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WK | LSN | TOPIC | SUB-TOPIC | OBJECTIVES | T/L ACTIVITIES | T/L AIDS | REFERENCE | REMARKS |
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2 | 1 |
NITROGEN AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Uses of Nitric(V) Acid and Introduction to Nitrates
Action of Heat on Nitrates - Decomposition Patterns |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
List major industrial uses of nitric acid Explain importance in fertilizer manufacture Describe use in explosives and dyes Introduce nitrate salts and their preparation |
Discussion: Uses - fertilizer production (NH₄NO₃), explosives (TNT), dyes, drugs, metal purification, etching. Introduction to nitrates as salts of nitric acid. Methods of preparation: acid + base, acid + carbonate, acid + metal. Examples of common nitrates.
|
Industrial use charts, Nitrate salt samples, Preparation method diagrams, Safety data sheets
Various nitrate salts, Test tubes, Bunsen burner, Gas collection apparatus, Glowing splints, Observation recording sheets |
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 151
|
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2 | 2 |
NITROGEN AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Test for Nitrates - Brown Ring Test
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Perform brown ring test for nitrates Explain mechanism of complex formation Use alternative copper test method Apply tests to unknown samples |
Experiments: (a) Brown ring test - add FeSO₄ solution to nitrate, then carefully add concentrated H₂SO₄. Observe brown ring formation. (b) Alternative test - warm nitrate with H₂SO₄ and copper turnings. Observe brown fumes. Test unknown samples.
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Sodium nitrate, Fresh FeSO₄ solution, Concentrated H₂SO₄, Copper turnings, Test tubes, Unknown nitrate samples
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 153-154
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2 | 3 |
NITROGEN AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Environmental Pollution by Nitrogen Compounds
Pollution Control and Environmental Solutions |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Explain sources of nitrogen pollution Describe formation of acid rain Discuss effects on environment and health Evaluate pollution control measures |
Teacher exposition: NOₓ from vehicles, HNO₃ formation in atmosphere, acid rain effects. Discussion: Chlorosis in plants, building corrosion, soil leaching, smog formation, health effects. Control measures: Catalytic converters, emission controls, proper fertilizer use.
|
Environmental pollution charts, Acid rain effect photos, Vehicle emission diagrams, Control measure illustrations
Case studies, Pollution control technology information, Group activity worksheets, Local environmental data |
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 154-157
|
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2 | 4-5 |
NITROGEN AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Comprehensive Problem Solving - Nitrogen Chemistry
Laboratory Practical Assessment - Nitrogen Compounds Industrial Applications and Economic Importance |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Solve complex problems involving nitrogen compounds Apply knowledge to industrial processes Calculate yields and percentages in reactions Analyze experimental data and results Demonstrate practical skills in nitrogen chemistry Perform qualitative analysis of nitrogen compounds Apply safety procedures correctly Interpret experimental observations accurately |
Problem-solving session: Mixed calculations involving nitrogen preparation, ammonia synthesis, nitric acid concentration, fertilizer analysis. Industrial application problems. Data analysis from experiments. Integration of all nitrogen chemistry concepts.
Practical examination: Identify unknown nitrogen compounds using chemical tests. Prepare specified nitrogen compounds. Demonstrate proper laboratory techniques. Safety assessment. Written report on observations and conclusions. |
Scientific calculators, Comprehensive problem sets, Industrial data sheets, Experimental result tables
Unknown nitrogen compounds, All laboratory chemicals and apparatus used in chapter, Safety equipment, Assessment rubrics Economic data sheets, Industry case studies, Agricultural statistics, Cost-benefit analysis templates |
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 119-157
|
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3 | 1 |
NITROGEN AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Chapter Review and Integration
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Synthesize all nitrogen chemistry concepts Compare preparation methods for nitrogen compounds Relate structure to properties and reactivity Connect laboratory and industrial processes |
Comprehensive review: Concept mapping of all nitrogen compounds and their relationships. Comparison tables: Preparation methods, properties, uses. Flow chart: Nitrogen cycle in industry and environment. Integration exercises connecting all topics.
|
Concept mapping materials, Comparison charts, Flow diagram templates, Integration worksheets
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 119-157
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3 | 2 |
SULPHUR AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Extraction of Sulphur
Allotropes of Sulphur Physical Properties of Sulphur - Solubility |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Define sulphur and state its position in the periodic table. Describe the occurrence of sulphur in nature. Explain the Frasch process for extraction of sulphur. Evaluate the effectiveness of the Frasch process. |
Q/A: Review group VI elements and electron configuration of sulphur. Teacher demonstration: Using diagrams to explain the Frasch process setup. Discussion: Why ordinary mining is impossible for sulphur deposits. Group work: Students draw and label the Frasch process diagram.
|
Charts showing periodic table, Diagram of Frasch process, Samples of sulphur compounds (pyrites, gypsum)
Powdered sulphur, Carbon(IV) sulphide, Evaporating dish, Glass rod, Hand lens, Boiling tubes, Filter paper, Beakers Powdered sulphur, Water, Benzene, Methylbenzene, Carbon(IV) sulphide, Test tubes, Charts showing molecular structure |
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 160-161
|
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3 | 3 |
SULPHUR AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Physical Properties of Sulphur - Effect of Heat
Chemical Properties of Sulphur - Reactions with Elements Chemical Properties of Sulphur - Reactions with Acids |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Investigate the effect of heat on sulphur. Describe changes in color and viscosity of molten sulphur. Explain the molecular changes occurring during heating. Identify "flowers of sulphur". |
Practical work: Experiment 2(b) - Heating sulphur and observing changes. Observation: Color changes from yellow to amber to reddish-brown to black. Testing viscosity by inverting test tube. Demonstration: Sublimation of sulphur vapour. Discussion: Breaking of S8 rings to form long chains.
|
Powdered sulphur, Test tubes, Bunsen burner, Cold surface for condensation, Thermometer, Safety equipment
Sulphur, Iron powder, Copper powder, Oxygen gas jar, Deflagrating spoon, Moist litmus papers, Test tubes, Bunsen burner Sulphur powder, Concentrated HNO3, Concentrated H2SO4, Concentrated HCl, Barium chloride solution, Test tubes, Fume cupboard access |
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 164-165
|
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3 | 4-5 |
SULPHUR AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Uses of Sulphur and Introduction to Oxides
Preparation of Sulphur(IV) Oxide Physical and Chemical Properties of Sulphur(IV) Oxide Bleaching Action of Sulphur(IV) Oxide |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
List the uses of sulphur in industry and agriculture. Identify the two main oxides of sulphur. Compare sulphur(IV) oxide and sulphur(VI) oxide. Plan laboratory preparation methods for sulphur oxides. Investigate the bleaching properties of SO Compare SO2 bleaching with chlorine bleaching. Explain the mechanism of SO2 bleaching. Relate bleaching to paper manufacturing. |
Discussion: Industrial uses - sulphuric acid manufacture, fungicide, vulcanization of rubber, bleaching agents, dyes and fireworks. Q/A: Review oxidation states of sulphur in compounds. Introduction: SO2 and SO3 as important compounds. Preparation planning: Methods for laboratory preparation of SO
Practical work: Experiment 6 - Placing colored flower petals in SO2 gas. Observation: Temporary bleaching effect. Discussion: SO2 + H2O → H2SO3, reduction of organic dyes. Comparison: Permanent vs temporary bleaching. Application: Paper industry bleaching processes. |
Charts showing uses of sulphur, Samples of vulcanized rubber, Fungicides, Industrial photographs, Textbook diagrams
Sodium sulphite, Dilute HCl, Round-bottomed flask, Delivery tubes, Gas jars, Concentrated H2SO4 for drying, Acidified potassium chromate(VI) paper SO2 gas from previous preparation, Litmus papers, Universal indicator, 0.1M NaOH solution, Water, Test tubes, Safety equipment Colored flower petals (red/blue), SO2 gas jars, Hand lens for observation, Charts comparing bleaching agents |
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 168-170
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 173 |
|
4 | 1 |
SULPHUR AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Reducing Action of Sulphur(IV) Oxide
Oxidising Action of Sulphur(IV) Oxide |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Investigate SO2 as a reducing agent. Test reactions with various oxidizing agents. Write ionic equations for redox reactions. Identify color changes in redox reactions. |
Practical work: Experiment 7 - Testing SO2 with acidified potassium dichromate(VI), potassium manganate(VII), bromine water, iron(III) chloride. Recording observations in Table 6. Color changes: Orange to green, purple to colorless, brown to colorless, yellow to pale green. Writing half-equations and overall equations.
|
SO2 gas, Acidified K2Cr2O7, Acidified KMnO4, Bromine water, Iron(III) chloride solution, Concentrated HNO3, Test tubes
SO2 gas jars, Magnesium ribbon, Deflagrating spoon, Hydrogen sulphide gas, Water droppers, Safety equipment |
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 173-176
|
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4 | 2 |
SULPHUR AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Test for Sulphate and Sulphite Ions & Uses of SO2
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Carry out confirmatory tests for sulphate and sulphite ions. Distinguish between sulphate and sulphite using chemical tests. List the uses of sulphur(IV) oxide. Explain the applications in industry. |
Practical work: Experiment 9 - Testing sodium sulphate and sodium sulphite with barium chloride. Adding dilute HCl to precipitates. Recording observations in Table 8. Discussion: BaSO4 insoluble in acid, BaSO3 dissolves. Uses: Raw material for H2SO4, bleaching wood pulp, fumigant, preservative.
|
Sodium sulphate solution, Sodium sulphite solution, Barium chloride solution, Dilute HCl, Test tubes, Charts showing industrial uses
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 178-179
|
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4-5 |
CAT 1 |
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5 | 2 |
SULPHUR AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Large-scale Manufacture of Sulphuric(VI) Acid - Contact Process
Properties of Concentrated Sulphuric(VI) Acid - Dehydrating Properties |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe the contact process for manufacturing H2SO Identify raw materials and conditions used. Explain the role of catalyst in the process. Draw flow diagrams of the contact process. |
Study of flow diagram: Figure 12 - Contact process. Discussion: Raw materials (sulphur, air), burning sulphur to SO Purification: Electrostatic precipitation, drying with H2SO Catalytic chamber: V2O5 catalyst at 450°C, 2-3 atmospheres. Formation of oleum: H2S2O7. Safety and environmental considerations.
|
Flow chart diagrams, Charts showing industrial plant, Samples of catalyst (V2O5), Photographs of Thika chemical plant, Calculator for percentage calculations
Concentrated H2SO4, Copper(II) sulphate crystals, Sucrose, Ethanol, KMnO4 solution, Test tubes, Beakers, Safety equipment, Fume cupboard |
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 179-181
|
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5 | 3 |
SULPHUR AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Properties of Concentrated Sulphuric(VI) Acid - Oxidizing Properties
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Investigate the oxidizing properties of concentrated H2SO Test reactions with metals and non-metals. Identify the products of oxidation reactions. Write balanced equations for redox reactions. |
Practical work: Experiment 10 (continued) - Reactions with copper foil, zinc granules, charcoal. Testing evolved gases with acidified K2Cr2O7 paper, lime water. Observations: SO2 evolution, color changes. Discussion: H2SO4 → SO2 + H2O + [O]. Writing half-equations and overall equations.
|
Copper foil, Zinc granules, Charcoal powder, Concentrated H2SO4, Acidified K2Cr2O7 paper, Lime water, Test tubes, Bunsen burner
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 183-184
|
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5 | 4-5 |
SULPHUR AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Properties of Concentrated Sulphuric(VI) Acid - Displacement Reactions
Reactions of Dilute Sulphuric(VI) Acid - With Metals Reactions of Dilute Sulphuric(VI) Acid - With Carbonates |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Investigate acid displacement reactions. Demonstrate formation of volatile acids. Test the evolved gases for identification. Write equations for displacement reactions. Investigate reactions of dilute H2SO4 with carbonates. Test for carbon dioxide evolution. Explain why some reactions stop prematurely. Compare reactions of different metal carbonates. |
Practical work: Experiment 10 (continued) - Reactions with potassium nitrate and sodium chloride. Testing evolved gases with moist blue litmus, concentrated ammonia. Observations: Brown fumes (NO2), white fumes (HCl). Discussion: Less volatile acid displacing more volatile acids. Industrial applications.
Practical work: Experiment 12 - Reactions with sodium carbonate, zinc carbonate, calcium carbonate, copper(II) carbonate. Testing evolved gas with lime water. Recording observations in Table 1 Discussion: Formation of insoluble calcium sulphate coating. Effervescence and CO2 identification. |
Potassium nitrate crystals, Sodium chloride crystals, Concentrated H2SO4, Moist blue litmus paper, Concentrated ammonia, Test tubes, Bunsen burner
Magnesium ribbon, Zinc granules, Copper turnings, Dilute H2SO4, Test tubes, Burning splints, Reactivity series chart Sodium carbonate, Zinc carbonate, Calcium carbonate, Copper(II) carbonate, Dilute H2SO4, Lime water, Test tubes |
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 184
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 185-186 |
|
6 | 1 |
SULPHUR AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Reactions of Dilute Sulphuric(VI) Acid - With Oxides and Hydroxides
Hydrogen Sulphide - Preparation and Physical Properties |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Investigate reactions of dilute H2SO4 with metal oxides and hydroxides. Identify neutralization reactions. Explain formation of insoluble sulphates. Write equations for acid-base reactions. |
Practical work: Experiment 13 - Reactions with magnesium oxide, zinc oxide, copper(II) oxide, lead(II) oxide, sodium hydroxide. Recording observations in Table 1 Discussion: Salt and water formation, immediate stopping with lead(II) oxide due to insoluble PbSO Acid-base neutralization concept.
|
Metal oxides (MgO, ZnO, CuO, PbO), NaOH solution, 2M H2SO4, Test tubes, Bunsen burner for warming
Iron(II) sulphide, Dilute HCl, Apparatus for gas generation, Anhydrous CaCl2, Gas jars, Safety equipment, Fume cupboard |
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 186-187
|
|
6 | 2 |
SULPHUR AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Chemical Properties of Hydrogen Sulphide
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Investigate H2S as a reducing agent. Test reactions with oxidizing agents. Demonstrate precipitation of metal sulphides. Write ionic equations for redox reactions. |
Practical demonstrations: H2S with bromine water, iron(III) chloride, acidified KMnO4, K2Cr2O7. Precipitation tests: H2S with copper(II) sulphate, lead(II) nitrate, zinc sulphate. Color changes: Brown to colorless, yellow to green, purple to colorless. Formation of black, yellow, and white precipitates.
|
H2S gas, Bromine water, Iron(III) chloride, KMnO4, K2Cr2O7, Metal salt solutions, Test tubes, Droppers
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 188-190
|
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6 | 3 |
SULPHUR AND ITS COMPOUNDS
CHLORINE AND ITS COMPOUNDS |
Pollution Effects and Summary
Introduction and Preparation of Chlorine |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Explain environmental pollution by sulphur compounds. Describe formation and effects of acid rain. Suggest methods to reduce sulphur pollution. Summarize key concepts of sulphur chemistry. |
Discussion: Sources of SO2 pollution - burning fossil fuels, metal extraction, H2SO4 manufacture. Formation of acid rain: SO2 + H2O → H2SO3 → H2SO Effects: Plant damage, aquatic life destruction, building corrosion, soil acidification. Control measures: Scrubbing with Ca(OH)2, catalytic converters. Revision: Key reactions, properties, uses.
|
Charts showing pollution effects, Photographs of acid rain damage, Environmental data, Summary charts of reactions, Industrial pollution control diagrams
Manganese(IV) oxide, Concentrated HCl, Gas collection apparatus, Water, Concentrated H2SO4, Blue litmus paper, Gas jars |
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 190-194
|
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6 | 4-5 |
CHLORINE AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Physical Properties of Chlorine
Chemical Properties of Chlorine - Reaction with Water Chemical Properties of Chlorine - Reaction with Metals Chemical Properties of Chlorine - Reaction with Non-metals Oxidising Properties of Chlorine Reaction of Chlorine with Alkali Solutions |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Investigate the physical properties of chlorine gas. Explain the method of collection used for chlorine. Test the solubility of chlorine in water. State the density and color of chlorine gas. Investigate reactions of chlorine with non-metals. Demonstrate reaction with phosphorus and hydrogen. Write equations for non-metal chloride formation. Explain the vigorous nature of these reactions. |
Practical work: Experiment 6.2 - Testing chlorine gas preserved from previous experiment. Recording observations in Table 6. Testing: Color, smell (caution - no direct smelling), density, solubility in water. Demonstration: Inverting gas jar in water trough. Discussion: Why collected by downward delivery.
Practical work: Experiment 6.5 - Warming red phosphorus and lowering into chlorine. Demonstration: Burning hydrogen jet in chlorine. Observations: White fumes of phosphorus chlorides, hydrogen chloride formation. Writing equations: P4 + 6Cl2 → 4PCl3, H2 + Cl2 → 2HCl. Discussion: Formation of covalent chlorides. |
Preserved chlorine gas, Water trough, Gas jars, Observation tables, Safety equipment
Chlorine gas, Distilled water, Blue and red litmus papers, Colored flower petals, Gas jars, Boiling tubes Magnesium ribbon, Iron wire, Chlorine gas, Deflagrating spoon, Combustion tube, Anhydrous CaCl2, Gas jars Red phosphorus, Hydrogen gas, Chlorine gas, Deflagrating spoon, Gas jars, Bunsen burner, Safety equipment Sodium sulphite solution, Barium nitrate, Lead nitrate, Hydrogen sulphide gas, Aqueous ammonia, Chlorine gas, Test tubes Sodium hydroxide solutions (dilute cold, concentrated hot), Chlorine gas, Beakers, Bunsen burner, Thermometer |
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 196-197
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 201 |
|
7 | 1 |
CHLORINE AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Oxidising Properties - Displacement Reactions
Test for Chloride Ions |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Investigate displacement reactions of chlorine with halides. Test reactions with bromides and iodides. Write ionic equations for displacement reactions. Explain the order of reactivity of halogens. |
Practical work: Experiment 6.8 - Bubbling chlorine through potassium bromide and potassium iodide solutions. Observations: Colorless to orange (Br2), colorless to brown (I2). Writing ionic equations: Cl2 + 2Br⁻ → 2Cl⁻ + Br2, Cl2 + 2I⁻ → 2Cl⁻ + I Discussion: Displacement as evidence of relative reactivity.
|
Potassium bromide solution, Potassium iodide solution, Chlorine gas, Test tubes, Observation charts
Sodium chloride, Concentrated H2SO4, Lead(II) nitrate solution, Aqueous ammonia, Glass rod, Test tubes, Bunsen burner |
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 203-204
|
|
7 | 2 |
CHLORINE AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Uses of Chlorine and its Compounds
Hydrogen Chloride - Laboratory Preparation |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
List the industrial uses of chlorine. Explain the use of chlorine in water treatment. Describe manufacture of chlorine compounds. Relate properties to uses of chlorine. |
Discussion: Industrial applications - HCl manufacture, bleaching agents for cotton and paper industries, water treatment and sewage plants. Study Figure 6.3(a) - bleaching chemicals. Applications: Chloroform (anaesthetic), solvents (trichloroethane), CFCs, PVC plastics, pesticides (DDT), germicides and fungicides. Q/A: Relating chemical properties to practical applications.
|
Charts showing industrial uses, Samples of bleaching agents, PVC materials, Photographs of water treatment plants, Industrial application diagrams
Rock salt (NaCl), Concentrated H2SO4, Gas collection apparatus, Ammonia solution, Litmus papers, Water trough, Gas jars |
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 205-207
|
|
7 | 3 |
CHLORINE AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Chemical Properties of Hydrogen Chloride
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Prepare aqueous hydrogen chloride (hydrochloric acid). Investigate acid properties of HCl solution. Test reactions with metals, bases, and carbonates. Compare HCl in water vs organic solvents. |
Practical work: Experiment 6.11 - Preparation of aqueous HCl using apparatus in Figure 6. Testing with metals (Zn, Fe, Mg, Cu), NaOH, carbonates, lead nitrate. Recording observations in Table 6.7. Testing HCl in methylbenzene - no acid properties. Discussion: Ionization in water vs molecular existence in organic solvents. Writing equations for acid reactions.
|
Distilled water, Filter funnel, Metals (Zn, Fe, Mg, Cu), NaOH solution, Carbonates, Lead nitrate, Methylbenzene, Indicators
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 208-211
|
|
7 | 4-5 |
CHLORINE AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Large-scale Manufacture of Hydrochloric Acid
Uses of Hydrochloric Acid Environmental Pollution by Chlorine Compounds and Summary |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe industrial production of hydrochloric acid. Identify raw materials and conditions used. Explain the controlled combustion process. Draw flow diagrams of the industrial process. Explain environmental effects of chlorine compounds. Describe the impact of CFCs on ozone layer. Discuss pollution by chlorine-containing pesticides. Summarize key concepts of chlorine chemistry. |
Study of Figure 6.4 - Large-scale manufacture setup. Discussion: Raw materials (H2 from electrolysis/cracking, Cl2 from electrolysis). Controlled combustion: H2 + Cl2 → 2HCl in jet burner. Dissolving HCl gas in water over glass beads. Safety: Explosive nature of H2/Cl2 mixture, use of excess chlorine. Industrial considerations: 35% concentration, transport in rubber-lined steel tanks.
Discussion: Environmental impacts - chlorine gas forming acid rain, CFCs (life span CCl3F = 75 years, CCl2F2 = 110 years) breaking down ozone layer. DDT as persistent pesticide, PVC as non-biodegradable plastic. NEMA role in environmental protection, Stockholm Convention on DDT. Control measures and alternatives. Revision: Key reactions, properties, uses, and environmental considerations. Summary of halogen chemistry concepts. |
Flow diagrams, Industrial photographs, Glass beads samples, Charts showing electrolysis processes, Safety equipment models
Samples of rusted and cleaned metals, Photographic materials, pH control charts, Industrial application videos, Water treatment diagrams Environmental pollution charts, Ozone layer diagrams, DDT restriction documents, PVC waste samples, NEMA guidelines, Summary charts of reactions |
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 211-212
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 213-215 |
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8-9 |
END TERM EXAMS |
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