Explanations
1. D
Choosing the appropriate instrument is a typical laboratory
question on the test. When the question states volumetric
analysis and then the word titrated in
the same sentence, a burette, choice D, should be your
first thought. Choice E is an easy elimination: a balance measures
mass in grams and would be used in gravimetric analysis. Choice C is
the next elimination: Beakers are not accurate measuring instruments.
The markings on a beaker may only be accurate to within a 5–10%
range! A pipette, choice B, and a graduated cylinder,
choice A, are both very accurate measuring instruments.
However, this question discussed a titration, so the best answer
is the burette.
2. E
This question requires that you understand the reaction
that will occur. In this question, NaOH will react with HCl in a
double replacement (neutralization) reaction and produce a salt,
NaCl, and water. The concentration of each solution is irrelevant
information and is thus ignored. Focus on what the question asks—after
drying, what will remain? Statement I is a true statement. If you
evaporate all of the water away, NaCl will be the only remaining
product. Statement II is a bit tricky. If you read quickly and are
thinking law of conservation of matter, you’ll think that this must
be false. However, the question states that after drying has occurred,
water will evaporate and the mass will be less since some is given
off as water vapor. You know then, that the answer contains I and
II. Just for confirmation, you could check statement III. This answer
is also correct. A metal and a nonmetal bond ionically and salt
crystals will be white in color so, E is the answer.
3. B
Answering this question makes you think about physical
and chemical changes. You are looking for the one process that is
chemical; changing substances, not physical. Chromatography, choice A,
is a physical separation of a substance by polarities (as in paper).
Filtering, choice C, is also a physical separation
of a solid from a liquid. Distillation, choice D, and evaporation,
choice E, both involve changes of state, which are
also physical changes. Choice B is the only chemical
change listed. Precipitation is the formation of a solid when two
or more liquids are combined. The formation of a precipitate is
one indicator that a chemical change may have taken place.
4. C
Once again, you are in search of the true statements.
Statement I is true. If the student forgot to subtract out the mass
of the filter paper, the mass obtained would appear larger. Statement
II is also correct. If the substance was not completely dry, the
moisture would cause the mass to be greater. Statement III is a
true statement, but it should not increase the mass of silver unless
the student failed to separate all of the silver from the copper
before massing. The question states that copper is in excess, meaning
that it would not all react. Statement IV, the concentration of
the silver nitrate needed to be stronger, does not match the problem—we
had too much silver! So the answer is C.
5. A
Choice A is the correct answer. Using
a filter paper and funnel, you can easily separate a solid from
a liquid. The solid stays in the paper, and the liquid runs through
the paper. Choice B would not separate easily using
a filter paper. Oil and water would layer and could easily be separated
using a pipette. Choice C, two solids, would not separate
with filter paper. The easiest separation technique for these two
solids would be to use a magnet to gather all of the iron particles.
Choice D, gas bubbles, would not be trapped in piece
of solid filter paper. To remove the gas, a hose could be attached
to the soda, and the soda could be heated or shaken to remove the
carbon dioxide gas. Choice E, a mixture of dyes, could
be separated with filter paper but not with filtration. The technique
to separate the dyes is known as chromatography.
6. D
Color is a result of the way light is reflected. When
unshared electrons are present, especially in different energy levels,
as is possible with the transition elements and their d orbitals,
color is often a result. Most of the color comes in solutions of
transition metals. Thus, choice D gives the correct
answer. Choices A and B are partial statements
of fact but are neither reasons nor explanations. Many solutions
of transition elements do contain oxygen in the polyatomic ion,
such as nickel (II) nitrate—nitrate contains oxygen, but this has
nothing to do with the color. The term metals in
statement B is too broad. Over three-quarters of the
periodic table is composed of metals, and there are not that many
colored solutions! Statement C is also a partially
true statement. Most transition metals will be ionically bonded
when in salt form, but bond type does not give rise to color. Statement E makes
the incorrect assumption that noble gases are all colored. This
may have tricked you since you know that neon lights have color.
However, the color of the neon light is the direct result of electrons
getting excited and falling back to a lower energy level.