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WK | LSN | TOPIC | SUB-TOPIC | OBJECTIVES | T/L ACTIVITIES | T/L AIDS | REFERENCE | REMARKS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2 | 1 |
ACIDS, BASES AND SALTS
|
Definition of Acids
Strength of Acids |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- Define an acid in terms of hydrogen ions -Investigate reactions of magnesium and zinc carbonate with different acids -Write equations for reactions taking place -Explain why magnesium strip should be cleaned |
Class experiment: React cleaned magnesium strips with 2M HCl, 2M ethanoic acid, 2M H₂SO₄, 2M ethanedioic acid. Record observations in table. Repeat using zinc carbonate. Write chemical equations. Discuss hydrogen ion displacement and gas evolution.
|
Magnesium strips, zinc carbonate, 2M HCl, 2M ethanoic acid, 2M H₂SO₄, 2M ethanedioic acid, test tubes, test tube rack
2M HCl, 2M ethanoic acid, universal indicator, pH chart, electrical conductivity apparatus, milliammeter, carbon electrodes, beakers, wires |
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 1-3
|
|
2 | 2 |
ACIDS, BASES AND SALTS
|
Definition of Bases
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- Define a base in terms of hydroxide ions -Investigate effect of calcium hydroxide in water -Test solutions with litmus paper -Explain dissociation of bases in water |
Teacher demonstration: Place dry calcium hydroxide on dry red litmus paper. Dissolve calcium hydroxide in water, test with litmus paper and phenolphthalein. Discuss observations and write dissociation equation. Define bases in terms of OH⁻ ions.
|
Calcium hydroxide, red litmus paper, phenolphthalein indicator, distilled water, test tubes, spatula, evaporating dish
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 5-6
|
|
2 | 3-4 |
ACIDS, BASES AND SALTS
|
Strength of Bases
Acid-Base Reactions Effect of Solvent on Acids |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- Compare strengths of bases using pH values -Determine strengths of bases by comparing their electrical conductivity -Classify bases as either strong or weak -Explain complete and partial ionization of bases - Explain effect of polar and non-polar solvents on hydrogen chloride -Investigate HCl behavior in water vs methylbenzene -Define polar and non-polar solvents -Explain why acids show properties only in polar solvents |
Class experiment: Test pH of 2M NaOH and 2M ammonia solution using universal indicator. Test electrical conductivity of both solutions using same apparatus as acids. Compare deflections and pH values. Explain in terms of OH⁻ ion concentration and complete vs partial ionization.
Teacher demonstration: Dissolve HCl gas in water and methylbenzene separately. Test both solutions with litmus paper, magnesium, and calcium carbonate. Compare observations. Explain polarity of water vs methylbenzene. Discuss dissociation vs molecular solution. |
2M NaOH, 2M ammonia solution, universal indicator, pH chart, electrical conductivity apparatus, milliammeter, carbon electrodes
Various acids and bases from previous lessons, indicators, beakers, measuring cylinders, stirring rods HCl gas, distilled water, methylbenzene, magnesium ribbon, calcium carbonate, litmus paper, test tubes, gas absorption apparatus |
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 5-7
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 7-9 |
|
2 | 5 |
ACIDS, BASES AND SALTS
|
Effect of Solvent on Bases
Amphoteric Oxides and Hydroxides |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- Investigate effect of polar and non-polar solvents on ammonia gas -Compare ammonia behavior in water vs methylbenzene -Explain formation of ammonium hydroxide -Write equations for ammonia dissolution in water |
Class experiment: Test dry ammonia with dry litmus. Dissolve ammonia in water and test with litmus. Dissolve ammonia in methylbenzene and test with litmus. Record observations in table. Write equation for NH₃ + H₂O reaction. Explain why only aqueous ammonia shows basic properties.
|
Dry ammonia gas, distilled water, methylbenzene, red litmus paper, test tubes, gas collection apparatus
Al₂O₃, ZnO, PbO, Zn(OH)₂, Al(OH)₃, Pb(OH)₂, 2M HNO₃, 2M NaOH, boiling tubes, heating source |
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 9-10
|
|
3 | 1 |
ACIDS, BASES AND SALTS
|
Definition of Salts and Precipitation
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- Define a salt as an ionic compound -Define a precipitate -Investigate precipitation reactions -Write ionic equations showing formation of precipitates |
Q/A: Review salt definition from Book 2. Demonstrate precipitation: Add sodium carbonate to solutions containing Mg²⁺, Ca²⁺, Zn²⁺, Al³⁺, Cu²⁺, Fe²⁺, Ba²⁺, Pb²⁺ ions. Record observations. Write ionic equations for precipitate formation. Explain why Fe³⁺ and Al³⁺ give different results.
|
Na₂CO₃ solution, salt solutions containing various metal ions, test tubes, droppers
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 11-14
|
|
3 | 2 |
ACIDS, BASES AND SALTS
|
Solubility of Chlorides, Sulphates and Sulphites
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- Find out cations that form insoluble chlorides, sulphates and sulphites -Write ionic equations for formation of insoluble salts -Distinguish between sulphate and sulphite precipitates -Investigate effect of warming on precipitates |
Class experiment: Add NaCl, Na₂SO₄, Na₂SO₃ to solutions of Pb²⁺, Ba²⁺, Mg²⁺, Ca²⁺, Zn²⁺, Cu²⁺, Fe²⁺, Fe³⁺, Al³⁺. Warm mixtures. Record observations in table. Test sulphite precipitates with dilute HCl. List soluble and insoluble salts.
|
2M NaCl, 2M Na₂SO₄, 2M Na₂SO₃, 0.1M salt solutions, dilute HCl, test tubes, heating source
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 14-16
|
|
3 | 3-4 |
ACIDS, BASES AND SALTS
|
Complex Ions Formation
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- Explain formation of complex ions -Investigate reactions with excess sodium hydroxide and ammonia -Identify metal ions that form complex ions -Write equations for complex ion formation |
Class experiment: Add NaOH dropwise then in excess to Mg²⁺, Ca²⁺, Zn²⁺, Al³⁺, Cu²⁺, Fe²⁺, Fe³⁺, Pb²⁺ solutions. Repeat with NH₃ solution. Record observations showing precipitate formation and dissolution. Write equations for complex ion formation: [Zn(OH)₄]²⁻, [Al(OH)₄]⁻, [Pb(OH)₄]²⁻, [Zn(NH₃)₄]²⁺, [Cu(NH₃)₄]²⁺.
|
2M NaOH, 2M NH₃ solution, 0.5M salt solutions, test tubes, droppers
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 15-16
|
|
3 | 5 |
ACIDS, BASES AND SALTS
|
Solubility and Saturated Solutions
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- Define the term solubility -Determine solubility of a given salt at room temperature -Calculate mass of solute and solvent -Express solubility in different units |
Class experiment: Weigh evaporating dish and watch glass. Measure 20cm³ saturated KNO₃ solution. Record temperature. Evaporate to dryness carefully. Calculate masses of solute, solvent, and solution. Determine solubility per 100g water and in moles per litre. Discuss definition and significance.
|
Saturated KNO₃ solution, evaporating dish, watch glass, measuring cylinder, thermometer, balance, heating source
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 16-18
|
|
4 | 1 |
ACIDS, BASES AND SALTS
|
Effect of Temperature on Solubility
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- Investigate the effect of temperature on solubility of potassium chlorate -Record temperature at which crystals appear -Calculate solubility at different temperatures -Plot solubility curve |
Class experiment: Dissolve 4g KClO₃ in 15cm³ water by warming. Cool while stirring and note crystallization temperature. Add 5cm³ water portions and repeat until total volume is 40cm³. Calculate solubility in g/100g water for each temperature. Plot solubility vs temperature graph.
|
KClO₃, measuring cylinders, thermometer, burette, boiling tubes, heating source, graph paper
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 18-20
|
|
4 | 2 |
ACIDS, BASES AND SALTS
|
Solubility Curves and Applications
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- Plot solubility curves for various salts -Use solubility curves to determine mass of crystals formed -Apply solubility curves to practical problems -Compare solubility patterns of different salts |
Using data from textbook, plot solubility curves for KNO₃, KClO₃, NaCl, CaSO₄. Calculate mass of crystals deposited when saturated solutions are cooled. Work through examples: KClO₃ cooled from 70°C to 30°C. Discuss applications in salt extraction and purification.
|
Graph paper, ruler, pencil, calculator, data tables from textbook
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 20-21
|
|
4 | 3-4 |
ACIDS, BASES AND SALTS
|
Solubility Curves and Applications
Fractional Crystallization |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- Plot solubility curves for various salts -Use solubility curves to determine mass of crystals formed -Apply solubility curves to practical problems -Compare solubility patterns of different salts - Define fractional crystallization -Apply knowledge of solubility curves in separation of salts -Calculate masses of salts that crystallize -Explain separation of salt mixtures |
Using data from textbook, plot solubility curves for KNO₃, KClO₃, NaCl, CaSO₄. Calculate mass of crystals deposited when saturated solutions are cooled. Work through examples: KClO₃ cooled from 70°C to 30°C. Discuss applications in salt extraction and purification.
Work through separation problems using solubility data for KNO₃ and KClO₃ mixtures. Calculate which salt crystallizes first when cooled from 50°C to 20°C. Plot combined solubility curves. Discuss applications in Lake Magadi and Ngomeni salt works. Solve practice problems. |
Graph paper, ruler, pencil, calculator, data tables from textbook
Calculator, graph paper, data tables, worked examples from textbook |
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 20-21
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 21-22 |
|
4 | 5 |
ACIDS, BASES AND SALTS
|
Hardness of Water - Investigation
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- Determine the effects of various salt solutions on soap -Identify cations that cause hardness -Distinguish between hard and soft water -Investigate effect of boiling on water hardness |
Class experiment: Test soap lathering with distilled water, tap water, rainwater, and solutions of MgCl₂, NaCl, Ca(NO₃)₂, CaHCO₃, NaHCO₃, ZnSO₄. Record volumes of soap needed. Boil some solutions and retest. Compare results and identify hardness-causing ions.
|
Soap solution, burette, various salt solutions, conical flasks, distilled water, tap water, rainwater, heating source
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 22-24
|
|
5 | 1 |
ACIDS, BASES AND SALTS
|
Types and Causes of Water Hardness
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- Define temporary and permanent hardness -Explain causes of temporary hardness -Explain causes of permanent hardness -Write equations for decomposition of hydrogen carbonates |
Q/A: Review previous experiment results. Explain temporary hardness caused by Ca(HCO₃)₂ and Mg(HCO₃)₂. Write decomposition equations when boiled. Explain permanent hardness caused by CaSO₄, MgSO₄, Ca(NO₃)₂, Mg(NO₃)₂. Discuss why permanent hardness cannot be removed by boiling.
|
Student books, examples from previous experiment, chalkboard for equations
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 24-25
|
|
5 | 2 |
ACIDS, BASES AND SALTS
|
Types and Causes of Water Hardness
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- Define temporary and permanent hardness -Explain causes of temporary hardness -Explain causes of permanent hardness -Write equations for decomposition of hydrogen carbonates |
Q/A: Review previous experiment results. Explain temporary hardness caused by Ca(HCO₃)₂ and Mg(HCO₃)₂. Write decomposition equations when boiled. Explain permanent hardness caused by CaSO₄, MgSO₄, Ca(NO₃)₂, Mg(NO₃)₂. Discuss why permanent hardness cannot be removed by boiling.
|
Student books, examples from previous experiment, chalkboard for equations
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 24-25
|
|
5 | 3-4 |
ACIDS, BASES AND SALTS
|
Effects of Hard Water
Methods of Removing Hardness I |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- State disadvantages of hard water -State advantages of hard water -Explain formation of scum and fur -Discuss economic and health implications - Explain removal of hardness by boiling -Explain removal by distillation -Write equations for these processes -Compare effectiveness of different methods |
Discussion based on practical experience: Soap wastage, scum formation on clothes, fur in kettles and pipes, pipe bursting in boilers. Advantages: calcium for bones, protection of lead pipes, use in brewing. Show examples of fur deposits. Calculate economic costs of hard water in households.
Demonstrate boiling method: Boil hard water samples from previous experiments and test with soap. Write equations for Ca(HCO₃)₂ and Mg(HCO₃)₂ decomposition. Discuss distillation method using apparatus setup. Compare costs and effectiveness. Explain why boiling only removes temporary hardness. |
Samples of fur deposits, pictures of scaled pipes, calculator for cost analysis
Hard water samples, heating source, soap solution, distillation apparatus diagram |
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 24-25
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 25-26 |
|
5 | 5 |
ACIDS, BASES AND SALTS
|
Methods of Removing Hardness I
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- Explain removal of hardness by boiling -Explain removal by distillation -Write equations for these processes -Compare effectiveness of different methods |
Demonstrate boiling method: Boil hard water samples from previous experiments and test with soap. Write equations for Ca(HCO₃)₂ and Mg(HCO₃)₂ decomposition. Discuss distillation method using apparatus setup. Compare costs and effectiveness. Explain why boiling only removes temporary hardness.
|
Hard water samples, heating source, soap solution, distillation apparatus diagram
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 25-26
|
|
6 | 1 |
ACIDS, BASES AND SALTS
|
Methods of Removing Hardness II
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- Explain removal using sodium carbonate -Describe ion exchange method -Explain removal using calcium hydroxide and ammonia -Write equations for all processes |
Demonstrate addition of Na₂CO₃ to hard water - observe precipitation. Explain ion exchange using resin (NaX) showing Ca²⁺ + 2NaX → CaX₂ + 2Na⁺. Discuss regeneration with brine. Write equations for Ca(OH)₂ and NH₃ methods. Compare all methods for effectiveness and cost.
|
Na₂CO₃ solution, hard water samples, ion exchange resin diagram, Ca(OH)₂, NH₃ solution
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 25-26
|
|
6 | 2 |
CHLORINE AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Introduction and Preparation of Chlorine
Physical Properties of Chlorine |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Define chlorine and state its position in the periodic table. Describe the occurrence of chlorine in nature. Describe laboratory preparation of chlorine gas. Write balanced equations for chlorine preparation. |
Q/A: Review Group VII elements and electron configuration of chlorine ( 8.7). Discussion: Occurrence as sodium chloride in sea water and rock salt. Practical work: Experiment 6.1 - Preparation using MnO2 + concentrated HCl. Setup apparatus as in Figure 6. Safety precautions for handling chlorine gas.
|
Manganese(IV) oxide, Concentrated HCl, Gas collection apparatus, Water, Concentrated H2SO4, Blue litmus paper, Gas jars
Preserved chlorine gas, Water trough, Gas jars, Observation tables, Safety equipment |
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 195-196
|
|
6 | 3-4 |
CHLORINE AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Chemical Properties of Chlorine - Reaction with Water
Chemical Properties of Chlorine - Reaction with Metals Chemical Properties of Chlorine - Reaction with Non-metals |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Investigate the reaction of chlorine with water. Explain the formation of chlorine water. Test the acidic nature of chlorine water. Demonstrate the bleaching action of chlorine. Investigate reactions of chlorine with metals. Write balanced equations for metal-chlorine reactions. Explain the formation of metal chlorides. Demonstrate exothermic nature of these reactions. |
Practical work: Experiment 6.3 - Bubbling chlorine through water. Testing with litmus papers (dry vs moist). Testing with colored flower petals. Formation of green-yellow chlorine water. Writing equations: Cl2 + H2O → HCl + HOCl. Discussion: Formation of hypochlorous acid and hydrochloric acid.
Practical work: Experiment 6.4 - Reactions with burning magnesium, hot iron wire, dry chlorine over hot iron coil (Figure 6.2). Recording observations in Table 6. Observations: White fumes (MgCl2), glowing iron wire, black crystals (FeCl3). Discussion: Formation of higher oxidation state chlorides. Safety: Proper ventilation and eye protection. |
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 |
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 197-199
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 199-201 |
|
6 | 5 |
CHLORINE AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Oxidising Properties of Chlorine
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Investigate chlorine as an oxidizing agent. Test reactions with reducing agents. Write ionic equations for redox reactions. Identify color changes in oxidation reactions. |
Practical work: Experiment 6.6 - Bubbling chlorine through sodium sulphite solution, testing with barium nitrate and lead nitrate. Reactions with hydrogen sulphide and ammonia. Recording observations in Table 6. Color changes and precipitate formation. Writing ionic equations: SO3²⁻ + Cl2 + H2O → SO4²⁻ + 2Cl⁻ + 2H⁺.
|
Sodium sulphite solution, Barium nitrate, Lead nitrate, Hydrogen sulphide gas, Aqueous ammonia, Chlorine gas, Test tubes
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 201-202
|
|
7 | 1 |
CHLORINE AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Reaction of Chlorine with Alkali Solutions
Oxidising Properties - Displacement Reactions |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Investigate reactions of chlorine with alkalis. Compare reactions with cold dilute and hot concentrated alkalis. Write equations for formation of chlorates and hypochlorites. Explain formation of bleaching powder. |
Practical work: Experiment 6.7 - Bubbling chlorine through cold dilute NaOH and hot concentrated NaOH. Recording observations in Table 6. Formation of pale-yellow solution (cold) vs colorless solution (hot). Equations: 3Cl2 + 6NaOH → 5NaCl + NaClO3 + 3H2O (hot), Cl2 + 2NaOH → NaCl + NaClO + H2O (cold). Discussion: Industrial production of bleaching powder.
|
Sodium hydroxide solutions (dilute cold, concentrated hot), Chlorine gas, Beakers, Bunsen burner, Thermometer
Potassium bromide solution, Potassium iodide solution, Chlorine gas, Test tubes, Observation charts |
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 202-203
|
|
7 | 2 |
CHLORINE AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Test for Chloride Ions
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Carry out confirmatory tests for chloride ions. Distinguish between different chloride tests. Practice qualitative analysis techniques. Write equations for chloride ion tests. |
Practical work: Experiment 6.9 - Testing sodium chloride with concentrated H2SO4, testing with lead(II) nitrate solution. Recording observations in Table 6. Tests: White fumes with H2SO4 + ammonia test, white precipitate with Pb(NO3)2 that dissolves on warming. Writing equations: NaCl + H2SO4 → NaHSO4 + HCl, Pb²⁺ + 2Cl⁻ → PbCl
|
Sodium chloride, Concentrated H2SO4, Lead(II) nitrate solution, Aqueous ammonia, Glass rod, Test tubes, Bunsen burner
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 204-205
|
|
7 | 3-4 |
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. Describe laboratory preparation of hydrogen chloride gas. Set up apparatus for HCl preparation. Investigate physical properties of HCl gas. Explain the method of collection used. |
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.
Practical work: Experiment 6.10 - Preparation using rock salt (NaCl) + concentrated H2SO Setup apparatus as in Figure 6.3(b). Testing physical properties and recording in Table 6.6. Tests: Solubility (fountain experiment), reaction with ammonia, effect on litmus. Collection by downward delivery due to density. Writing equation: NaCl + H2SO4 → NaHSO4 + HCl. |
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
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 207-208 |
|
7 | 5 |
CHLORINE AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Hydrogen Chloride - Laboratory Preparation
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe laboratory preparation of hydrogen chloride gas. Set up apparatus for HCl preparation. Investigate physical properties of HCl gas. Explain the method of collection used. |
Practical work: Experiment 6.10 - Preparation using rock salt (NaCl) + concentrated H2SO Setup apparatus as in Figure 6.3(b). Testing physical properties and recording in Table 6.6. Tests: Solubility (fountain experiment), reaction with ammonia, effect on litmus. Collection by downward delivery due to density. Writing equation: NaCl + H2SO4 → NaHSO4 + HCl.
|
Rock salt (NaCl), Concentrated H2SO4, Gas collection apparatus, Ammonia solution, Litmus papers, Water trough, Gas jars
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 207-208
|
|
8 | 1 |
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
|
|
8 | 2 |
CHLORINE AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Large-scale Manufacture of Hydrochloric Acid
|
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. |
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.
|
Flow diagrams, Industrial photographs, Glass beads samples, Charts showing electrolysis processes, Safety equipment models
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 211-212
|
|
8 | 3-4 |
CHLORINE AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Uses of Hydrochloric Acid
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
List the industrial uses of hydrochloric acid. Explain applications in metal treatment. Describe use in water treatment and manufacturing. Relate acid properties to industrial applications. |
Discussion: Applications - rust removal and descaling, galvanizing preparation, electroplating preparation, water treatment (chlorination), sewage treatment. Manufacturing uses: dyes, drugs, photographic materials (AgCl), pH control in industries. Q/A: How acid properties make HCl suitable for these uses. Case studies: Metal cleaning processes, water purification systems.
|
Samples of rusted and cleaned metals, Photographic materials, pH control charts, Industrial application videos, Water treatment diagrams
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 212-213
|
|
8 | 5 |
CHLORINE AND ITS COMPOUNDS
|
Environmental Pollution by Chlorine Compounds and Summary
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
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. |
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.
|
Environmental pollution charts, Ozone layer diagrams, DDT restriction documents, PVC waste samples, NEMA guidelines, Summary charts of reactions
|
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 213-215
|
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