Question detail

For Reactions of acids with metals, which ion focus answer best supports this Unit 4.4 objective: Write word equations for reactions between acids and metals?

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

At a glance

MCQ

Type

practice

Style

Topic

Reactions of acids

Question

  1. A. Salt and hydrogen - correct ion focus for acid
  2. B. Wrong ion focus: confuses acid with a nearby Unit 4.4 chemical change idea
  3. C. Wrong particle check: uses the wrong ion, electrode, acid-base term, or product for Reactions of acids with metals
  4. D. Wrong reaction link: does not support Write word equations for reactions between acids and metals

Answer

The correct option is Salt and hydrogen - correct ion focus for acid.

Explanation

The correct option is Salt and hydrogen - correct ion focus for acid. Salt and hydrogen - correct ion focus for acid is correct because it directly supports the approved learning objective to write word equations for reactions between acids and metals. This ion focus variant asks students to separate acid from similar Unit 4.4 chemical-change ideas. The reasoning belongs to Reactions of acids with metals within Reactions of acids, so it should not be confused with nearby ideas about acids, alkalis, bases, oxidation, reduction, displacement, reactivity, electrolysis, electrodes, ions, pH, or salt preparation unless those are named in the objective. Use the focus term acid to keep the answer aligned with AQA GCSE Chemistry 8462 Unit 4.4 Chemical changes. Keep acid, alkali and base distinct; keep oxidation and reduction distinct; do not mix reduction with displacement; keep electrolysis separate from electroplating; distinguish anode from cathode, positive ions from negative ions, oxidation state from ionic charge, and strong acid from concentrated acid. The other options are weaker because they either use the wrong reaction type, wrong ion, wrong electrode, wrong acid-base distinction, vague wording, or the wrong chemical-change context.

Common mistake

Incorrect Word Equation Formation

Students often write incomplete or incorrect word equations for acid-metal reactions, such as omitting the product or using incorrect terms.

Ensure to include both reactants and products in the equation. For example, when hydrochloric acid reacts with zinc, the correct equation is 'hydrochloric acid + zinc → zinc chloride + hydrogen'.

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