AP Chemistry, Predicting Products:Sec. 8.14 – 8.16 Reading Guide
- What are the two possible products when a solid dissolves?
- How can you tell whether a solid will most likely produce molecules or ions when it dissolves?
- Compare and Contrast strong electrolytes, weak electrolytes, and nonelectrolytes.
- Explain how the conductivity apparatus works and how the results would indicate what kind of electrolyte the solution is.
- Using a more sensitive tester for conductivity, why does the conductivity of a silver chloride solution increase as more silver chloride solid is added?
- What happens that eventually the amount of conductivity of a silver chloride solution stops increasing?
- What macroscopic observations should you be able to make about a beaker of water with silver chloride if it has reached the point where the conductivity stops increasing?
- What is the connection between the solubility of a substance, a saturated solution, and a precipitation reaction?
- Most of our level of chemistry will involve solids we term either soluble or insoluble, what concentration will probably separate those two categories?
- What four ions are always soluble (that is there are no exceptions)? Memorize these!
- For the groups of ions marked “insoluble”, what ions are exceptions to them all?
- Contrast condensed equations, ionic equations, and net ionic equations. Show an example of each.
- What are spectator ions, and what is necessary to classify an ion as such?
- What is the most difficult task of writing net ionic equations?
- What three types of substances are considered strong electrolytes?
- What are the strong acids and strong bases? Memorize these!
- Work exercise 8.4 (cover up the answers at first) and then check your work.
AP Chemistry, Predicting Products:Sec. 8.14 – 8.16 Reading Guide
- What are the two possible products when a solid dissolves?
- How can you tell whether a solid will most likely produce molecules or ions when it dissolves?
- Compare and Contrast strong electrolytes, weak electrolytes, and nonelectrolytes.
- Explain how the conductivity apparatus works and how the results would indicate what kind of electrolyte the solution is.
- Using a more sensitive tester for conductivity, why does the conductivity of a silver chloride solution increase as more silver chloride solid is added?
- What happens that eventually the amount of conductivity of a silver chloride solution stops increasing?
- What macroscopic observations should you be able to make about a beaker of water with silver chloride if it has reached the point where the conductivity stops increasing?
- What is the connection between the solubility of a substance, a saturated solution, and a precipitation reaction?
- Most of our level of chemistry will involve solids we term either soluble or insoluble, what concentration will probably separate those two categories?
- What four ions are always soluble (that is there are no exceptions)? Memorize these!
- For the groups of ions marked “insoluble”, what ions are exceptions to them all?
- Contrast condensed equations, ionic equations, and net ionic equations. Show an example of each.
- What are spectator ions, and what is necessary to classify an ion as such?
- What is the most difficult task of writing net ionic equations?
- What three types of substances are considered strong electrolytes?
- What are the strong acids and strong bases? Memorize these!
- Work exercise 8.4 (cover up the answers at first) and then check your work.