_Anonymous
Member
- Joined
- Jun 30, 2017
- Messages
- 131
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2019
Got a few questions I was wondering on.
1) How does the aluminium oxide layer prevent oxidation and why is Aluminium foil good for food?
2) How does the wall exert a force let alone an equal one on a ball? Isn't it F=Ma and the Mass are different for each? How can a stationary object exert a force across? I understand Newton's third law states there's an opposite and equal reaction, but how can a stationary object exert a force when something hits it?
3) Is CH2 the same as C6H12? If so, how? Don't they have different numbers of atoms and hence create different compounds?
4) How does the ball slow down when thrown? Say ball going at 10ms^2 acceleration and mass 50g, how much would air slow it down if air resistance force was 500N? Does the acceleration of the ball decrease or does the opposite "air resistance" force have to be greater than the force of the ball for the ball to decelerate? Also, say there's a day with little to no wind and the force of Air Resistance is around 10N, if the force of a projectile is 500N; why will it eventually slow down and stop? If there's not enough of an opposite force which is strong enough to stop it, why would the ball still eventually slow down and stop? Obviously there wont be a day where the AR force is 10N, but this is just a scenario.
5) How does cutting of an object work in the molecular level? We know that metals don't break since the metallic structures prevent it to (Cations slide across a cushion of delocalised electrons). But say we had a metal-cutting band saw or something and managed to cut a piece of metal in half, how does that work? What would happen to the bonds? What caused them to break?
6) Similar to Q5, Ionic compounds tend to be brittle. How come? Aren't their bonds strong due to the opposite charges attracting each other? I understand when a force is applied the ions displace and repel each other and that causes to break the structure, but why does that happen in the first place? Why is it so easy to displace the Cation and Anions if their bonds are so strong? How is a metallic structure's bonding stronger than one of an Ionic structure? Metallic structures are Cations surrounded by a sea of delocalised Electrons, wouldn't it be easier for them to vibrate more and break apart whilst Ionic bonds are more tightly held together by the Electrostatic attraction between the Cation and Anions, hence harder for it to vibrate and break (yet somehow Ionic compounds are brittle)?
7) We were learning about Nuclear Fusion and how 4 Hydrogen atoms would create 1 Helium Atom. The equation looked something like this:
4H ---> He
but since Hydrogen has an Atomic number of 1 and a Mass number of 1, how would having 4 of them only give to create Helium? How does having 1 Proton and having 4 of those create Helium which only has 2 Protons (why not 4 Protons)?
8) What's the difference between intermolecular forces and the metallic/ionic/covalent bonding? Why do Covalent molecules have intermolecular forces between them but Covalent network substances have strong covalent bonds? What's the difference?
9) Also another question: how do semi-metals and non-metals combine to form a covalent network substance? For example Silicon Dioxide is a Covalent Network Structure (I thought Covalent meant between non-metal and non-metal)?
1) How does the aluminium oxide layer prevent oxidation and why is Aluminium foil good for food?
2) How does the wall exert a force let alone an equal one on a ball? Isn't it F=Ma and the Mass are different for each? How can a stationary object exert a force across? I understand Newton's third law states there's an opposite and equal reaction, but how can a stationary object exert a force when something hits it?
3) Is CH2 the same as C6H12? If so, how? Don't they have different numbers of atoms and hence create different compounds?
4) How does the ball slow down when thrown? Say ball going at 10ms^2 acceleration and mass 50g, how much would air slow it down if air resistance force was 500N? Does the acceleration of the ball decrease or does the opposite "air resistance" force have to be greater than the force of the ball for the ball to decelerate? Also, say there's a day with little to no wind and the force of Air Resistance is around 10N, if the force of a projectile is 500N; why will it eventually slow down and stop? If there's not enough of an opposite force which is strong enough to stop it, why would the ball still eventually slow down and stop? Obviously there wont be a day where the AR force is 10N, but this is just a scenario.
5) How does cutting of an object work in the molecular level? We know that metals don't break since the metallic structures prevent it to (Cations slide across a cushion of delocalised electrons). But say we had a metal-cutting band saw or something and managed to cut a piece of metal in half, how does that work? What would happen to the bonds? What caused them to break?
6) Similar to Q5, Ionic compounds tend to be brittle. How come? Aren't their bonds strong due to the opposite charges attracting each other? I understand when a force is applied the ions displace and repel each other and that causes to break the structure, but why does that happen in the first place? Why is it so easy to displace the Cation and Anions if their bonds are so strong? How is a metallic structure's bonding stronger than one of an Ionic structure? Metallic structures are Cations surrounded by a sea of delocalised Electrons, wouldn't it be easier for them to vibrate more and break apart whilst Ionic bonds are more tightly held together by the Electrostatic attraction between the Cation and Anions, hence harder for it to vibrate and break (yet somehow Ionic compounds are brittle)?
7) We were learning about Nuclear Fusion and how 4 Hydrogen atoms would create 1 Helium Atom. The equation looked something like this:
4H ---> He
but since Hydrogen has an Atomic number of 1 and a Mass number of 1, how would having 4 of them only give to create Helium? How does having 1 Proton and having 4 of those create Helium which only has 2 Protons (why not 4 Protons)?
8) What's the difference between intermolecular forces and the metallic/ionic/covalent bonding? Why do Covalent molecules have intermolecular forces between them but Covalent network substances have strong covalent bonds? What's the difference?
9) Also another question: how do semi-metals and non-metals combine to form a covalent network substance? For example Silicon Dioxide is a Covalent Network Structure (I thought Covalent meant between non-metal and non-metal)?
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