Oh ok cheersnah kidding here take a look at these Li, Na, K, Ca, Sr, Ba, Fe (2+ & 3+), Zn are the main ones (pb is the most important to know tho fr make sho u say that u GOTTA USE lead in the flame test )
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i dont do chemisty Big Kev but i love younah kidding here take a look at these Li, Na, K, Ca, Sr, Ba, Fe (2+ & 3+), Zn are the main ones (pb is the most important to know tho fr make sho u say that u GOTTA USE lead in the flame test )
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you and big kev are my favourite bos usersi dont do chemisty Big Kev but i love you
W @chilli 412 u understood the jokei dont do chemisty Big Kev but i love you
nah bro @carrotsss ur the OG fr remember when we were studying for HSC last year it's been almost a year how fast has time flownyou and big kev are my favourite bos users
i still can’t believe how dirty they did us with that individual identity mcqnah bro @carrotsss ur the OG fr remember when we were studying for HSC last year it's been almost a year how fast has time flown
im so glad I never have to deal with SORs vague bs again that subject was so annoyingikrrr that was so sad
was that the totem onei still can’t believe how dirty they did us with that individual identity mcq
yeahwas that the totem one
I think there have been a few Qs in the past where there were no contextual clues given and needed to know flame colours in short-answers and MCQs:Students are not required to memorise flame test colours for the HSC Chemistry examination.
The syllabus does not require it, and even if a question about flame tests was included, the data would have to be provided either in the formula sheet or in the body of the question.
The HSC Chemistry examination is not testing students' ability to memorise tables of data.
The syllabus states that flame test colours are qualitative for investigation, not quantitative, and they are highly subjective.
You just have to know that flame colours are unique to a particular species, and why they are unique (the emission line spectrum).
Those were in the old syllabusI think there have been a few Qs in the past where there were no contextual clues given and needed to know flame colours in short-answers and MCQs:
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But yeah I get what you mean by focusing more on the application rather than memorising, thanks
i would assume the ones listed in the syllabus under cations?What are all the different cations flame test colours we need to memorise? (different textbooks and websites vary)
Thanks!
for precipitates just see if it’s on your data sheet, if it is then it’s insoluble (there are 2 slightly soluble ones on the data sheet too but that’s it), you don’t have to memorise anythingactually on this note,
what do we have to memorise for this section im rlly confused
in terms of ppt and complexation
theres so many flowcharts idk which one to pick as well as complexation like which ones do i remember.
Completely forgot about the syllabusi would assume the ones listed in the syllabus under cations?