Question detail

For Concentrations in mol/dm3 and titration calculations, which ratio reasoning answer best supports this Unit 4.3 objective: (chemistry only) (HT only) Substitute numerical values into algebraic equations using appropriate units. (MS 3c)?

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

At a glance

MCQ

Type

practice

Style

Topic

Using concentrations of solutions in mol/dm3 (chemistry only) (HT only)

Question

  1. A. 0.34 mol/dm3 - correct ratio reasoning for chemistry only
  2. B. Wrong ratio reasoning: confuses chemistry only with a nearby Unit 4.3 idea
  3. C. Wrong unit check: uses the wrong unit for Concentrations in mol/dm3 and titration calculations
  4. D. Wrong calculation link: does not support (chemistry only) (HT only) Substitute numerical values into algebraic equations using appropriate units. (MS 3c)

Answer

The correct option is 0.34 mol/dm3 - correct ratio reasoning for chemistry only. The calculated answer is 0.34 mol/dm3.

Explanation

The correct option is 0.34 mol/dm3 - correct ratio reasoning for chemistry only. This uses Concentration in mol/dm3 because the objective is about (chemistry only) (HT only) Substitute numerical values into algebraic equations using appropriate units. (MS 3c). This ratio reasoning variant asks students to separate chemistry only from similar Unit 4.3 calculation steps. The reasoning belongs to Concentrations in mol/dm3 and titration calculations within Using concentrations of solutions in mol/dm3 (chemistry only) (HT only), so it should not be confused with nearby quantitative ideas such as mass, moles, concentration, yield, atom economy, or gas volume unless those are named in the objective. Use the focus term chemistry only to keep the answer aligned with AQA GCSE Chemistry 8462 Unit 4.3. The other options are weaker because they either use the wrong formula, the wrong unit, a vague relationship, or the wrong quantitative context.

Common mistake

Incorrect Unit Conversion

Students often forget to convert volumes from cm3 to dm3 when substituting into concentration equations.

Always convert cm3 to dm3 by dividing by 1000 before using the volume in calculations.

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