(g) 2I(aq)
I2(s) 2Cl(aq)
spontaneously to the left
E (0.54) (1.36)
0.82 V
2e
Cu2(aq)
2Ag(aq) Cu(s)
2Ag(s) spontaneously to the right
E (0.80) (0.34) 0.46 V
the deterioration of metals due to
oxidation reactions with their
environment
oxygen, water, and ions
Holt Chemistry
101
Concept Review:
Electrolytic Cells
1. Electrolytic, nonspontaneous,
3H3AsO4 4NaCl
13.
14.
electrical
2. electrolysis, molten, Downs, Downs
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
cell
released, oxidation, consumed,
reduction, anode, cathode
positive, negative
electrosynthesis
2Na(l) 2e 2Na(l)
2Cl(l) 2e Cl2(g)
e
2Na(l)
2Na(l) 2Cl(l)
Cl2(g)
Reduction
anode
oxygen, hydrogen
electrolyte
refine
electrical, chemical
d
b
f
h
c
a
g
e
Additional Problems
REDOX EQUATIONS
1. 3Mg N2 Mg3N2
2. SO2 Br2 2H2O 2HBr H2SO4
3. H2S Cl2 S 2HCl
4. PbO2 4HBr PbBr2 Br2 2H2O
5. S 6HNO3 6NO2 H2SO4 2H2O
6. NaIO3 N2H4 2HCl
N2 NaICl2 3H2O
7. MnO2 H2O2 2HCl
MnCl2 O2 2H2O
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
ELECTROCHEMISTRY
E0 2.77 V; spontaneous
E0 1.11 V; spontaneous
E0 0.46 V; not spontaneous
E0 1.50 V; spontaneous
E0 2.46 V; spontaneous
E0 1.28 V; spontaneous
E0 3.71 V; spontaneous
E0 3.41 V; not spontaneous
E0 1.32 V; spontaneous
E0 3.60 V; not spontaneous
Overall reaction:
Cl2 Ni Ni2 2Cl
Cathode reaction: Cl2 2e 2Cl
Anode reaction: Ni Ni2 2e
Cell voltage: 1.62 V
12. Overall reaction:
3Hg2 2Fe 3Hg 2Fe3
Cathode reaction: Hg2 2e Hg
Anode reaction: Fe Fe3 3e
Cell voltage: 0.89 V
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
Holt Chemistry
102
Answer Key
Concept Review: Atomic
Nuclei and Nuclear Stability
2.
of a nucleus.
2. A nuclide is a general term applied to
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Type of
radioactive
decay
What
happens
to atomic
number?
What
happens
to mass
number?
beta-particle
emission
increases
by one
does not
change
electron
capture
decreases
by one
does not
change
positron
emission
decreases
by one
does not
change
alpha
particle
emission
decreases
by two
decreases
by four
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
51
23 V; gamma ray
222
86Rn; alpha particle
239
92U; positron
234
92U; beta particle
0
1 e; positron
4
2 He; alpha particle
0
1 e; beta particle
13.
14. annihilation of matter
15. positron emission
Holt Chemistry
61
Nuclear Chemistry
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
35.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
electron capture
alpha decay
beta emission
beta particles
antiparticle
annihilation of matter
Gamma
electron capture
neutron
alpha decay
alpha particle
2, 4
fission, binding energy, spontaneous,
neutrons, chain reaction, sustains,
critical mass
fusion, fuse
fusion
fission
fission
fusion
Benefits: can produce a large amount
of energy; one gram of uranium-235
generates as much energy as the
combustion of 2700 kilograms of coal;
only 100 reactors generate 20 percent
of the electricity used in the United
States.
Hazards: chain reactions that occur in
nuclear reactors can be very
dangerous if they are not contained;
radioactive wastes are generated.
Nuclear fusion occurs when small
nuclei combine to form a larger, more
stable nucleus. Energy is released as
the new nucleus forms. It is not a practical energy source now because it
takes a lot of energy and tremendous
temperatures to start such a reaction.
It is also hard to contain the reactants.
b
d
a
a
a
a
b
a
c
b
c
Acute exposure to large doses of
radiation over a short time can lead to
radiation sickness and even death.
Chronic exposure to low levels of
radiation can be as dangerous as acute
exposure and can lead to certain types
of cancer.
15. All the reactions emit gamma rays, and
all use radioactive isotopes with short
half-lives.
1
gram, 8 microgram
17.
18. 8 grams
19. about 11 400 years
20. 6.25%
Holt Chemistry
62
Nuclear Chemistry
Answer Key
Concept Review:
Compounds of Carbon
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
alkane
isomer
alkene
alcohol
carboxylic acid
aldehyde
amine
ketone
Compounds with functional groups
react like each other. They do not
react like the parent compound.
22. Isomers have different structures, and
so their chemical and physical properties are different from each other. The
greater the structural difference, the
greater the difference in properties.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
3.
4.
5.
6.
HICICJ C
H
H H
7. HICK CIH
8. H
H
CJ C
H
9. H
H
H H H
CJ CICICIH
H H
10. -ol
11. -oic acid
12. -one
Holt Chemistry
77
-al
amino2-methylpropene
C6H5OH
OH
C
C
9.
OH
H
C
10.
11.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
12.
13.
Holt Chemistry
78
Answer Key
Concept Review:
Carbohydrates and Lipids
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
monosaccharide
polysaccharide
carbohydrate
lipid
starch
disaccharide
glycogen
cellulose
sugar
polymer
condensation
hydrolysis
polysaccharide
disaccharide
monosaccharide
polysaccharide
Carbohydrate
Structure
Role
starch
polysaccharide
storing energy
glycogen
polysaccharide
energy storage
in animals
cellulose
polysaccharide
structural
rigidity
sucrose
disaccharide
table sugar
glucose
fructose
lactose
disaccharide
sugar found in
milk products
maltose
disaccharide
malt-flavored
sugar
chitin
polysaccharide
insect
exoskeleton
amylose
polysaccharide
energy storage
in plants
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
amino acid
protein
peptide
disulfide
secondary
tertiary
primary
quaternary
helix
pleated sheet
amino acid
enzyme
active site
disulfide
substrate
denature
trypsin
Amino acids form proteins through
condensation reactions: the OH
group of a carboxylic acid of one
amino acid and an H from a neighboring amino acid are released as the
two amino groups join.
19. 1. Disulfide bridges (covalent bonds)
between side chains can form a
looped protein or bond two separate
polypeptides. 2. Ionic bonds can link
different points on a protein. 3. A
hydrophobic environment attracts
other nonpolar molecules or nonpolar
segments of the same protein. 4.
Hydrogen bond can form to oxygen
atoms, especially carboxyl groups.
Holt Chemistry
49
Biological Chemistry
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
carbon
ATP
photosynthesis
chlorophyll
respiration
cellular
exothermic
glycolysis
Krebs
mechanical
transport
synthetic
Most plants use chlorophyll to capture
energy from sunlight. During this
process, called photosynthesis, carbon
dioxide and water form glucose and
oxygen. The plant stores the glucose
by forming larger carbohydrates to use
as a source of energy as needed.
14. Animals eat plants, which make carbohydrates that animals, too, can use for
energy. Once an animal eats a plant, it
breaks the plants large carbohydrates
down into simpler carbohydrates, such
as glucose. Glucose can be carried
throughout the body in the bloodstream.
15. In photosynthesis, carbon dioxide and
water form glucose and oxygen.
During respiration the opposite reaction occurs: glucose and oxygen form
carbon dioxide and water. Photosynthesis takes in energy. Respiration
gives off energy.
16. The first stage of cellular respiration
includes glycolysis, in which glucose is
split into two molecules of pyruvic
acid. This stage produces ATP. The
second stage also produces ATP. This
stage is called the Krebs cycle. The
overall result is the oxidation of pyruvic acid to form carbon dioxide. The
two stages together produce 38 ATP
per glucose molecule.
DNA
deoxyribose
nucleic acid
gene
RNA
uracil
genetic code
nitrogenous
DNA fingerprints
helix
PCR
clone
stem cell
recombinant DNA
nucleic acid
triplet
autoradiograph
base
DNA replicates by unwinding its double helix, providing two strands. Each
strand acts as a template for making a
new strand. Each base forms a hydrogen bond to its complementary base
(A to T, T to A, C to G, G to C).
Eventually the two strands of the original become four strands.
20. a. AUG AAA AGC UUC UCA UAA
b. START lysine, serine, phenylalanine,
serine STOP
c. ATG AAA AGC TTC TCA TAA
21. a. AUG GAA UGU CUA ACA UGA
b. START glutamic acid, cysteine,
leucine, threonine STOP
c. ATG GAA TGT CTA ACA TGA
22. Cloning is producing an offspring that
is genetically identical to a parent
using asexual reproduction methods.
In animals, scientists take stem cells
and culture them artificially so they
grow into complete organisms.
Holt Chemistry
50
Biological Chemistry