Electricity & Chemistry 2 QP
Electricity & Chemistry 2 QP
Electricity & Chemistry 2 QP
methane.
(a) In the first stage of the process, methane reacts with steam at 800 °C.
In the second stage of the process, carbon monoxide reacts with steam at 200 °C.
(i) Explain why the position of equilibrium in the first reaction is affected by pressure but
the position of equilibrium in the second reaction is not.
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(ii) Suggest why a high temperature is needed in the first reaction to get a high yield of
products but in the second reaction a high yield is obtained at a low temperature.
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(b) Two other ways of producing hydrogen are cracking and electrolysis.
(ii) There are three products of the electrolysis of concentrated aqueous sodium
chloride. Hydrogen is one of them.
Write an equation for the electrode reaction which forms hydrogen.
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(iii) Name the other two products of the electrolysis of concentrated aqueous sodium
chloride and give a use of each one.
[Total: 11]
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2 Aluminium is an important metal with a wide range of uses.
(a) Aluminium is obtained by the electrolysis of aluminium oxide dissolved in molten cryolite.
waste gases
molten mixture of
carbon cathode (–)
aluminium oxide and cryolite
aluminium
(i) Solid aluminium oxide is a poor conductor of electricity. It conducts either when
molten or when dissolved in molten cryolite. Explain why.
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(ii) Why is a solution of aluminium oxide in molten cryolite used rather than molten
aluminium oxide?
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(iii) Explain why the carbon anodes need to be replaced periodically.
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(iv) One reason why graphite is used for the electrodes is that it is a good conductor of
electricity. Give another reason.
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(c) Aluminium is used for overhead power (electricity) cables which usually have a steel
core.
aluminium
steel core
(i) Give two properties of aluminium which make it suitable for this use.
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[Total: 10]
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3 For centuries, iron has been extracted from its ore in the blast furnace. The world production
of pig iron is measured in hundreds of million tonnes annually.
(a) The following raw materials are supplied to a modern blast furnace.
Describe the essential reactions in the blast furnace. Each of the four raw materials must
be mentioned at least once. Give the equation for the reduction of hematite.
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(b) Each year, blast furnaces discharge millions of tonnes of carbon dioxide into the
atmosphere. This will increase the percentage of atmospheric carbon dioxide.
(i) Explain why this increased percentage of carbon dioxide may cause problems in the
future.
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(ii) Until the early eighteenth century, charcoal, not coke, was used in the blast furnace.
Charcoal is made from wood but coke is made from coal. Explain why the use of
charcoal would have a smaller effect on the level of atmospheric carbon dioxide.
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(iii) A method being developed to produce iron with lower emissions of carbon dioxide
is by electrolysis. Hematite, Fe2O3, is dissolved in molten lithium carbonate and
electrolysed. The ore is spilt into its constituent elements.
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Complete the equation for the reaction at the positive electrode (anode).
[Total: 13]
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4 The ore of aluminium is bauxite which is impure aluminium oxide. Alumina, pure aluminium
oxide, is obtained from bauxite.
Aluminium is formed at the cathode when a molten mixture of alumina and cryolite, Na3Al F6,
is electrolysed.
(a)
a) Name two products formed at the anode in this electrolysis.
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(ii) All the aluminium formed comes from the alumina not the cryolite.
Suggest two reasons why the electrolyte must contain cryolite.
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(iii) The major impurity in bauxite is iron(III) oxide. Iron(III) oxide is basic, aluminium
oxide is amphoteric. Explain how aqueous sodium hydroxide can be used to separate
them.
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(b) The purification of bauxite uses large amounts of sodium hydroxide.
(i) Describe the chemistry of how sodium hydroxide is made from concentrated aqueous
sodium chloride. The description must include at least one ionic equation.
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(ii) Making sodium hydroxide from sodium chloride produces two other chemicals.
Name these two chemicals and state one use of each chemical.
chemical ....................................................................................................................
use .............................................................................................................................
chemical ....................................................................................................................
[Total: 13]
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5 During electrolysis, ions move in the electrolyte and electrons move in the external circuit.
Reactions occur at the electrodes.
+ –
external circuit
electrode electrode
heat
(i) Draw an arrow on the diagram to show the direction of the electron flow in the
external circuit. [1]
(ii) Electrons are supplied to the external circuit. How and where is this done?
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(iii) Explain why solid lithium iodide does not conduct electricity but when molten it is a
good conductor.
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(b) The results of experiments on electrolysis are shown in the following table. Complete the
table. The first line has been done as an example.
concentrated aqueous
carbon chlorine
potassium chloride
PhysicsAndMathsTutor.com [4]
(c) The diagram below shows the electrolysis of dilute sulfuric acid. Hydrogen is formed at
the negative electrode (cathode) and oxygen at the positive electrode (anode) and the
concentration of sulfuric acid increases.
+ –
bubbles of bubbles of
oxygen gas hydrogen gas
The ions present in the dilute acid are H+(aq), OH–(aq) and SO42–(aq).
(i) Write an equation for the reaction at the negative electrode (cathode).
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(ii) Complete the equation for the reaction at the positive electrode (anode).
(iii) Suggest an explanation of why the concentration of the sulfuric acid increases.
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(d) In the apparatus used in (c), the power supply is removed and immediately replaced by
a voltmeter.
voltmeter
V
bubbles of bubbles of
oxygen gas hydrogen gas
A reading on the voltmeter shows that electrical energy is being produced. Suggest an
explanation for how this energy is produced.
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