Question detail

A solution contains 10 g of sodium chloride (NaCl) dissolved in 500 cm³ of water. What is the concentration of the solution in g/dm³?

Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.

At a glance

MCQ

Type

practice

Style

Topic

Kinetics

Question

  1. A. 20 g/dm³
  2. B. 10 g/dm³
  3. C. 5 g/dm³
  4. D. 15 g/dm³

Answer

20 g/dm³

Explanation

The correct option is 20 g/dm³. Use Concentration in g/dm3: concentration = mass / volume. The worked result is 20 g. 20 g/dm³ is the best answer because it directly supports the AQA A-Level Chemistry objective to explain how concentration affects collision frequency and rate. This reasoning is anchored to Factors affecting reaction rate in Kinetics, and it separates concentration from similar A-Level ideas rather than relying on a vague recall statement. Other options are weaker if they use the wrong evidence, calculation, mechanism, observation, unit, or conclusion for this subtopic.

Common mistake

Misunderstanding Concentration Effects

Students often confuse concentration with the total amount of substance, leading to incorrect conclusions about how concentration affects reaction rate.

To correctly explain how concentration affects collision frequency and rate, use the formula for collision frequency: collision frequency ∝ concentration. For example, if the concentration of reactants is doubled, the collision frequency also doubles, leading to an increased reaction rate. Therefore, if the initial concentration is 0.5 mol/dm³ and the new concentration is 1.0 mol/dm³, the substitution would be: collision frequency ∝ 1.0 mol/dm³ / 0.5 mol/dm³ = 2. The answer is that the collision frequency doubles, which increases the rate of reaction.

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