AAMC Chem/Phys Q Banks Flashcards
V/m = ?
it reads as voltmeter and can be:
N/C
1 V = 1 J/C
1 J = 1 N•m
so, 1 J/C x 1/m = 1 N•m/C x 1/m = N/C
given:
60 million nuclei of americium with a half life of 430 years.
to solve half-life questions, ask
“How many cycles of halving does it take to get from quantity A (60 million nuclei) to quantity B (3.75 X106)”
then multiply that number of cycles by the half life to get total number of years
Atomic number= number of protons
Mass number= protons + neutrons
Atomic weight = the average mass of all the isotopes of a certain type. It is a weighted average that takes into account the abundances of all of the different isotopes
*mass number and atomic weight are not the same although they can be effectively treated the same when isotopes are not discussed. In the phrase “Carbon-14” the 14 would be describing the mass number/atomic mass, but the atomic weight would not change from it’s calculated average of 12.
Changes in neutron numbers, as occurs in radioactive decay, are able to change the mass number of atoms, inasmuch as the mass number is protons+neutrons (since proton number does not change, if neutron number changes, therefore mass number changes).
This question is asking for the thing that makes them share chemical behavior. This behavior depends directly on the activity of its electrons such as bonding and electron interactions. Since electrons are equal in number to the number of protons/atomic number (think of the periodic trends and the fact that the proton number fixes each chemical element in place in that table), therefore, the atomic number/proton number is what isotopes share that give them the same chemical behavior.
850 N/m2
I got this wrong because I forgot to subtract the surface pressure which is 50 N. Instead I kept it on there, which meant that when I doubled the pressure (for double the density d/t proportionality between density and pressure) I double the 50 surface pressure, which in fact would not be doubled since it is unaffected by the new density
What happens to a piece of a substance in solid state at it’s exact melting point when a flame is applied for a split second?
the melted substance does not change its temperature until all of the metal has melted, this is because melting occurs at a constant temperature and in phases. The latent heat of fusion is what converts it from solid to liquid even though the temperature itself does not change
T/F: the electrons in an atom with partially filled orbitals can jump to a higher energy orbitals by absorbing photons. This produces color
True, see the question, correct answer is selected
solve
C turn blue because it reacts with water to form OH-
what does this notation indicate and what do you do with it mathematically?
it means hydration. the 6 number indicates the max number of water molecules that can be incorporated into the chrystaline structure of the compound during solvation.
mathematically, just treat them both like reactants. the MW was compute from simply addition (NOT multiplication)
How many moles of Ni in a 7 g sample of NiSO4 •6H20 (MW 262.84) dissolved in enough water to make 50mL of a solution.
^how do you solve this?
Answer: 6/262.84 = 0.025
(the number of liters doesn’t effect number of moles)
my instinct is to always try to divide the weight by the molecular weight of just the atom I’m trying to find (e.g. 6.57/58 for nickel) But that is WRONG.
6/262.84 gives you the number of moles of the entire molecule OR the number of moles of each individual component of NiSO4 because moles is just the number of them that exists and whether they are separate or apart, they exist in units of moles.
analogy: If I’m walking with sean we are a couple and there is 1 of us, but if I am walking by myself I am not a couple but there is still 1 of me. either way there’s 1 (where 1 would be the number of moles in this scenario)
CO32- will react with a proton source (HCl) to form ?
CO2 and OH-
how do you solve this?
since the pKa is constant for a given reaction, you know you can plug it into an equation. The other piece you plug in is pH, since the passage says it was buffered to a pH of 8.7. Since it’s asking about the concentration in the buffer solution (ie the concentration at THAT given pH) all you have to do is plug in the numbers in to the Henderson Hasselback equation
Correct answer is C: 100:1
What is the conversion factor for determining the number of cal provided by a given subtance.
1 cal/g °C
example:
ionization energy
T/F: atoms in the periodic table are all neutral by definition
true
so, the atomic number (eg 6 for carbon) will always indicate the number of protons and the number of electrons.
the number of neutrons is determined by subtracting the # protons from the mass number
notice that Sr2+ is not neutral in chemical reactions, but is neutral in its theoretical position within the periodic table
What method do you use to solve this without having to write out all the possible combinations?
n! (factorial)
where n=3
possible combos: 3 x 2 x 1 = 6
T/F: most elements are metals
The compound with the greatest difference in ______________ between the metal and nonmetal atom has the most ionic character
electronegativity
a non-metal bonded to a non-metal will be a covalent/ionic bond
covalent
avogadro’s number
for MCAT, just use 6 x1023
what is this?
benzoquinone
what is this?
hydroquinone