Arrowshaft
Well-Known Member
Well you dont really need heat for NaOH, heat is usually for water but i may have been taught wrongI just did NaOH + heat for substitution of the chloroethane; thats how Ive learnt it.
Well you dont really need heat for NaOH, heat is usually for water but i may have been taught wrongI just did NaOH + heat for substitution of the chloroethane; thats how Ive learnt it.
I mean as @Arrowshaft has mentioned above u only apparently need NaOH with no other conditions? IDK, im pretty sure you need heat, Ill check my textbook in the morningFor the last q. I also said that via a substitution reaction with NaOH we can get ethanol, but I also forgot to include the conditions ugghhhh! Hope we don't lose marks!!! I've already lost 10 marks for sure ... and really want a b6 uugghhh the sheer amount of silly mistakes I make in EVERY EXAM is ridiculous!
Oh shoot I mean its a 7 marker so hopefully what u wrote was enough??? Im starting to get worried because I only wrote heat, not reflux...So I just googled, apparently primary haloalkanes require a catalyst with NaOH due to the slow reaction which occurs, and reflux conditions can be used
1500? cant rrally rmberso lol...
that difluoro question in the multiple choice? how many carbons in the molecule? anyone sure of their answer from that? only 2 numbers i remember are 750 and 1500
Im pretty sure its 1500. Everyone that I know got 1500.so lol...
that difluoro question in the multiple choice? how many carbons in the molecule? anyone sure of their answer from that? only 2 numbers i remember are 750 and 1500
OKAY haha i got that too1500? cant rrally rmber
either oxidation with potassium dichromate, aldehyde shiuld change colour from orange to green when oxidised to an acid. After to confirm solid na2co3 can be dissolved producing bubble and u know the restOKAY haha i got that too
can't remember all the other MC i felt were sucky so guess i'll have to live in suspense until december 16th
last thing - i remember in the very first q they were asking for a test to differentiate between the aldehyde and the ketone lol... vaguely remembered tollens' reagent and how aldehyde reduces silver ions to silver, but ultimately had no idea what the actual reaction equation was. hope they don't penalise me.
omg i can't believe it yes that's such an obvious thing! i'm so dumb hahaha i got caught up in the silver mirror whatever. like, aldehyde reduces the ions to silver and ketone remains unreactive. now that i think about it, i wouldn't be writing equations for that either so hope they don't penaliseeither oxidation with potassium dichromate, aldehyde shiuld change colour from orange to green when oxidised to an acid. After to confirm solid na2co3 can be dissolved producing bubble and u know the rest
Thanks, you too (if you have any )omg i can't believe it yes that's such an obvious thing! i'm so dumb hahaha i got caught up in the silver mirror whatever. like, aldehyde reduces the ions to silver and ketone remains unreactive. now that i think about it, i wouldn't be writing equations for that either so hope they don't penalise
thanks bro and gl on your future exams!
I lost like 3 marks in MC - the strong acid strong base, radioactive one and q20...OKAY haha i got that too
can't remember all the other MC i felt were sucky so guess i'll have to live in suspense until december 16th
last thing - i remember in the very first q they were asking for a test to differentiate between the aldehyde and the ketone lol... vaguely remembered tollens' reagent and how aldehyde reduces silver ions to silver, but ultimately had no idea what the actual reaction equation was. hope they don't penalise me.
I didn't know we had to nameeee them Wthhhhh arghhhNa probably 4 marks for naming all the compounds and 3 for justifying each step and its reagents and conditions
But identifying the reagents didny mean theI remember specifically adjusting my answer to clearly outline each compound as it said something like 'identify the reagents in each reaction'.
I thought identifying reagents was what was needed for the reaction to occur?? Is that not right?I remember specifically adjusting my answer to clearly outline each compound as it said something like 'identify the reagents in each reaction'.
I'm as surprised as you. I always thought reagents was synonymous with reactants. Also, for that last question (chloroethane to ethanol), is water and sulfuric acid catalyst correct?? I wrote that but I assumed it was wrong because I can't seem to find them anywhere???But identifying the reagents didny mean the
I thought identifying reagents was what was needed for the reaction to occur?? Is that not right?