Login

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

September 19, 2025, 03:22:53 pm

Author Topic: Unit 3 Questions MEGATHREAD :)  (Read 63696 times)  Share 

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

scocliffe09

  • Victorian
  • Forum Obsessive
  • ***
  • Posts: 310
  • Respect: +46
Re: Unit 3 Questions MEGATHREAD :)
« Reply #330 on: June 11, 2011, 06:34:53 pm »
0
Could someone please help me with part b) of this question? I'm fairly certain that the solutions are wrong :\

Argh that's from Engage right? I wasn't sure of the answer for part b) either. How would you even work it out? :S

Yeah it is, I was like 'WTF' at the question. The solutions don't even make sense, they state that C is the limiting reagent when it had the greatest amount of mol ==

For the question: Name the type of bonding that is present between a deoxyribose molecule and phosphate molecule,
I wrote phosphodiester bonding - the answers stated hydrogen bonding. Am I right or is it actually H-bonding?

Thanks!
Nope you're definitely right - It is (if we're being picky), technically a phosphate ester bond (it's only in a nucleic acid that phosphodiester bonds are formed). But it's not H bonds.
Nacho - concentrations (2M) are definitely counted in sig figs. Some papers are just slack (e.g. tsfx).
Luken - all of those reactions are fine. But remember, you want the examiner to give you the marks you deserve, so make whatever the question is asking for REALLY obvious - treat the examiner like both a complete douche and a chem nut :)
JayCanteloupe - DEFINITELY know the solubility table. REALLY important.
pi - the OH at the end (I assume you mean the 3' end) is connected to a carbon, so it's much less polar than the phosphate group, so much less likely to be acidic - so it's almost always going to be an OH group.
Hope that helps everyone

Moderator action: removed real name, sorry for the inconvenience
« Last Edit: January 03, 2017, 12:30:59 am by pi »
Just back from spending the year at Oxford. Now onto final year Monash MBBS.

2009: Biology [50], Maths Methods (CAS) [45]
2010: English [50], German [50], Chemistry [50] Monash Uni Chem [5.5]
ATAR: 99.95.

Andiio

  • Victorian
  • Part of the furniture
  • *****
  • Posts: 1209
  • Respect: +14
Re: Unit 3 Questions MEGATHREAD :)
« Reply #331 on: June 11, 2011, 06:37:18 pm »
0
Could someone please help me with part b) of this question? I'm fairly certain that the solutions are wrong :\

Argh that's from Engage right? I wasn't sure of the answer for part b) either. How would you even work it out? :S

Yeah it is, I was like 'WTF' at the question. The solutions don't even make sense, they state that C is the limiting reagent when it had the greatest amount of mol ==

For the question: Name the type of bonding that is present between a deoxyribose molecule and phosphate molecule,
I wrote phosphodiester bonding - the answers stated hydrogen bonding. Am I right or is it actually H-bonding?

Thanks!
Nope you're definitely right - It is (if we're being picky), technically a phosphate ester bond (it's only in a nucleic acid that phosphodiester bonds are formed). But it's not H bonds.
Nacho - concentrations (2M) are definitely counted in sig figs. Some papers are just slack (e.g. tsfx).
Luken - all of those reactions are fine. But remember, you want the examiner to give you the marks you deserve, so make whatever the question is asking for REALLY obvious - treat the examiner like both a complete douche and a chem nut :)
JayCanteloupe - DEFINITELY know the solubility table. REALLY important.
pi - the OH at the end (I assume you mean the 3' end) is connected to a carbon, so it's much less polar than the phosphate group, so much less likely to be acidic - so it's almost always going to be an OH group.
Hope that helps everyone

Awesome thanks. So many errors in that paper D:
Do you think it'd be best to simply write covalent bonding in the exam if a question came up asking about the type of bonding between a deoxyribose sugar and a phosphate group?

Moderator action: removed real name, sorry for the inconvenience
« Last Edit: January 03, 2017, 12:30:41 am by pi »
2010: Chinese SL [43]
2011: English [47] | Mathematical Methods CAS [41]| Specialist Mathematics [38] | Chemistry [40] | Physics [37]
ATAR: 99.55

nacho

  • The Thought Police
  • Victorian
  • ATAR Notes Superstar
  • ******
  • Posts: 2602
  • Respect: +418
Re: Unit 3 Questions MEGATHREAD :)
« Reply #332 on: June 11, 2011, 06:58:44 pm »
0
Could someone please help me with part b) of this question? I'm fairly certain that the solutions are wrong :\
is the answer .1 mol?

can someone link me to the solutions please?
« Last Edit: June 11, 2011, 07:07:14 pm by nacho »
OFFICIAL FORUM RULE #1:
TrueTears is my role model so find your own

2012: BCom/BSc @ Monash
[Majors: Finance, Actuarial Studies, Mathematical Statistics]
[Minors: Psychology/ Statistics]

"Baby, it's only micro when it's soft".
-Bill Gates

Upvote me

luken93

  • Victorian
  • ATAR Notes Legend
  • *******
  • Posts: 3060
  • Respect: +114
Re: Unit 3 Questions MEGATHREAD :)
« Reply #333 on: June 11, 2011, 07:02:03 pm »
0
Well that is technically the "type of bonding", phosphodiester is more the name of the specific bond...

So scocliffe, even though my 3rd reaction is as cltf said, "a hybrid", it can still be used? I didn't think it would be either, but if you had a fatty acid I'm not going to write out a 20 carbon chain with 3 double bonds all in semi-structural while still showing the carboxyl aspect of it...
2010: Business Management [47]
2011: English [44]   |   Chemistry [45]  |   Methods [44]   |   Specialist [42]   |   MUEP Chemistry [5.0]   |   ATAR: 99.60
UMAT: 69 | 56 | 82 | = [69 / 98th Percentile]
2012: MBBS I @ Monash

luken93

  • Victorian
  • ATAR Notes Legend
  • *******
  • Posts: 3060
  • Respect: +114
Re: Unit 3 Questions MEGATHREAD :)
« Reply #334 on: June 11, 2011, 07:19:35 pm »
0
Next question, when you're talking about which molecule is the reductant and which is the oxidant, should you always state ie "SO4 is the oxidant, as the oxidation number of S has gone from 8+ -> 6+" as it is the entire molecule that is the oxidant, not the individual atom yes?
2010: Business Management [47]
2011: English [44]   |   Chemistry [45]  |   Methods [44]   |   Specialist [42]   |   MUEP Chemistry [5.0]   |   ATAR: 99.60
UMAT: 69 | 56 | 82 | = [69 / 98th Percentile]
2012: MBBS I @ Monash

mickeymouse

  • Victorian
  • Trendsetter
  • **
  • Posts: 173
  • I shall call him squishy
  • Respect: +7
Re: Unit 3 Questions MEGATHREAD :)
« Reply #335 on: June 11, 2011, 07:23:48 pm »
0
yes not individual atoms the whole compound would be the oxidant
2010: Biology. Psychology
2011: English Language. Chemistry. Revolutions. Methods
2012: Law/International Relations @ ANU

ATAR: 97.45

nacho

  • The Thought Police
  • Victorian
  • ATAR Notes Superstar
  • ******
  • Posts: 2602
  • Respect: +418
Re: Unit 3 Questions MEGATHREAD :)
« Reply #336 on: June 11, 2011, 07:23:53 pm »
0
out of all the spectroscopic techniques, which ones do we need to know in detail?
i.e the instruments used/purposes and their names
also,
whats the answer to andiio's question?
is it 0.1 mol for part b) ?
OFFICIAL FORUM RULE #1:
TrueTears is my role model so find your own

2012: BCom/BSc @ Monash
[Majors: Finance, Actuarial Studies, Mathematical Statistics]
[Minors: Psychology/ Statistics]

"Baby, it's only micro when it's soft".
-Bill Gates

Upvote me

taiga

  • Honorary Moderator
  • ATAR Notes Legend
  • *******
  • Posts: 4085
  • Respect: +588
Re: Unit 3 Questions MEGATHREAD :)
« Reply #337 on: June 11, 2011, 07:26:33 pm »
0
Nacho I think pretty much all of them can be asked into the same depth. That said, I think it would be necessary to be most familiar with titration the most
vce: english, methods, spesh, chemistry, physics, geography.

ex admin/mod/partner

2010: Melbourne High School (VCE)
2011 - 2016: Monash University BComm/BEng (Hons)


If you guys have any concerns/suggestions for making ATARNotes a better place, don't hesitate to PM me.

Andiio

  • Victorian
  • Part of the furniture
  • *****
  • Posts: 1209
  • Respect: +14
Re: Unit 3 Questions MEGATHREAD :)
« Reply #338 on: June 11, 2011, 07:32:36 pm »
0
out of all the spectroscopic techniques, which ones do we need to know in detail?
i.e the instruments used/purposes and their names
also,
whats the answer to andiio's question?
is it 0.1 mol for part b) ?

Yeah it is, what was your reasoning for it though?
2010: Chinese SL [43]
2011: English [47] | Mathematical Methods CAS [41]| Specialist Mathematics [38] | Chemistry [40] | Physics [37]
ATAR: 99.55

scocliffe09

  • Victorian
  • Forum Obsessive
  • ***
  • Posts: 310
  • Respect: +46
Re: Unit 3 Questions MEGATHREAD :)
« Reply #339 on: June 11, 2011, 07:41:17 pm »
0
Well that is technically the "type of bonding", phosphodiester is more the name of the specific bond...

So scocliffe, even though my 3rd reaction is as cltf said, "a hybrid", it can still be used? I didn't think it would be either, but if you had a fatty acid I'm not going to write out a 20 carbon chain with 3 double bonds all in semi-structural while still showing the carboxyl aspect of it...
As long as you are happy that you convince the examiner of what you want to convince them, then go for it! CHO and CHCOOH are both 100% acceptable forms for fatty acids. Also your oxidation question - you're right.
Hope UNichem went well Luken
Just back from spending the year at Oxford. Now onto final year Monash MBBS.

2009: Biology [50], Maths Methods (CAS) [45]
2010: English [50], German [50], Chemistry [50] Monash Uni Chem [5.5]
ATAR: 99.95.

nacho

  • The Thought Police
  • Victorian
  • ATAR Notes Superstar
  • ******
  • Posts: 2602
  • Respect: +418
Re: Unit 3 Questions MEGATHREAD :)
« Reply #340 on: June 11, 2011, 07:42:17 pm »
0
I did this:
I assumed there was one mol for each reactant as it says 'for every mole'
that means
1 mol of Ca... 1 mol of Si... and 1 mol of C.

Find the limiting reagent.
1 mol of Ca3(PO4)2 requires 3 mol of SiO2 and 5 mol of C
the limiting reagent is therefore Carbon
with 1 mol of carbon, 1/5 mol of Ca3(PO4)2 will react (simple stoich ratios)
and 2/5 mol of SiO2 will react (but all you dont even need to calculate both of them, you can just use the carbon figure)
Carbon : P4
10 : 1
therefore 1 mol of carbon produces .1 mol of P4
check with the others

OFFICIAL FORUM RULE #1:
TrueTears is my role model so find your own

2012: BCom/BSc @ Monash
[Majors: Finance, Actuarial Studies, Mathematical Statistics]
[Minors: Psychology/ Statistics]

"Baby, it's only micro when it's soft".
-Bill Gates

Upvote me

Andiio

  • Victorian
  • Part of the furniture
  • *****
  • Posts: 1209
  • Respect: +14
Re: Unit 3 Questions MEGATHREAD :)
« Reply #341 on: June 11, 2011, 07:45:18 pm »
0
I did this:
I assumed there was one mol for each reactant as it says 'for every mole'
that means
1 mol of Ca... 1 mol of Si... and 1 mol of C.

Find the limiting reagent.
1 mol of Ca3(PO4)2 requires 3 mol of SiO2 and 5 mol of C
the limiting reagent is therefore Carbon
with 1 mol of carbon, 1/5 mol of Ca3(PO4)2 will react (simple stoich ratios)
and 2/5 mol of SiO2 will react (but all you dont even need to calculate both of them, you can just use the carbon figure)
Carbon : P4
10 : 1
therefore 1 mol of carbon produces .1 mol of P4
check with the others



Limiting reagent is carbon?
2010: Chinese SL [43]
2011: English [47] | Mathematical Methods CAS [41]| Specialist Mathematics [38] | Chemistry [40] | Physics [37]
ATAR: 99.55

nacho

  • The Thought Police
  • Victorian
  • ATAR Notes Superstar
  • ******
  • Posts: 2602
  • Respect: +418
Re: Unit 3 Questions MEGATHREAD :)
« Reply #342 on: June 11, 2011, 07:49:20 pm »
0
I did this:
I assumed there was one mol for each reactant as it says 'for every mole'
that means
1 mol of Ca... 1 mol of Si... and 1 mol of C.

Find the limiting reagent.
1 mol of Ca3(PO4)2 requires 3 mol of SiO2 and 5 mol of C
the limiting reagent is therefore Carbon
with 1 mol of carbon, 1/5 mol of Ca3(PO4)2 will react (simple stoich ratios)
and 2/5 mol of SiO2 will react (but all you dont even need to calculate both of them, you can just use the carbon figure)
Carbon : P4
10 : 1
therefore 1 mol of carbon produces .1 mol of P4
check with the others



Limiting reagent is carbon?
yea, because if you have 1 mol of each reactant
and Ca3PO4 needs ten times its own amount to react, doesnt that mean that Carbon is limiting Ca3PO4 from being used up?
1 mol of Ca3PO4 needs 10 mol of carbon, yet there is only 1 mol present
OFFICIAL FORUM RULE #1:
TrueTears is my role model so find your own

2012: BCom/BSc @ Monash
[Majors: Finance, Actuarial Studies, Mathematical Statistics]
[Minors: Psychology/ Statistics]

"Baby, it's only micro when it's soft".
-Bill Gates

Upvote me

jane1234

  • Guest
Re: Unit 3 Questions MEGATHREAD :)
« Reply #343 on: June 11, 2011, 07:53:23 pm »
0
Hmm...

If a question says that aspirin was hydrolysed in alkaline conditions... and asks you to draw salicylic acid wouldn't you draw it as -COO- instead of -COOH... or just leave it as the -COOH even though it would lose a proton in basic conditions? ???

luken93

  • Victorian
  • ATAR Notes Legend
  • *******
  • Posts: 3060
  • Respect: +114
Re: Unit 3 Questions MEGATHREAD :)
« Reply #344 on: June 11, 2011, 08:03:53 pm »
0
Well that is technically the "type of bonding", phosphodiester is more the name of the specific bond...

So scocliffe, even though my 3rd reaction is as cltf said, "a hybrid", it can still be used? I didn't think it would be either, but if you had a fatty acid I'm not going to write out a 20 carbon chain with 3 double bonds all in semi-structural while still showing the carboxyl aspect of it...
As long as you are happy that you convince the examiner of what you want to convince them, then go for it! CHO and CHCOOH are both 100% acceptable forms for fatty acids. Also your oxidation question - you're right.
Hope UNichem went well Luken
Cheers. Yeah, it wasn't too bad - but the completely revamped the format of the previous years which wasn't good :(

Ah well, I'd rather do better in normal chem :P
2010: Business Management [47]
2011: English [44]   |   Chemistry [45]  |   Methods [44]   |   Specialist [42]   |   MUEP Chemistry [5.0]   |   ATAR: 99.60
UMAT: 69 | 56 | 82 | = [69 / 98th Percentile]
2012: MBBS I @ Monash