Question 1 · multiple_choice
1 marksWhich of the following reaction pathways can be used to convert propan-1-ol into propan-2-ol?
(1) Heat propan-1-ol with concentrated \(\text{H}_2\text{SO}_4\) at \(170^\circ\text{C}\), then react the product with \(\text{H}_2\text{O(g)}\) in the presence of \(\text{H}_3\text{PO}_4\) catalyst at high temperature and pressure.
(2) Warm propan-1-ol with acidified \(\text{K}_2\text{Cr}_2\text{O}_7\text{(aq)}\), then react the product with \(\text{NaBH}_4\).
(3) Heat propan-1-ol with concentrated \(\text{H}_2\text{SO}_4\) at \(170^\circ\text{C}\), react the product with \(\text{HBr(g)}\), and then heat the resulting compound with \(\text{NaOH(aq)}\).
- A.(1) and (2) only
- B.(1) and (3) only
- C.(2) and (3) only
- D.(1), (2) and (3)
Worked solution
Pathway (1): Heating propan-1-ol with concentrated sulfuric acid at \(170^\circ\text{C}\) undergoes dehydration to form propene (\(\text{CH}_3\text{CH}=\text{CH}_2\)). Acid-catalyzed hydration of propene with steam follows Markovnikov's rule, yielding propan-2-ol as the major product. This is correct.
Pathway (2): Oxidation of propan-1-ol with acidified dichromate yields propanal or propanoic acid. Reduction of these with \(\text{NaBH}_4\) yields propan-1-ol again, not propan-2-ol. This is incorrect.
Pathway (3): Dehydration of propan-1-ol gives propene. Hydrohalogenation of propene with \(\text{HBr}\) yields 2-bromopropane as the major product. Nucleophilic substitution of 2-bromopropane with aqueous \(\text{NaOH}\) yields propan-2-ol. This is correct.
Therefore, (1) and (3) only are correct.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for option B. 0 marks for other options.
Question 2 · multiple_choice
1 marksStandard enthalpies of combustion (\(\Delta H_c^\theta\)) of \(\text{C}_2\text{H}_4\text{(g)}\) and \(\text{C}_2\text{H}_5\text{OH(l)}\) are \(-1411 \text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\) and \(-1367 \text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\) respectively. What is the standard enthalpy change of the following reaction?
\(\text{C}_2\text{H}_4\text{(g)} + \text{H}_2\text{O(l)} \rightarrow \text{C}_2\text{H}_5\text{OH(l)}\)
- A.\(-44 \text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\)
- B.\(+44 \text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\)
- C.\(-330 \text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\)
- D.\(+330 \text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\)
Worked solution
According to Hess's Law:
\(\Delta H_{\text{rxn}} = \sum \Delta H_c^\theta(\text{Reactants}) - \sum \Delta H_c^\theta(\text{Products})\)
Since liquid water (\(\text{H}_2\text{O(l)}\)) is already a product of combustion, its standard enthalpy of combustion is zero (\(\Delta H_c^\theta = 0\)).
Therefore,
\(\Delta H_{\text{rxn}} = \Delta H_c^\theta(\text{C}_2\text{H}_4\text{(g)}) - \Delta H_c^\theta(\text{C}_2\text{H}_5\text{OH(l)}) = -1411 - (-1367) = -44 \text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\).
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for option A. 0 marks for other options.
Question 3 · multiple_choice
1 marksXenon difluoride (\(\text{XeF}_2\)) reacts with water to produce xenon gas, oxygen gas, and hydrofluoric acid. In the balanced chemical equation for this reaction, what is the mole ratio of \(\text{XeF}_2\) reacted to \(\text{O}_2\) produced?
- A.\(1 : 1\)
- B.\(2 : 1\)
- C.\(4 : 1\)
- D.\(1 : 2\)
Worked solution
The reduction half-equation is:
\(\text{XeF}_2 + 2e^- \rightarrow \text{Xe} + 2\text{F}^-\)
The oxidation half-equation is:
\(2\text{H}_2\text{O} \rightarrow \text{O}_2 + 4\text{H}^+ + 4e^-\)
Multiply the reduction equation by 2 to balance the electrons:
\(2\text{XeF}_2 + 4e^- \rightarrow 2\text{Xe} + 4\text{F}^-\)
Combine both equations to get the overall balanced equation:
\(2\text{XeF}_2 + 2\text{H}_2\text{O} \rightarrow 2\text{Xe} + \text{O}_2 + 4\text{HF}\)
Thus, 2 moles of \(\text{XeF}_2\) react to produce 1 mole of \(\text{O}_2\). The ratio is \(2 : 1\).
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for option B. 0 marks for other options.
Question 4 · multiple_choice
1 marksWhich of the following statements about the activation energy (\(E_a\)) and rate constant (\(k\)) of a chemical reaction is/are correct?
(1) A reaction with a higher activation energy must have a smaller rate constant at any given temperature than a reaction with a lower activation energy.
(2) The activation energy of a reaction decreases when the temperature is raised.
(3) A plot of \(\ln k\) against \(\frac{1}{T}\) (where \(T\) is in Kelvin) yields a straight line with a slope equal to \(-\frac{E_a}{R}\).
- A.(1) only
- B.(3) only
- C.(1) and (2) only
- D.(2) and (3) only
Worked solution
Statement (1) is incorrect because the rate constant \(k = A e^{-E_a/RT}\) depends on both \(E_a\) and the pre-exponential factor \(A\). A reaction with higher \(E_a\) can have a larger \(k\) if its \(A\) factor is significantly larger than that of the other reaction.
Statement (2) is incorrect because activation energy \(E_a\) is a constant characteristic barrier of a reaction pathway and is independent of temperature.
Statement (3) is correct as it is the linear form of the Arrhenius equation: \(\ln k = -\frac{E_a}{R}\left(\frac{1}{T}\right) + \ln A\).
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for option B. 0 marks for other options.
Question 5 · multiple_choice
1 marksAn organic compound \(X\) has the molecular formula \(\text{C}_3\text{H}_6\text{O}\). The infrared (IR) spectrum of \(X\) shows a strong and broad absorption band at around \(3300\text{ cm}^{-1}\), and a sharp absorption band at around \(1640\text{ cm}^{-1}\). Which of the following is most likely the structure of \(X\)?
- A.\(\text{CH}_3\text{CH}_2\text{CHO}\)
- B.\(\text{CH}_3\text{COCH}_3\)
- C.\(\text{CH}_2=\text{CHCH}_2\text{OH}\)
- D.\(\text{CH}_3\text{OCH}=\text{CH}_2\)
Worked solution
The strong and broad absorption band at around \(3300\text{ cm}^{-1}\) indicates the presence of an \(\text{O}-\text{H}\) group (alcohol). The sharp band at around \(1640\text{ cm}^{-1}\) indicates a \(\text{C}=\text{C}\) group (alkene).
Among the options:
- \(\text{CH}_3\text{CH}_2\text{CHO}\) has a \(\text{C}=\text{O}\) group (absorption around \(1700\text{ cm}^{-1}\)), but no \(\text{O}-\text{H}\) or \(\text{C}=\text{C}\).
- \(\text{CH}_3\text{COCH}_3\) has a \(\text{C}=\text{O}\) group, but no \(\text{O}-\text{H}\) or \(\text{C}=\text{C}\).
- \(\text{CH}_2=\text{CHCH}_2\text{OH}\) (prop-2-en-1-ol) contains both a \(\text{C}=\text{C}\) group and an \(\text{O}-\text{H}\) group.
- \(\text{CH}_3\text{OCH}=\text{CH}_2\) contains a \(\text{C}=\text{C}\) group but no \(\text{O}-\text{H}\) group.
Thus, \(X\) is most likely \(\text{CH}_2=\text{CHCH}_2\text{OH}\).
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for option C. 0 marks for other options.
Question 6 · multiple_choice
1 marksAt a certain temperature \(T\), \(1.00\text{ mol}\) of \(\text{PCl}_5\text{(g)}\) is introduced into a \(2.00\text{ dm}^3\) evacuated sealed container. The gas decomposes according to the equation:
\(\text{PCl}_5\text{(g)} \rightleftharpoons \text{PCl}_3\text{(g)} + \text{Cl}_2\text{(g)}\)
When the system reaches chemical equilibrium, the container contains \(0.40\text{ mol}\) of \(\text{Cl}_2\text{(g)}\). What is the equilibrium constant \(K_c\) of the reaction at temperature \(T\)?
- A.\(0.13\text{ mol dm}^{-3}\)
- B.\(0.27\text{ mol dm}^{-3}\)
- C.\(0.07\text{ mol dm}^{-3}\)
- D.\(0.40\text{ mol dm}^{-3}\)
Worked solution
Set up the ICE table for moles:
- Initial: \(\text{PCl}_5 = 1.00\text{ mol}\); \(\text{PCl}_3 = 0\); \(\text{Cl}_2 = 0\)
- Change: \(\text{PCl}_5 = -0.40\text{ mol}\); \(\text{PCl}_3 = +0.40\text{ mol}\); \(\text{Cl}_2 = +0.40\text{ mol}\)
- Equilibrium: \(\text{PCl}_5 = 0.60\text{ mol}\); \(\text{PCl}_3 = 0.40\text{ mol}\); \(\text{Cl}_2 = 0.40\text{ mol}\)
Divide moles by volume (\(2.00\text{ dm}^3\)) to get concentrations:
\([\text{PCl}_5] = 0.60 / 2.00 = 0.30\text{ mol dm}^{-3}\)
\([\text{PCl}_3] = 0.40 / 2.00 = 0.20\text{ mol dm}^{-3}\)
\([\text{Cl}_2] = 0.40 / 2.00 = 0.20\text{ mol dm}^{-3}\)
Calculate \(K_c\):
\(K_c = \frac{[\text{PCl}_3][\text{Cl}_2]}{[\text{PCl}_5]} = \frac{0.20 \times 0.20}{0.30} = 0.133\text{ mol dm}^{-3} \approx 0.13\text{ mol dm}^{-3}\).
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for option A. 0 marks for other options.
Question 7 · multiple_choice
1 marksWhich of the following statements about transition metals and d-block elements are correct?
(1) Zinc is not classified as a transition metal because neither its atom nor its stable ion has an incomplete d-subshell.
(2) Transition metal complexes are often coloured because of electronic transitions between split d-orbitals.
(3) Fe(II) ions can act as a catalyst in the redox reaction between \(\text{S}_2\text{O}_8^{2-}\) and \(\text{I}^-\) because iron can readily switch between +2 and +3 oxidation states.
- A.(1) and (2) only
- B.(1) and (3) only
- C.(2) and (3) only
- D.(1), (2) and (3)
Worked solution
Statement (1) is correct: Transition metals must have at least one stable ion with an incomplete d-subshell. Since zinc's only stable ion \(\text{Zn}^{2+}\) has a filled d-subshell (\([Ar] 3d^{10}\)), it is not classified as a transition metal.
Statement (2) is correct: Ligands split d-orbitals of a metal ion into different energy levels; absorption of visible light promotes d-electrons from lower to higher split d-orbitals (d-d transitions).
Statement (3) is correct: Fe(II) can be oxidized to Fe(III) by \(\text{S}_2\text{O}_8^{2-}\) and then reduced back to Fe(II) by \(\text{I}^-\), bypassing the high activation energy of the direct reaction between two negatively charged ions.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for option D. 0 marks for other options.
Question 8 · multiple_choice
1 marksWhich of the following compounds can exhibit enantiomerism?
- A.Butan-1-ol
- B.Butan-2-ol
- C.Butanone
- D.2-Methylpropan-2-ol
Worked solution
Enantiomerism requires the presence of at least one chiral center (a carbon atom bonded to four different groups).
- Butan-1-ol (\(\text{CH}_3\text{CH}_2\text{CH}_2\text{CH}_2\text{OH}\)) has no chiral carbon.
- Butan-2-ol (\(\text{CH}_3\text{CH(OH)CH}_2\text{CH}_3\)) has a chiral carbon at C2, which is bonded to four different groups: \(-\text{H}\), \(-\text{OH}\), \(-\text{CH}_3\), and \(-\text{CH}_2\text{CH}_3\). Thus, it has a chiral center and exhibits enantiomerism.
- Butanone (\(\text{CH}_3\text{COCH}_2\text{CH}_3\)) has no chiral carbon.
- 2-Methylpropan-2-ol (\((\text{CH}_3)_3\text{COH}\)) has no chiral carbon.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for option B. 0 marks for other options.
Question 9 · multiple_choice
1 marksWhich of the following pairs of species have the same molecular shape?
- A.\(\text{CO}_2\) and \(\text{SO}_2\)
- B.\(\text{BF}_3\) and \(\text{NH}_3\)
- C.\(\text{CH}_4\) and \(\text{NH}_4^+\)
- D.\(\text{H}_2\text{O\) and \(\text{BeCl}_2\)
Worked solution
- \(\text{CO}_2\) is linear (2 bonding pairs, 0 lone pairs on C), while \(\text{SO}_2\) is bent (2 bonding pairs, 1 lone pair on S).
- \(\text{BF}_3\) is trigonal planar (3 bonding pairs, 0 lone pairs on B), while \(\text{NH}_3\) is trigonal pyramidal (3 bonding pairs, 1 lone pair on N).
- Both \(\text{CH}_4\) and \(\text{NH}_4^+\) have 4 bonding pairs and 0 lone pairs around the central atom, giving them both a tetrahedral molecular shape.
- \(\text{H}_2\text{O\) is bent (2 bonding pairs, 2 lone pairs on O), while \(\text{BeCl}_2\) is linear (2 bonding pairs, 0 lone pairs on Be).
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for option C. 0 marks for other options.
Question 10 · multiple_choice
1 marksWhich of the following compounds has the highest boiling point?
- A.\(\text{CH}_3\text{CH}_2\text{CH}_2\text{CHO}\)
- B.\(\text{CH}_3\text{CH}_2\text{CH}_2\text{CH}_2\text{OH}\)
- C.\(\text{CH}_3\text{CH}_2\text{OCH}_2\text{CH}_3\)
- D.\(\text{CH}_3\text{CH}_2\text{CH}_2\text{CH}_2\text{CH}_3\)
Worked solution
All four compounds have similar relative molecular masses (around 72–74), meaning their dispersion forces (Van der Waals' forces) are of similar magnitude.
- Butan-1-ol (\(\text{CH}_3\text{CH}_2\text{CH}_2\text{CH}_2\text{OH}\)) contains a highly polar \(-\text{OH}\) group that forms strong intermolecular hydrogen bonds.
- Butanal (\(\text{CH}_3\text{CH}_2\text{CH}_2\text{CHO}\)) and ethoxyethane (\(\text{CH}_3\text{CH}_2\text{OCH}_2\text{CH}_3\)) are polar but cannot form hydrogen bonds with themselves, experiencing only dipole-dipole forces.
- Pentane (\(\text{CH}_3\text{CH}_2\text{CH}_2\text{CH}_2\text{CH}_3\)) is nonpolar and experiences only weak dispersion forces.
Therefore, butan-1-ol has the strongest intermolecular forces and the highest boiling point.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for option B. 0 marks for other options.
Question 11 · multiple_choice
1 marksGiven the following standard enthalpy changes of combustion:
\(\Delta H_c^\theta [C_2H_2(g)] = -1300\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\)
\(\Delta H_c^\theta [C_6H_6(l)] = -3268\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\)
What is the standard enthalpy change of the following reaction?
\(3C_2H_2(g) \rightarrow C_6H_6(l)\)
- A.\(-632\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\)
- B.\(+632\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\)
- C.\(-2332\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\)
- D.\(+2332\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\)
Worked solution
According to Hess's Law, the enthalpy change of a reaction can be calculated from the standard enthalpy changes of combustion of reactants and products:
\(\Delta H^\theta = \sum \Delta H_c^\theta[\text{reactants}] - \sum \Delta H_c^\theta[\text{products}]\)
For the reaction: \(3C_2H_2(g) \rightarrow C_6H_6(l)\)
\(\Delta H^\theta = 3 \times \Delta H_c^\theta [C_2H_2(g)] - 1 \times \Delta H_c^\theta [C_6H_6(l)]\)
\(\Delta H^\theta = 3 \times (-1300\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}) - (-3268\text{ kJ mol}^{-1})\)
\(\Delta H^\theta = -3900 + 3268 = -632\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\).
Therefore, option A is the correct answer.
Marking scheme
1 mark for the correct answer (A). No marks for incorrect or multiple answers.
Question 12 · multiple_choice
1 marksAn organic compound \(X\) has the molecular formula \(C_4H_8O\). It does not react with Tollens' reagent, but can be reduced by \(LiAlH_4\) to form an alcohol \(Y\). Which of the following statements about \(Y\) is/are correct?
(1) \(Y\) can be dehydrated to form a mixture of but-1-ene and but-2-ene.
(2) \(Y\) contains a chiral carbon atom.
(3) \(Y\) can be oxidized by acidified \(K_2Cr_2O_7(aq)\) to form a carboxylic acid.
- A.(1) and (2) only
- B.(1) and (3) only
- C.(2) and (3) only
- D.(1), (2) and (3)
Worked solution
The organic compound \(X\) with formula \(C_4H_8O\) has 1 degree of unsaturation. Since it does not react with Tollens' reagent but can be reduced to an alcohol, it must be a ketone rather than an aldehyde. Therefore, \(X\) is butanone (\(CH_3COCH_2CH_3\)). Reduction of butanone by \(LiAlH_4\) gives butan-2-ol (\(CH_3CH(OH)CH_2CH_3\)), which is alcohol \(Y\).
(1) Correct: Dehydration of butan-2-ol can eliminate hydrogen from C1 or C3, producing a mixture of but-1-ene and but-2-ene.
(2) Correct: The C2 of butan-2-ol is bonded to four different groups (\(-H\), \(-OH\), \(-CH_3\), \(-CH_2CH_3\)), making it a chiral carbon atom.
(3) Incorrect: Butan-2-ol is a secondary alcohol. Its oxidation yields butanone (a ketone), not a carboxylic acid.
Hence, only (1) and (2) are correct.
Marking scheme
1 mark for the correct answer (A). No marks for incorrect or multiple answers.
Question 13 · multiple_choice
1 marksConsider the following equilibrium system in a closed container at constant temperature:
\(N_2O_4(g) \rightleftharpoons 2NO_2(g) \quad \Delta H > 0\)
If the volume of the container is suddenly halved at constant temperature, which of the following describes the subsequent change in the concentration of \(NO_2(g)\)?
- A.It increases instantaneously, then decreases gradually to a value higher than its initial value.
- B.It increases instantaneously, then decreases gradually to a value lower than its initial value.
- C.It decreases instantaneously, then increases gradually to a value lower than its initial value.
- D.It remains constant instantaneously, then increases gradually to a new equilibrium value.
Worked solution
1. When the volume of the container is halved, the concentrations of all gaseous species (including \(NO_2\)) instantly double due to the volume decrease.
2. According to Le Chatelier's Principle, the increase in overall pressure shifts the equilibrium to the side with fewer gas molecules (the reactant side, to the left) to oppose the pressure increase. Thus, some \(NO_2\) reacts to form \(N_2O_4\), causing the concentration of \(NO_2\) to decrease gradually.
3. However, the shift in equilibrium only partially opposes the initial change. Therefore, the new equilibrium concentration of \(NO_2\) remains higher than its initial value before the volume change.
Thus, the concentration increases instantaneously, then decreases gradually to a value higher than its initial value.
Marking scheme
1 mark for the correct answer (A). No marks for incorrect or multiple answers.
Question 14 · multiple_choice
1 marksIn which of the following reactions does sulfur undergo BOTH oxidation and reduction (disproportionation)?
(1) \(3S + 6KOH \rightarrow 2K_2S + K_2SO_3 + 3H_2O\)
(2) \(SO_2 + 2H_2S \rightarrow 3S + 2H_2O\)
(3) \(S_2O_3^{2-} + 2H^+ \rightarrow S + SO_2 + H_2O\)
- A.(1) and (2) only
- B.(1) and (3) only
- C.(2) and (3) only
- D.(1), (2) and (3)
Worked solution
(1) Sulfur in \(S\) has an oxidation number of 0. In products, it forms \(K_2S\) (oxidation number of S is -2, reduced) and \(K_2SO_3\) (oxidation number of S is +4, oxidized). Thus, sulfur undergoes disproportionation. (Correct)
(2) Sulfur in reactants is in \(SO_2\) (+4) and \(H_2S\) (-2). Both react to form elemental \(S\) (0). This is comproportionation, where different species are oxidized and reduced to form the same product. (Incorrect)
(3) Sulfur in \(S_2O_3^{2-}\) has an average oxidation number of +2. In the products, it forms \(S\) (oxidation number 0, reduced) and \(SO_2\) (oxidation number +4, oxidized). Thus, sulfur undergoes disproportionation. (Correct)
Therefore, (1) and (3) only are correct.
Marking scheme
1 mark for the correct answer (B). No marks for incorrect or multiple answers.
Question 15 · multiple_choice
1 marksFor a certain reaction, the rate constant \(k\) is measured at different temperatures. A plot of \(\ln k\) against \(\frac{1}{T}\) (where \(T\) is in Kelvin) gives a straight line with a slope of \(-1.20 \times 10^4\text{ K\)}
What is the activation energy (\(E_a\)) of this reaction?
(Given: gas constant \(R = 8.314\text{ J mol}^{-1}\text{ K}^{-1}\))
- A.1.44 \(\text{kJ mol}^{-1}\)
- B.99.8 \(\text{kJ mol}^{-1}\)
- C.144 \(\text{kJ mol}^{-1}\)
- D.99800 \(\text{kJ mol}^{-1}\)
Worked solution
According to the Arrhenius equation:
\(\ln k = -\frac{E_a}{R}\left(\frac{1}{T}\right) + \ln A\)
The slope of the straight line obtained by plotting \(\ln k\) against \(\frac{1}{T}\) is equal to \(-\frac{E_a}{R}\).
\(\text{Slope} = -\frac{E_a}{R} = -1.20 \times 10^4\text{ K}\)
\(E_a = 1.20 \times 10^4 \times R = 1.20 \times 10^4 \times 8.314 = 99768\text{ J mol}^{-1} \approx 99.8\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\).
Therefore, option B is correct.
Marking scheme
1 mark for the correct answer (B). No marks for incorrect or multiple answers.
Question 16 · multiple_choice
1 marksWhich of the following pairs of species have the same molecular shape?
- A.\(CO_2\) and \(SO_2\)
- B.\(BF_3\) and \(NH_3\)
- C.\(CH_4\) and \(NH_4^+\)
- D.\(H_2O\) and \(BeCl_2\)
Worked solution
Let us determine the molecular shapes of each pair:
a) \(CO_2\) is linear (two double bonds, zero lone pairs on C). \(SO_2\) is bent (V-shaped) because sulfur has two bonding domains and one lone pair.
b) \(BF_3\) is trigonal planar (three bonding pairs, zero lone pairs on B). \(NH_3\) is trigonal pyramidal (three bonding pairs, one lone pair on N).
c) Both \(CH_4\) and \(NH_4^+\) have 4 bonding domains and 0 lone pairs around the central atom, so both are tetrahedral.
d) \(H_2O\) is bent (two bonding pairs, two lone pairs). \(BeCl_2\) is linear (two bonding pairs, zero lone pairs).
Therefore, option C is the correct answer.
Marking scheme
1 mark for the correct answer (C). No marks for incorrect or multiple answers.
Question 17 · multiple_choice
1 marksAn organic compound has the molecular formula \(C_3H_6O_2\). Its infrared (IR) spectrum shows a strong absorption peak around \(1740\text{ cm}^{-1}\), but no broad absorption peak in the region \(2500 - 3300\text{ cm}^{-1}\). Which of the following compounds could this be?
(1) Propanoic acid
(2) Methyl ethanoate
(3) Ethyl methanoate
- A.(1) only
- B.(1) and (2) only
- C.(2) and (3) only
- D.(1), (2) and (3)
Worked solution
1. The molecular formula \(C_3H_6O_2\) corresponds to acyclic isomers with one double bond equivalent (either an acid or an ester).
2. The strong absorption peak around \(1740\text{ cm}^{-1}\) indicates the presence of a carbonyl group (\(C=O\)).
3. The absence of a broad absorption peak in the \(2500 - 3300\text{ cm}^{-1}\) region indicates that there is no carboxylic acid \(O-H\) group. This rules out propanoic acid (1).
4. Both methyl ethanoate (2) and ethyl methanoate (3) are esters. They have the formula \(C_3H_6O_2\), possess a carbonyl group (\(C=O\)), and do not contain an \(O-H\) group. Therefore, they match the spectrum.
Hence, (2) and (3) only are correct.
Marking scheme
1 mark for the correct answer (C). No marks for incorrect or multiple answers.
Question 18 · multiple_choice
1 marksIn an industrial electrolysis cell used for purifying copper, a crude copper anode is refined to produce pure copper at the cathode. Which of the following statements regarding this process is correct?
- A.The concentration of \(Cu^{2+}(aq)\) in the electrolyte increases significantly during the electrolysis.
- B.Noble metal impurities like gold and platinum are oxidized and dissolve into the electrolyte.
- C.Zinc and iron impurities present in the anode are reduced and deposit onto the cathode.
- D.The mass lost by the anode is greater than the mass gained by the cathode if insoluble impurities are present.
Worked solution
Let's analyze the statements:
a) The concentration of \(Cu^{2+}(aq)\) in the electrolyte remains virtually constant because the amount of copper oxidized at the anode is almost equal to the amount of copper reduced and deposited at the cathode. (Incorrect)
b) Noble metal impurities (like gold and platinum) are less reactive than copper, so they are not oxidized. They detach from the dissolving anode and fall to the bottom of the cell as 'anode slime'. (Incorrect)
c) Zinc and iron impurities are oxidized to \(Zn^{2+}\) and \(Fe^{2+}\) ions at the anode, but they remain in the solution because they are much harder to reduce than \(Cu^{2+}\) ions. (Incorrect)
d) Because insoluble noble metal impurities (e.g. Au, Pt) fall off the anode as sludge, they contribute to the mass lost by the anode but do not deposit on the cathode. Thus, the mass lost by the anode is greater than the mass gained by the cathode. (Correct)
Marking scheme
1 mark for the correct answer (D). No marks for incorrect or multiple answers.
Question 19 · multiple_choice
1 marksAt \(25^\circ\text{C}\), two beakers contain \(0.10\text{ mol dm}^{-3}\) of hydrochloric acid (HCl) and \(0.10\text{ mol dm}^{-3}\) of ethanoic acid (\(CH_3COOH\)) respectively. Which of the following properties is/are the SAME for both solutions?
(1) The volume of \(0.10\text{ mol dm}^{-3}\text{ NaOH}(aq)\) required to completely neutralize \(25.0\text{ cm}^3\) of each acid.
(2) The electrical conductivity of the solutions.
(3) The initial rate of reaction when excess magnesium ribbon is added.
- A.(1) only
- B.(1) and (2) only
- C.(2) and (3) only
- D.(1), (2) and (3)
Worked solution
(1) Correct: Both HCl and \(CH_3COOH\) are monoprotic acids. Since they have the same concentration (\(0.10\text{ mol dm}^{-3}\)) and volume (\(25.0\text{ cm}^3\)), they contain the same amount of potential hydrogen ions to react with NaOH. During neutralization, the equilibrium of \(CH_3COOH\) dissociation shifts completely to the right. Thus, the volume of NaOH required for complete neutralization is identical.
(2) Incorrect: HCl is a strong acid that is completely ionized in water, while \(CH_3COOH\) is a weak acid that only partially ionizes. The concentration of mobile ions is much higher in HCl, leading to a much higher electrical conductivity.
(3) Incorrect: The initial rate of reaction with magnesium ribbon depends on the concentration of \(H^+(aq)\) ions. Since HCl has a much higher \(H^+(aq)\) concentration, its initial reaction rate is significantly faster.
Therefore, only (1) is correct.
Marking scheme
1 mark for the correct answer (A). No marks for incorrect or multiple answers.
Question 20 · multiple_choice
1 marksHow many structural isomers (excluding stereoisomers) exist for the acyclic compound with the molecular formula \(C_4H_7Br\)?
- A.5
- B.6
- C.7
- D.8
Worked solution
For an acyclic compound of formula \(C_4H_7Br\), there is one carbon-carbon double bond (degree of unsaturation = 1). We can find the isomers by considering the carbon skeletons:
1. Skeleton: But-1-ene (\(CH_2=CH-CH_2-CH_3\))
- 1-bromobut-1-ene (\(CHBr=CH-CH_2-CH_3\))
- 2-bromobut-1-ene (\(CH_2=CBr-CH_2-CH_3\))
- 3-bromobut-1-ene (\(CH_2=CH-CHBr-CH_3\))
- 4-bromobut-1-ene (\(CH_2=CH-CH_2-CH_2Br\))
(4 isomers)
2. Skeleton: But-2-ene (\(CH_3-CH=CH-CH_3\))
- 1-bromobut-2-ene (\(CH_2Br-CH=CH-CH_3\))
- 2-bromobut-2-ene (\(CH_3-CBr=CH-CH_3\))
(2 isomers)
3. Skeleton: 2-Methylpropene (\((CH_3)_2C=CH_2\))
- 1-bromo-2-methylpropene (\((CH_3)_2C=CHBr\))
- 3-bromo-2-methylpropene (\(CH_2Br-C(CH_3)=CH_2\))
(2 isomers)
Total structural isomers = 4 + 2 + 2 = 8.
Therefore, option D is correct.
Marking scheme
1 mark for the correct answer (D). No marks for incorrect or multiple answers.
Question 21 · multiple_choice
1 marksConsider the following standard enthalpy changes of combustion (\(\Delta H_c^\theta\)) at \(298\text{ K}\):
\(\Delta H_c^\theta [C_2H_4(g)] = -1411\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\)
\(\Delta H_c^\theta [H_2(g)] = -286\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\)
\(\Delta H_c^\theta [C_2H_6(g)] = -1560\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\)
What is the standard enthalpy change of the following reaction?
\(C_2H_4(g) + H_2(g) \rightarrow C_2H_6(g)\)
- A.-137 kJ mol^-1
- B.+137 kJ mol^-1
- C.-3257 kJ mol^-1
- D.+3257 kJ mol^-1
Worked solution
According to Hess's Law:
\(\Delta H_r^\theta = \sum \Delta H_c^\theta(\text{reactants}) - \sum \Delta H_c^\theta(\text{products})\)
\(\Delta H_r^\theta = \Delta H_c^\theta[C_2H_4(g)] + \Delta H_c^\theta[H_2(g)] - \Delta H_c^\theta[C_2H_6(g)]\)
\(\Delta H_r^\theta = (-1411) + (-286) - (-1560) = -137\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\)
Marking scheme
Correct option is A. Award 1 mark for the correct calculation using Hess's Law based on combustion data.
Question 22 · multiple_choice
1 marksAn organic compound \(X\) with molecular formula \(C_8H_{16}O_2\) undergoes acid-catalyzed hydrolysis to form two organic products, \(Y\) and \(Z\). Under suitable conditions, \(Y\) can be oxidized by acidified potassium dichromate(VI) solution to form a carboxylic acid which is a structural isomer of \(Z\). Which of the following is a possible identity of \(X\)?
- A.Ethyl hexanoate
- B.Butyl 2-methylpropanoate
- C.Propyl pentanoate
- D.Methyl heptanoate
Worked solution
Let's analyze butyl 2-methylpropanoate (Option B). Hydrolysis gives butan-1-ol (Y, 4 carbons) and 2-methylpropanoic acid (Z, 4 carbons). Oxidation of butan-1-ol (Y) gives butanoic acid (Y'), which has the formula \(CH_3CH_2CH_2COOH\). The formula of Z is \(CH_3CH(CH_3)COOH\). Butanoic acid and 2-methylpropanoic acid are structural isomers of each other.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for identifying the correct ester that hydrolyzes to form an alcohol and a carboxylic acid of equal carbon count which can be oxidized to mutually isomeric acids.
Question 23 · multiple_choice
1 marksConsider the following equilibrium system established in a closed container of volume \(V\) at temperature \(T\):
\(2NO_2(g) \rightleftharpoons N_2O_4(g) \quad \Delta H < 0\)
(
\(NO_2\) is a brown gas; \(N_2O_4\) is a colorless gas)
Which of the following statements is/are correct?
(1) If the volume of the container is decreased to \(0.5V\) at temperature \(T\), the brown color of the mixture first intensifies, then fades slightly, but remains darker than before the change.
(2) If helium gas is injected into the container at constant volume and temperature, the equilibrium shifts to the left.
(3) If the temperature of the system is increased at constant volume, the equilibrium constant \(K_c\) increases.
- A.(1) only
- B.(1) and (2) only
- C.(2) and (3) only
- D.(1), (2) and (3)
Worked solution
(1) is correct: decreasing volume increases concentration instantly (color intensifies), then equilibrium shifts right to reduce molecules (color fades), but final concentration is still higher than initial. (2) is incorrect: adding inert gas at constant volume does not change partial pressures of reactants/products, so equilibrium does not shift. (3) is incorrect: since the reaction is exothermic, increasing temperature shifts equilibrium left, decreasing \(K_c\).
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for analyzing Le Chatelier's principle and equilibrium constant temperature dependence correctly to find that only statement (1) is correct.
Question 24 · multiple_choice
1 marksWhen the following chemical equation is balanced using the simplest whole numbers, what is the value of \(z\)?
\(x I^-(aq) + y NO_2^-(aq) + z H^+(aq) \rightarrow a I_2(aq) + b NO(g) + c H_2O(l)\)
- A.2
- B.4
- C.6
- D.8
Worked solution
The half-equations are:
Oxidation: \(2I^- \rightarrow I_2 + 2e^-\)
Reduction: \(NO_2^- + 2H^+ + e^- \rightarrow NO + H_2O\)
Multiply the reduction half-equation by 2 to balance electrons:
\(2NO_2^- + 4H^+ + 2e^- \rightarrow 2NO + 2H_2O\)
Combine both:
\(2I^- + 2NO_2^- + 4H^+ \rightarrow I_2 + 2NO + 2H_2O\)
Thus, \(x=2, y=2, z=4, a=1, b=2, c=2\). The value of \(z\) is 4.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for obtaining the correct balanced equation and identifying that \(z = 4\).
Question 25 · multiple_choice
1 marksWhich of the following pairs of chemical species has/have the same molecular shape?
(1) \(NH_4^+\) and \(CH_4\)
(2) \(H_3O^+\) and \(NH_3\)
(3) \(BF_3\) and \(NF_3\)
- A.(1) and (2) only
- B.(1) and (3) only
- C.(2) and (3) only
- D.(1), (2) and (3)
Worked solution
(1) Both \(NH_4^+\) and \(CH_4\) have 4 bond pairs and 0 lone pairs around the central atom, giving them a tetrahedral shape.
(2) Both \(H_3O^+\) and \(NH_3\) have 3 bond pairs and 1 lone pair around the central atom, giving them a trigonal pyramidal shape.
(3) \(BF_3\) has 3 bond pairs and 0 lone pairs (trigonal planar), while \(NF_3\) has 3 bond pairs and 1 lone pair (trigonal pyramidal). They have different shapes.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for analyzing electron pair repulsion theory correctly to determine that only pairs (1) and (2) share the same shape.
Question 26 · multiple_choice
1 marksA polymer \(P\) has the repeating unit shown below:
\(-[ \text{NH}-\text{CH}_2-\text{CH}_2-\text{NH}-\text{CO}-\text{CH}_2-\text{CH}_2-\text{CO} ]_n-\)
Which of the following statements about \(P\) are correct?
(1) It is a polyamide.
(2) Its monomers are ethane-1,2-diamine and butanedioic acid.
(3) It can be hydrolyzed by heating with aqueous sodium hydroxide.
- A.(1) and (2) only
- B.(1) and (3) only
- C.(2) and (3) only
- D.(1), (2) and (3)
Worked solution
(1) It contains the amide linkage \(-\text{NH}-\text{CO}-\), so it is a polyamide. (2) The linkage splits to form amine groups \(-\text{NH}_2\) and carboxylic acid groups \(-\text{COOH}\). Thus, the monomers are \(\text{H}_2\text{N}-\text{CH}_2-\text{CH}_2-\text{NH}_2\) (ethane-1,2-diamine) and \(\text{HOOC}-\text{CH}_2-\text{CH}_2-\text{COOH}\) (butanedioic acid). (3) Polyamides are susceptible to alkaline hydrolysis upon heating with aqueous sodium hydroxide.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark if all three statements are determined to be correct.
Question 27 · multiple_choice
1 marksIn a closed container of volume \(5.0\text{ dm}^3\), \(1.0\text{ mol}\) of gas \(P\) and \(1.0\text{ mol}\) of gas \(Q\) are mixed and allowed to reach equilibrium at temperature \(T\):
\(P(g) + Q(g) \rightleftharpoons 2R(g)\)
At equilibrium, there are \(1.2\text{ mol}\) of gas \(R\) in the container. What is the equilibrium constant \(K_c\) of the reaction at this temperature?
- A.1.44
- B.3.00
- C.5.63
- D.9.00
Worked solution
Since \(1.2\text{ mol}\) of \(R\) is formed, the change in mole of \(P\) and \(Q\) is each \(-0.6\text{ mol}\) because of the 1:1:2 stoichiometry.
At equilibrium:
\(n_P = 1.0 - 0.6 = 0.4\text{ mol}\)
\(n_Q = 1.0 - 0.6 = 0.4\text{ mol}\)
\(n_R = 1.2\text{ mol}\)
Since the total number of moles of gas is the same on both sides, the volume term cancels out:
\(K_c = \frac{[R]^2}{[P][Q]} = \frac{(1.2 / 5.0)^2}{(0.4 / 5.0)(0.4 / 5.0)} = \frac{1.2^2}{0.4 \times 0.4} = 9.00\)
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for calculating the correct value of 9.00.
Question 28 · multiple_choice
1 marksFor a certain chemical reaction, the rate constant doubles when the temperature is increased from \(300\text{ K}\) to \(310\text{ K}\). What is the activation energy (\(E_a\)) of this reaction?
(Given: gas constant \(R = 8.31\text{ J K}^{-1}\text{ mol}^{-1}\))
- A.12.4 kJ mol^-1
- B.26.8 kJ mol^-1
- C.53.6 kJ mol^-1
- D.107 kJ mol^-1
Worked solution
Using the Arrhenius equation: \(\ln\left(\frac{k_2}{k_1}\right) = \frac{E_a}{R} \left(\frac{1}{T_1} - \frac{1}{T_2}\right)\)
Given \(\frac{k_2}{k_1} = 2\), \(T_1 = 300\text{ K}\), and \(T_2 = 310\text{ K}\):
\(\ln(2) = \frac{E_a}{8.31} \left(\frac{1}{300} - \frac{1}{310}\right)\)
\(0.693 = \frac{E_a}{8.31} \times 1.075 \times 10^{-4}\)
\(E_a = \frac{0.693 \times 8.31}{1.075 \times 10^{-4}} \approx 53560\text{ J mol}^{-1} \approx 53.6\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\)
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for correct mathematical manipulation of the Arrhenius equation to find the activation energy.
Question 29 · multiple_choice
1 marksWhich of the following methods can be used to distinguish between propanoic acid and methyl ethanoate?
(1) Comparing their infrared (IR) spectra.
(2) Adding sodium hydrogencarbonate solution to each.
(3) Heating each with acidified potassium dichromate(VI) solution.
- A.(1) and (2) only
- B.(1) and (3) only
- C.(2) and (3) only
- D.(1), (2) and (3)
Worked solution
(1) Correct: Propanoic acid has a broad characteristic \(O-H\) absorption band at \(2500\text{–}3300\text{ cm}^{-1}\), which is absent in methyl ethanoate.
(2) Correct: Propanoic acid is a carboxylic acid and reacts with \(NaHCO_3(aq)\) to release \(CO_2\) gas (bubbles), whereas methyl ethanoate does not react.
(3) Incorrect: Neither compound can be oxidized by acidified potassium dichromate(VI) solution, so no observable change will occur in either.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for identifying that only methods (1) and (2) can successfully distinguish the two compounds.
Question 30 · multiple_choice
1 marksConsider the following two electrolysis setups operating under the same constant current for 10 minutes:
Setup X: Electrolysis of \(1.0\text{ M } CuSO_4(aq)\) using carbon electrodes.
Setup Y: Electrolysis of \(1.0\text{ M } CuSO_4(aq)\) using copper electrodes.
Which of the following statements is/are correct?
(1) The mass of copper deposited at the cathode in Setup X is the same as that in Setup Y.
(2) The pH of the electrolyte in Setup X decreases, while the pH of the electrolyte in Setup Y remains unchanged.
(3) Gas bubbles are observed at the anode in Setup Y, but not in Setup X.
- A.(1) and (2) only
- B.(1) and (3) only
- C.(2) and (3) only
- D.(1), (2) and (3)
Worked solution
(1) is correct: since the same current flows for the same duration, the same amount of charge passes through both. The cathode reaction is \(Cu^{2+}(aq) + 2e^- \rightarrow Cu(s)\) in both setups, depositing the same mass of copper.
(2) is correct: in Setup X, water is oxidized at the anode (\(2H_2O \rightarrow O_2 + 4H^+ + 4e^-\)), producing \(H^+\) ions and lowering the pH. In Setup Y, the copper anode dissolves (\(Cu \rightarrow Cu^{2+} + 2e^-\)), so no \(H^+\) is produced and pH remains constant.
(3) is incorrect: oxygen gas is evolved at the anode in Setup X, while the active copper anode in Setup Y dissolves without producing any gas.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for analyzing both electrolysis setups correctly and determining that statements (1) and (2) are correct.
Question 31 · multiple_choice
1 marksConsider the following chemical equation: \(2\text{N}_2\text{O}(g) + \text{N}_2\text{H}_4(l) \rightarrow 3\text{N}_2(g) + 2\text{H}_2\text{O}(l)\). Given the standard enthalpy changes of formation (\(\Delta H_f^\theta\)) below: \(\Delta H_f^\theta[\text{N}_2\text{O}(g)] = +82\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\), \(\Delta H_f^\theta[\text{N}_2\text{H}_4(l)] = +51\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\), \(\Delta H_f^\theta[\text{H}_2\text{O}(l)] = -286\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\). What is the standard enthalpy change of the reaction?
- A.\(-787\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\)
- B.\(-705\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\)
- C.\(-685\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\)
- D.\(-357\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\)
Worked solution
Using Hess's Law, \(\Delta H^\theta = \sum \Delta H_f^\theta(\text{products}) - \sum \Delta H_f^\theta(\text{reactants})\). For the products: \(2 \times \Delta H_f^\theta[\text{H}_2\text{O}(l)] = 2 \times (-286) = -572\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\) (elemental \(\text{N}_2\) has \(\Delta H_f^\theta = 0\)). For the reactants: \(2 \times \Delta H_f^\theta[\text{N}_2\text{O}(g)] + \Delta H_f^\theta[\text{N}_2\text{H}_4(l)] = 2 \times (82) + 51 = +215\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\). Thus, \(\Delta H^\theta = -572 - (+215) = -787\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\).
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct answer A. No fractional marks are given.
Question 32 · multiple_choice
1 marksHow many moles of potassium permanganate (\(\text{KMnO}_4\)) are required to completely oxidize 1.0 mole of iron(II) oxalate (\(\text{FeC}_2\text{O}_4\)) in an acidic medium?
- A.0.20 mol
- B.0.40 mol
- C.0.60 mol
- D.1.67 mol
Worked solution
In iron(II) oxalate, both the \(\text{Fe}^{2+}\) cation and the \(\text{C}_2\text{O}_4^{2-}\) anion are oxidized by acidified \(\text{MnO}_4^-\). The oxidation half-reaction for \(\text{FeC}_2\text{O}_4\) is: \(\text{FeC}_2\text{O}_4 \rightarrow \text{Fe}^{3+} + 2\text{CO}_2 + 3e^-\). The reduction half-reaction of permanganate is: \(\text{MnO}_4^- + 8\text{H}^+ + 5e^- \rightarrow \text{Mn}^{2+} + 4\text{H}_2\text{O}\). To balance the electrons transferred, 3 moles of \(\text{MnO}_4^-\) are required to react with 5 moles of \(\text{FeC}_2\text{O}_4\). Therefore, 1.0 mole of \(\text{FeC}_2\text{O}_4\) requires \(3/5 = 0.60\) moles of \(\text{KMnO}_4\).
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct answer C. No fractional marks are given.
Question 33 · multiple_choice
1 marksWhich of the following reaction sequences can be used to convert propan-1-ol to propan-2-ol?
- A.Heat with concentrated \(\text{H}_2\text{SO}_4\), then heat with dilute \(\text{H}_2\text{SO}_4\)
- B.Reflux with acidified \(\text{K}_2\text{Cr}_2\text{O}_7\), then react with \(\text{NaBH}_4\)
- C.React with \(\text{PCl}_3\), then heat with \(\text{NaOH}(aq)\)
- D.Heat with concentrated \(\text{H}_2\text{SO}_4\), then react with concentrated \(\text{HCl}(aq)\)
Worked solution
Heating propan-1-ol with concentrated sulfuric acid at \(180^\circ\text{C}\) causes elimination (dehydration) to yield propene (\(\text{CH}_3\text{CH}=\text{CH}_2\)). Subsequently, heating propene with dilute sulfuric acid (hydration) yields propan-2-ol as the major product because the addition of water follows Markovnikov's rule.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct answer A. No fractional marks are given.
Question 34 · multiple_choice
1 marksFor a certain reaction, when the temperature is increased from 300 K to 310 K, the rate constant \(k\) doubles. Which of the following statements are correct? (Given: \(R = 8.314\text{ J mol}^{-1}\text{ K}^{-1}\))
(1) The activation energy of the reaction is approximately \(54\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\).
(2) If a catalyst is added at 300 K, the activation energy decreases and the rate constant increases.
(3) A plot of \(\ln k\) against \(\frac{1}{T}\) for this reaction has a positive slope.
- A.(1) and (2) only
- B.(1) and (3) only
- C.(2) and (3) only
- D.(1), (2) and (3)
Worked solution
(1) is correct: Using Arrhenius equation \(\ln(k_2/k_1) = \frac{E_a}{R} (\frac{1}{T_1} - \frac{1}{T_2}) \Rightarrow \ln(2) = \frac{E_a}{8.314} (\frac{1}{300} - \frac{1}{310}) \Rightarrow 0.693 = \frac{E_a}{8.314} (1.075 \times 10^{-4}) \Rightarrow E_a \approx 53.6\text{ kJ mol}^{-1} \approx 54\text{ kJ mol}^{-1}\). (2) is correct: A catalyst provides an alternative pathway with lower activation energy, which increases the value of rate constant \(k\). (3) is incorrect: According to \(\ln k = -\frac{E_a}{RT} + \ln A\), the plot has a negative slope of \(-\frac{E_a}{R}\).
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct answer A. No fractional marks are given.
Question 35 · multiple_choice
1 marksAn organic compound \(X\) has the molecular formula \(\text{C}_4\text{H}_8\text{O}_2\). The infrared spectrum of \(X\) shows a very broad absorption band in the region \(2500 - 3300\text{ cm}^{-1}\) and a strong absorption peak at \(1715\text{ cm}^{-1}\). The mass spectrum of \(X\) shows a prominent peak at \(m/z = 45\). Which of the following is the most likely structural formula of \(X\)?
- A.\(\text{CH}_3\text{CH}_2\text{CH}_2\text{COOH}\)
- B.\(\text{CH}_3\text{COOCH}_2\text{CH}_3\)
- C.\(\text{HCOOCH}_2\text{CH}_2\text{CH}_3\)
- D.\(\text{HOCH}_2\text{CH}_2\text{COCH}_3\)
Worked solution
The very broad absorption band at \(2500 - 3300\text{ cm}^{-1}\) indicates the presence of a carboxylic acid \(\text{O-H}\) group. The strong peak at \(1715\text{ cm}^{-1}\) is due to the \(\text{C=O}\) stretch. Together, they suggest a carboxylic acid group. Among the options, only \(\text{CH}_3\text{CH}_2\text{CH}_2\text{COOH}\) (butanoic acid) is a carboxylic acid with the formula \(\text{C}_4\text{H}_8\text{O}_2\). The mass spectrum peak at \(m/z = 45\) corresponds to the \([\text{COOH}]^+\) fragment, which is highly characteristic of carboxylic acids.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct answer A. No fractional marks are given.
Question 36 · multiple_choice
1 marks2.0 mol of \(\text{A}(g)\) and 3.0 mol of \(\text{B}(g)\) are mixed in a closed \(2.0\text{ dm}^3\) container to undergo the following reaction: \(\text{A}(g) + 2\text{B}(g) \rightleftharpoons 2\text{C}(g)\). When equilibrium is reached, the concentration of \(\text{C}(g)\) is found to be \(1.0\text{ mol dm}^{-3}\). What is the equilibrium constant \(K_c\) of the reaction at this temperature?
- A.\(2.0\text{ dm}^3\text{ mol}^{-1}\)
- B.\(4.0\text{ dm}^3\text{ mol}^{-1}\)
- C.\(8.0\text{ dm}^3\text{ mol}^{-1}\)
- D.\(16.0\text{ dm}^3\text{ mol}^{-1}\)
Worked solution
Initial concentrations: \([\text{A}]_0 = 2.0 / 2.0 = 1.0\text{ mol dm}^{-3}\), \([\text{B}]_0 = 3.0 / 2.0 = 1.5\text{ mol dm}^{-3}\). At equilibrium, \([\text{C}]_{\text{eq}} = 1.0\text{ mol dm}^{-3}\). From stoichiometry, change in concentrations: \(\Delta [\text{C}] = +1.0\text{ mol dm}^{-3}\), \(\Delta [\text{B}] = -1.0\text{ mol dm}^{-3}\), \(\Delta [\text{A}] = -0.5\text{ mol dm}^{-3}\). Equilibrium concentrations: \([\text{A}]_{\text{eq}} = 1.0 - 0.5 = 0.5\text{ mol dm}^{-3}\), \([\text{B}]_{\text{eq}} = 1.5 - 1.0 = 0.5\text{ mol dm}^{-3}\). \(K_c = \frac{[\text{C}]^2}{[\text{A}][\text{B}]^2} = \frac{(1.0)^2}{(0.5) \times (0.5)^2} = 8.0\text{ dm}^3\text{ mol}^{-1}\).
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct answer C. No fractional marks are given.