Acids, Bases and Salts

IGCSE Edexcel Chemistry
2.34–2.39 Acids, Bases and Salt Preparations

Revision — Key Ideas

1. Define the terms atom, molecule and ion. [3]
2. Write the correct description for each substance. Choose from the list below. [5]

the acid found in the stomach  |  the acid found in car batteries and used widely in industry  |  the acid used in fertiliser manufacture  |  a strong alkali used in drain cleaners  |  a weak alkali produced by dissolving a gas in water

SubstanceDescription
Hydrochloric acid (HCl)
Sulfuric acid (H₂SO₄)
Nitric acid (HNO₃)
Sodium hydroxide (NaOH)
Ammonia solution (NH₃)
3. State whether each of the following is an acid, a base, or neither. [5]
SubstanceAcid / Base / Neither
Copper(II) oxide (CuO)
Carbon dioxide (CO₂)
Potassium hydroxide (KOH)
Sodium chloride (NaCl)
Nitric acid (HNO₃)

Section 1 (2.35–2.36) — Acids and Bases as Proton Transfer

4. There are different ways to define acids and bases, each more complete than the last. [6]

a) Give a simple definition of an acid and a base based on pH values.

b) Give a more precise definition based on the ions that acids and bases produce in solution. State one limitation of this definition.

c) Give a definition of acids and bases based only on H⁺ ions. Suggest one type of substance that the definition in part (b) struggles to explain, and use it to show why this definition is more useful.

5. For each reaction below, identify the acid and the base, and explain your reasoning. [6]

a) H₂SO₄ + H₂O → H₃O⁺ + HSO₄⁻

b) HNO₃ + NaOH → NaNO₃ + H₂O

c) HCl + H₂O → H₃O⁺ + Cl⁻

d) H₂SO₄ + 2KOH → K₂SO₄ + 2H₂O

e) HCl + NH₃ → NH₄⁺ + Cl⁻

6. Water can act as both an acid and a base. [3]

a) State what water must do in order to act as a base.

b) Complete the equation to show water acting as a base:

HCl + H₂O → _____________ + _____________

c) Using your equation, identify the proton donor and the proton acceptor.

Section 2 (2.37) — Reactions of Acids to Form Salts

Key reactions: The name of the salt depends on the acid used: hydrochloric acid → chloride salt; sulfuric acid → sulfate salt; nitric acid → nitrate salt.
7. Complete the word equations. [7]

a) Zinc + sulfuric acid → __________ + __________

b) Copper(II) oxide + hydrochloric acid → __________ + __________

c) Sodium hydroxide + nitric acid → __________ + __________

d) Calcium carbonate + hydrochloric acid → __________ + __________ + __________

e) Iron + hydrochloric acid → __________ + __________

f) Magnesium oxide + sulfuric acid → __________ + __________

g) Sodium carbonate + nitric acid → __________ + __________ + __________

8. Write balanced symbol equations, including state symbols, for the following reactions. [6]

a) Magnesium (Mg) reacting with dilute sulfuric acid

b) Zinc oxide (ZnO) reacting with dilute hydrochloric acid

c) Calcium carbonate (CaCO₃) reacting with dilute hydrochloric acid

9. A student adds excess zinc powder to dilute sulfuric acid. Describe what the student would observe, and explain what happens to the rate of reaction over time. [3]
10. Name the gas produced when an acid reacts with a carbonate and describe a test for it. [2]

Section 3 (2.38) — Bases: Metal Oxides, Hydroxides and Ammonia

Key concept: A base is any substance that neutralises an acid to form a salt and water only. Metal oxides, metal hydroxides and ammonia (NH₃) are all bases. A soluble base is called an alkali — it produces OH⁻ ions in aqueous solution.
11. From the following list, identify which substances are bases: HCl, MgO, NaOH, CO₂, NH₃, CuO, HNO₃, Ca(OH)₂. [2]
12. Explain the difference between a base and an alkali. Give one example of each. [3]
13. Explain why metal oxides act as bases using the idea of proton transfer. [2]
14. Fill in the missing balancing numbers in the equations below. One equation is already balanced — if you think so, write "already balanced" in the answer space. [7]

a) KOH(aq) + HCl(aq) → KCl(aq) + H₂O(l)

b) ___ NaOH(aq) + H₂SO₄(aq) → Na₂SO₄(aq) + ___ H₂O(l)

c) ___ NH₃(aq) + H₂SO₄(aq) → (NH₄)₂SO₄(aq)

d) NaOH(aq) + HCl(aq) → NaCl(aq) + H₂O(l)

e) Ca(OH)₂(aq) + ___ HCl(aq) → CaCl₂(aq) + ___ H₂O(l)

f) ___ KOH(aq) + H₂SO₄(aq) → K₂SO₄(aq) + ___ H₂O(l)

g) Mg(OH)₂(aq) + ___ HNO₃(aq) → Mg(NO₃)₂(aq) + ___ H₂O(l)

Section 4 (2.34) — Solubility Rules

Key rules:
15. Predict whether each compound is soluble or insoluble in water. [8]
CompoundSoluble / Insoluble
Potassium nitrate
Silver chloride
Barium sulfate
Ammonium carbonate
Copper(II) carbonate
Lead(II) nitrate
Calcium sulfate
Iron(III) hydroxide
16. A student mixes aqueous solutions of barium chloride and sodium sulfate. A white precipitate forms immediately. [3]

a) Complete the word equation for the reaction:

barium chloride + sodium sulfate → __________________ + __________________

b) The formulae of the reactants are BaCl₂ and Na₂SO₄. Write a balanced symbol equation for the reaction, including state symbols.

Section 5 (2.39) — Preparing a Pure, Dry Soluble Salt ★ Practical

Key method: To make a soluble salt from an insoluble base and an acid:
  1. Warm the acid gently and add the insoluble base in excess until no more dissolves.
  2. Filter to remove the excess, unreacted solid.
  3. Evaporate the filtrate to concentrate the salt solution.
  4. Allow to cool and crystallise.
  5. Filter the crystals, then dry between filter paper or in a warm oven.
Using the base in excess ensures all the acid is used up, giving a pure (acid-free) product.
17. A student prepares copper(II) sulfate crystals by reacting copper(II) oxide with dilute sulfuric acid. Place the following steps in the correct order by numbering them 1–5. [3]
OrderStep
___Filter the mixture to remove excess copper(II) oxide.
___Filter and dry the crystals between filter paper.
___Warm the sulfuric acid and add copper(II) oxide in excess.
___Allow the solution to cool so crystals form.
___Evaporate the filtrate to concentrate the solution.
18. Explain the purpose of each step below. [4]

a) Adding the base in excess:

b) Filtering the mixture after heating:

c) Evaporating then cooling rather than evaporating to dryness:

19. The formulae of copper(II) oxide and sulfuric acid are CuO and H₂SO₄. Write the balanced symbol equation for the reaction used to produce copper(II) sulfate, including state symbols. [2]
20. Suggest what colour change the student would observe in the filtrate as copper(II) sulfate is formed. [1]

Total marks: 80

Mark Scheme

Revision — Key Ideas

Q1. [3 marks — 1 per definition]
Q2. [5 marks — 1 per row]
Correct letter matches:
Q3. [5 marks — 1 per row] Note: accept "acid" for CO₂ if the student gives a valid justification based on its oxide chemistry, but "neither" is the expected answer at this level.

Section 1 — Proton Transfer

Q5. [6 marks — 2 per part]
Q5. [10 marks — 2 per part]
For each part, award 1 mark for correctly identifying the acid with a reason, and 1 mark for correctly identifying the base with a reason.
Q6. [3 marks]

Section 2 — Reactions of Acids

Q7. [7 marks — 1 per part]
Q8. [6 marks — 2 per part: 1 for correct balanced equation, 1 for all state symbols correct] Note: award the equation mark even if state symbols are missing or wrong, as long as the equation is balanced and correct.
Q9. [3 marks]
Q10. [2 marks]

Section 3 — Bases

Q11. [2 marks]
Bases from the list: MgO, NaOH, NH₃, CuO, Ca(OH)₂
HCl and HNO₃ are acids, not bases. CO₂ is an acidic oxide — it does not neutralise acids.
Q12. [3 marks]
Q13. [2 marks]
Q14. [7 marks — 1 per part]

Section 4 — Solubility Rules

Q15. [8 marks — 1 per row]
Q16. [3 marks]

Section 5 — Salt Preparation Practical

Q17. [3 marks]
The correct order (reading down the table as presented) is: Award 1 mark for steps 1–2 in correct relative order, 1 mark for steps 2–3–4 in correct relative order, and 1 mark for steps 4–5 in correct relative order. Award full 3 marks automatically if all five are in the correct sequence.
Q18. [4 marks]
Q19. [2 marks]
CuO(s) + H₂SO₄(aq) → CuSO₄(aq) + H₂O(l)
Q20. [1 mark]
The filtrate turns blue as copper(II) sulfate solution forms. Accept "blue/blue-green". Do not accept "green" alone.