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Title: GCSE Edexcel C1 Summary
Description: Written by an A/A* student for use in taking the GCSE Edexcel C1 exam for GCSE Edexcel Science/Edexcel Chemistry qualification. Written for the specification examined until 2017. Very concise notes which are highly tailored to the specification - as well as past exam papers (I wrote these after having completed every past paper that existed as of 2016). Very useful for last-minute revision.
Description: Written by an A/A* student for use in taking the GCSE Edexcel C1 exam for GCSE Edexcel Science/Edexcel Chemistry qualification. Written for the specification examined until 2017. Very concise notes which are highly tailored to the specification - as well as past exam papers (I wrote these after having completed every past paper that existed as of 2016). Very useful for last-minute revision.
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The Earth’s Sea and Atmosphere
Volcanoes gave out carbon dioxide
...
Carbon dioxide dissolved in the oceans
...
Photosynthesis gave out oxygen
...
Atmosphere now is 78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen, argon 1%, and small amounts
of other gases like carbon dioxide, argon etc
...
Extrusive = cools quickly =
small crystals
...
Granite
...
Has layers and can have fossils
...
Metamorphic = other rocks under heat and pressure
...
Limestone can be used for cement, concrete, glass, neutralising fields,
neutralising sulphur dioxide from power stations
...
You can test by using a burette and slowly adding acid to a flash
of water with a dissolved tablet and universal indicator in it
Acid + metal oxide = salt + water
Acid + metal hydroxide = salt + water
Acid + metal carbonate = salt + water + carbon dioxide
EQUATIONS OF ACIDS
Electrolysis = breaking up with electricity
DC, electrolyte, electrodes (anode and cathode), broken down
Electrolysis of hydrochloric acid = hydrogen and chlorine
Electrolysis of brine = chlorine
Electrolysis of water = hydrogen and oxygen
Chlorine can be used to make PVC, treat water supplies and manufacture
bleach
Test for oxygen = glowing split, relights
Test for hydrogen = lighted split, squeaky pop
Test for chlorine = damp litmus paper, bleached
Obtaining and Using Metals
Unreactive metals are found in ores
More reactive metals are found in compounds with oxygen
If less reactive than carbon you displace by heating with carbon
...
If more reactive than carbon you displace by electrolysis
Metals are malleable, strong and good conductors of heat and electricity
Aluminium = low density, reflective, doesn’t corrode
...
Pipes, wires
Gold = reflective, excellent conductor, inert
...
g
...
g
...
g
...
Pure gold is too soft and
too expensive to use
We should recycle metals because it saves money, saves resources,
prevents waste, uses less energy
Fuels
Crude oil is a mixture of hydrocarbons
Separate hydrocarbons by fractional distillation – heating slowly to the boiling
points of different hydrocarbons and then condensing them off
Gas (cooking and heating), petrol (cars), kerosene (jet fuel), diesel (lorries,
trains, some cars), fuel oil (boats), bitumen (surfacing roads)
As you go down the fractionating column the boiling point gets higher, it gets
more viscous, less flammable and the chain gets longer
Complete combustion = happens when there’s adequate oxygen
...
Incomplete combustion = happens when there’s inadequate oxygen
...
Soot’s a carcinogen and carbon monoxide binds
to haemoglobin
Can prevent by ventilating properly and watching for a yellow, sooty flame
Criteria for a good fuel = ease of ignition, price, energy value, how cleanly it
burns, storage and transport
Sulphur impurities exist in hydrocarbons, burnt, sulphur dioxide, reacts with
rainwater, sulphuric acid, acid rain, damages plants, damages buildings,
makes lakes acidic
We can prevent by using catalytic convertors, ‘scrubbing’ fumes from power
stations and burning less fossil fuels
Greenhouse gases act as an insulating layer and re-radiate heat from the sun
We’re adding to greenhouse gases through deforestation, combustion of fossil
fuels
We can help by iron seeding, converting carbon dioxide into hydrocarbons
Biofuels – mostly biogas and ethanol (made from sugar cane/beet)
...
Disadvantages = have to grow which increases food prices, no
refuelling network, cars aren’t set up for it
Fuel cells –react hydrogen with oxygen to produce energy (and water)
...
Disadvantages =
hydrogen acquired from electrolysis of water which uses electricity, difficult to
store and transport, refuelling network
To test the energy content of fuels you put them in a spirit lamp (weigh) and
use them to heat water in a copper calorimeter with a thermometer
...
Have a
double bond
...
Some are not
Title: GCSE Edexcel C1 Summary
Description: Written by an A/A* student for use in taking the GCSE Edexcel C1 exam for GCSE Edexcel Science/Edexcel Chemistry qualification. Written for the specification examined until 2017. Very concise notes which are highly tailored to the specification - as well as past exam papers (I wrote these after having completed every past paper that existed as of 2016). Very useful for last-minute revision.
Description: Written by an A/A* student for use in taking the GCSE Edexcel C1 exam for GCSE Edexcel Science/Edexcel Chemistry qualification. Written for the specification examined until 2017. Very concise notes which are highly tailored to the specification - as well as past exam papers (I wrote these after having completed every past paper that existed as of 2016). Very useful for last-minute revision.