Vocabulary
Acids and Bases
Properties of Water
Labs and Lab Safety
What's that Formula?
100

A solution with a pH of 7.

What is neutral?

100

These ions are released when an acid is placed in water.

What are H+ ions?

100

These are the types of bonds between water molecules.

What are hydrogen bonds?

100

This is the room that the emergency shower is in.

What is Mr. Gaug's room?

100

Potassium and Bromine

KBr

200

Caused by cohesion, this is why bugs can skate across water.

What is surface tension?

200

The ions released when a base is placed in water.

What are OH- ions?

200

The reason water can travel up plants.

What is capillary action?

200

This is where all backpacks should go during a lab.

What is the counter?

200

Magnesium and Chlorine

MgCl2

300

We describe water as being this, meaning it is able to dissolve many other substances.

What is a universal solvent?

300

The pH scales measures the amount of this ion present in the solution.

What are H+ ions?

300

The attraction between particles of the same substance.

What is cohesion?

300

When you get injured in a lab, this is the first person you tell.

Who is Mr. Stanley?

300

Calcium and Iodine

CaI2

400

A steady state of being despite changing outside conditions.

What is homeostasis?

400

A reaction where a base and an acid combine to become water and a salt.

What is a neutralization reaction?

400

This is the element we call the positive "end" of an water molecule.

What is hydrogen?

400

This is the pH our blood is at (unless something is wrong!)

What is the 7.5?

400

Potassium and Sulfur

K2S

500

A weak acid or base used to keep a solution neutral.

What is a buffer?

500

This is the neutralization equation for NaOH and HCl.

NaOH + HCl -> NaCl + H2O

500

The amount of heat needed to raise or lower 1g of a substance 1*C.

What is specific heat?

500

This is how many times stronger an acid with a pH of 3 than an acid with a pH of 6.

What is 1000x?

500

Strontium and Fluorine

SrF2

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