C2 Quiz

Description

GCSE Chemistry Quiz on C2 Quiz, created by Leah Firmstone on 30/10/2015.
Leah Firmstone
Quiz by Leah Firmstone, updated more than 1 year ago
Leah Firmstone
Created by Leah Firmstone over 8 years ago
12
2

Resource summary

Question 1

Question
Melting Point is....
Answer
  • ....the temperature at which a solid turns into a liquid.
  • ....the force needed to break a material when it is being stretched
  • ....the force needed to crush a material when it is squeezed
  • ....the force needed to bend a material

Question 2

Question
Tensile strength is....
Answer
  • ....the force needed to break a material when it is being stretched
  • ....the force needed to crush a material when it is being squeezed
  • ....a comparison of two materials where one can or cannot scratch the other
  • ....the mass of a given volume of the material

Question 3

Question
Choose 3 examples of natural materials
Answer
  • cotton
  • plastic
  • paper
  • nylon
  • silk

Question 4

Question
What is meant by the word 'polymer'?
Answer
  • A large molecule that can be made into rubbers, plastics and fibres.
  • A material which needs very little processing for it to be useful.

Question 5

Question
What are hydrocarbons?
Answer
  • Compounds containing just carbon and hydrogen atoms
  • Compounds containing water and carbon
  • Compounds containing just oxygen and carbon atoms

Question 6

Question
Crude oil is separated by a process called fractional [blank_start]distillation[blank_end]. Crude oil is heated to around 400 degrees celsius to turn all the hydrocarbons to gases. The gas is then passed into a fractional distillation [blank_start]column[blank_end] where the gases rise up cool and [blank_start]condense[blank_end] to liquid at their boiling points. Some have [blank_start]high[blank_end] boiling points so condense lower down, while those with lower boiling points [blank_start]rise[blank_end] up the column. Some stay as [blank_start]gases[blank_end] even at the top of the column. Each substance is a mixture of [blank_start]hydrocarbons[blank_end] with similar boiling points called a fraction. The hydrocarbons of each fraction have [blank_start]similar[blank_end] boiling points as the molecules in that fraction are all a similar size - they have a similar number of [blank_start]carbon[blank_end] and hydrogen atoms. There are [blank_start]attractive[blank_end] forces between molecules which hold them together. Force is needed to separate these molecules. When heated, the molecules gain [blank_start]energy[blank_end] until they have enough energy to overcome the forces holding them together and the molecules become a [blank_start]gas[blank_end].
Answer
  • distillation
  • column
  • condense
  • high
  • rise
  • gases
  • hydrocarbons
  • similar
  • carbon
  • attractive
  • energy
  • gas

Question 7

Question
Polymerisation is the process of making a polymer.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 8

Question
What notation would be used to express a polymer of polyethene?
Answer
  • [C₂H₄]ₓ
  • [C₂H₆]ₓ
  • XC₂H₄

Question 9

Question
All polymers are chemically synthesised.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 10

Question
An important reason why [blank_start]synthetic[blank_end] polymers have been chosen for a purpose is because they are [blank_start]cheaper[blank_end] and available in larger quantities than the natural material they replace. This is why [blank_start]nylon[blank_end] replaced silk and [blank_start]wool[blank_end] for stockings in the 1940s. Synthetic polymers have many other properties that make them [blank_start]useful[blank_end] and also their properties can be [blank_start]adjusted[blank_end] to make them suit the job they have to do.
Answer
  • synthetic
  • cheaper
  • nylon
  • wool
  • useful
  • adjusted

Question 11

Question
There is a [blank_start]force[blank_end] between polymer [blank_start]molecules[blank_end] that pulls them together. The [blank_start]closer[blank_end] the molecules are to each other, the stronger the force. Polymers with a [blank_start]larger[blank_end] force between their molecules melt at [blank_start]higher[blank_end] temperatures.
Answer
  • force
  • molecules
  • closer
  • larger
  • higher

Question 12

Question
What does it mean to say a material is highly 'crystalline'?
Answer
  • That there are a lot of areas in the material where there is a regular pattern of molecules lined up alongside each other.
  • That there are branches between the polymer chains, reducing the attractive forces between the chains.

Question 13

Question
What effect do plasticisers have on a polymer?
Answer
  • They fit between the polymer molecules, keeping them apart and weakening the forces between them. They also allow the polymer chains to move over each other more easily, making the material flexible.
  • They connect the polymer chains together into one large molecule, making the material rigid and strong.

Question 14

Question
Cross-linked polymers are thermosetting plastics.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 15

Question
What size range does nanotechnology involve?
Answer
  • 1 - 100 nm
  • 1 - 10 nm
  • 1 - 1000 nm

Question 16

Question
Why do nanoparticles of gold or other materials act as good catalysts?
Answer
  • They have a large surface area on which the reaction can take place.
  • They are larger.
  • The reactions can happen faster.

Question 17

Question
Nanoparticles have been used in products such as [blank_start]cosmetics[blank_end] and sunscreens, and tests have shown that they are not [blank_start]harmful[blank_end] to the skin. However, the nanoparticles are so small that they can slip through tiny [blank_start]pores[blank_end] in the skin and be [blank_start]absorbed[blank_end] by the blood where they could be carried to the organs in the body. It is not known if these substances may be harmful to tissues. One fear is that breathing [blank_start]carbon[blank_end] nanotubes into the lungs to cause diseases in the way that the tiny fibres of [blank_start]asbestos[blank_end] do. We need to find out how [blank_start]hazardous[blank_end] nanoparticles are so that we can assess whether they pose too great a risk to health. Some people think that as nanoparticles occur [blank_start]naturally[blank_end] they are no danger as we have evolved to live with them. Others disagree as scientists are now making [blank_start]synthetic[blank_end] nanoparticles that have new and [blank_start]unexpected[blank_end] properties.
Answer
  • cosmetics
  • harmful
  • absorbed
  • carbon
  • asbestos
  • hazardous
  • naturally
  • synthetic
  • unexpected
  • pores
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