📋 Structured Questions
These questions test key concepts from Topic 4. Attempt each question on paper, then click "Show Mark Scheme" to check your answer.
Question 1: The pH Scale and Dilution
2 marks(a) Explain what happens to the pH of an acid as the acid is diluted with water. [2]
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- pH increases [1]
- (because) the concentration of hydrogen ions decreases [1]
Question 2: Extraction of Metals
2 marksNickel is extracted from nickel oxide by reduction with carbon: NiO + C → Ni + CO
(a) Explain why carbon can be used to extract nickel from nickel oxide. [2]
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- Carbon is more reactive (than nickel) [1]
- (so) carbon will displace nickel (from nickel oxide) OR carbon will remove oxygen (from nickel oxide) [1]
Question 3: Oxidation and Reduction
2 marksFe₂O₃ + 3C → 2Fe + 3CO
(a) Which substance in the equation is reduced? Give one reason for your answer. Answer in terms of oxygen. [2]
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- Fe₂O₃ / iron oxide [1]
- (Fe₂O₃) loses oxygen [1]
Question 4: Electrolysis of Aqueous Solutions
3 marks(a) Aqueous sodium chloride solution is electrolysed to produce an alkaline solution. Explain how the alkaline solution is produced. You should refer to the processes at the electrodes. [3]
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- Sodium ions and hydroxide ions are left (in solution) [1]
- (because) hydrogen ions are discharged / reduced at the negative electrode to form hydrogen [1]
- (and because) chloride ions are discharged / oxidised at the positive electrode to form chlorine [1]
Question 5: Making a Pure Dry Salt
4 marksA student wants to make pure, dry crystals of copper(II) sulfate from solid copper(II) oxide and dilute sulfuric acid.
(a) Describe the method the student should use. [4]
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- Add copper(II) oxide to the sulfuric acid and stir until the copper(II) oxide is in excess / until solid remains [1]
- Filter the mixture to remove the excess copper(II) oxide [1]
- Heat the filtrate / copper sulfate solution to evaporate some of the water / until crystallisation point is reached [1]
- Leave the solution to cool and crystallise, then pat the crystals dry with filter paper [1]
Question 6: Electrolysis of Brine ⭐ Extended Response
6 marksAqueous sodium chloride solution (brine) is electrolysed using inert electrodes.
(a) Explain the chemical processes occurring during this electrolysis. In your answer, you should name the products formed at each electrode, explain how they are formed using half-equations, and state what remains in the solution. [6]
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Level 3 (5–6 marks): Accurate chemical understanding demonstrated. Ion movement linked to correct electrodes, products correctly identified, oxidation and reduction described with balanced half-equations.
Level 2 (3–4 marks): Correct products at electrodes and remaining solution identified, with an attempt to link ion discharge, but may lack half-equations.
Level 1 (1–2 marks): Basic information given, such as identifying a single product or stating ions move to oppositely charged electrodes.
Indicative content:
- Ions present: Na⁺, Cl⁻, H⁺, and OH⁻
- Cathode (−): hydrogen gas produced (H is less reactive than Na); 2H⁺ + 2e⁻ → H₂ (reduction)
- Anode (+): chlorine gas produced (halide ion present); 2Cl⁻ → Cl₂ + 2e⁻ (oxidation)
- Remaining solution: Na⁺ and OH⁻ ions remain → sodium hydroxide (NaOH)
Question 7: Making Salts (Required Practical)
3 marksA student makes magnesium chloride crystals from magnesium oxide and dilute hydrochloric acid.
(a) Give a reason for each of these three steps:
(i) Step 2: Warm the hydrochloric acid. [1]
(ii) Step 5: Add magnesium oxide until it is in excess. [1]
(iii) Step 6: Filter the mixture. [1]
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- (Step 2) To speed up the reaction [1]
- (Step 5) To make sure all the (hydrochloric) acid reacts [1]
- (Step 6) To remove the excess magnesium oxide [1]
Question 8: Required Practical — Making a Soluble Salt 🔬
4 marksA student wants to prepare a pure, dry sample of copper sulfate crystals from copper oxide and sulfuric acid.
(a) Describe the key steps in the method to produce pure, dry copper sulfate crystals. [4]
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- Warm the sulfuric acid gently; add excess copper oxide and stir [1]
- Filter the mixture to remove the excess (unreacted) copper oxide [1]
- Pour the filtrate into an evaporating basin and heat gently until crystals start to form [1]
- Leave to cool and crystallise; pat dry with filter paper [1]
Question 9: Required Practical — Preparing Pure Dry Crystals ⭐🔬 Extended Response
6 marksCopper sulfate crystals can be prepared by reacting copper oxide (an insoluble base) with dilute sulfuric acid.
(a) Describe the full method for preparing a pure, dry sample of copper sulfate crystals. Explain the purpose of each key step. [6]
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Level 3 (5–6 marks): Detailed, logically sequenced description of the full method with clear explanations of the purpose of adding excess base, filtering, and crystallisation.
Level 2 (3–4 marks): Describes most steps correctly but may not fully explain why each step is performed (e.g. states filtering but not why).
Level 1 (1–2 marks): Basic steps such as "mix acid and base" without procedural detail or explanation.
Indicative content:
- Warm dilute sulfuric acid gently using a Bunsen burner
- Add excess copper oxide (insoluble base) and stir — purpose: ensures all acid is used up so no unreacted acid remains
- When excess solid remains at the bottom (no more dissolves), filter the mixture — purpose: removes the unreacted copper oxide
- Pour the blue filtrate (copper sulfate solution) into an evaporating basin
- Heat gently until half the water has evaporated (do not boil dry)
- Leave to cool slowly to allow crystals to form; dry with filter paper