to Society – 9th Edition
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TEST BANK
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American Chemical Society
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Comprehensive Test Bank for Instructors
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and Students
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© American Chemical Society
All rights reserved. Reproduction or distribution without permission is prohibited.
, TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chemistry in Context: Applying Chemistry to Society – 9th Edition
American Chemical Society
1. Chemistry for a Sustainable Future
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2. The Air We Breathe
3. Climate Change
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4. Energy, Chemistry, and Society
5. Water for Life
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6. Neutralizing the Threat of Acid Rain
7. The Fires of Nuclear Fission
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8. Energy from Electron Transfer
9. The World of Polymers and Plastics
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10.Manipulating Molecules and Designing Drugs
11.Nutrition: Food for Thought
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12.Genetic Engineering and the Molecules of Life
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, Chapter 01
Test Bank: Portable Electronics: The Periodic Table in the Palm of Your Hand
1. The quantity 0.0000064 g expressed in scientific notation.
A. 6.4 × 106 g
B. 6.4 × 10¯6 g
C. 6.4 × 107 g
D. 6.4 × 10¯7 g
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Bloom's Level: 3. Apply
Chapter: 01
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Section: 01.08
Subtopic: Scientific Notation
Topic: Study of Chemistry
Feedback: Negative powers of ten move the decimal to the left.
2. The quantity 8.7 × 105 g expressed in standard decimal notation.
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A. 0.000087 g
B. 870.000 g
C. 0.0000087 g
D. 870,000 g
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Bloom's Level: 3. Apply
Chapter: 01
Section: 01.08
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Subtopic: Measurements
Subtopic: Scientific Notation
Topic: Study of Chemistry
Feedback: Positive powers of ten move the decimal to the right.
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3. A substance that can be broken down into two or more simpler substances by chemical methods is called a(n)
A. compound.
B. mixture.
C. element.
D. isotope.
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Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
Chapter: 01
Section: 01.01
Subtopic: Classification of Matter
Subtopic: Fundamental Definitions
Topic: Components of Matter
Topic: Study of Chemistry
Feedback: Mixtures are separable by physical means.
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4. On a Periodic Table, the columns of elements with similar properties are
A. periods.
B. groups.
C. rows.
D. metals.
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Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
Chapter: 01
Section: 01.01
Subtopic: Periodic Table
Topic: Components of Matter
Topic: Study of Chemistry
Feedback: Periods and rows go across.
5. The most numerous of the elements are the
A. metals.
B. nonmetals.
C. metalloids.
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Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of
McGraw-Hill Education.
, D. noble gases.
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Bloom's Level: 1. Remember
Chapter: 01
Section: 01.01
Subtopic: Periodic Table
Topic: Components of Matter
Feedback: These are green in the periodic table in your textbook.
6. Which is not a mixture?
A. A jar filled with rocks and sand
B. Sea water
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C. A glass of Kool-Aid
D. Sodium chloride
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Bloom's Level: 2. Understand
Chapter: 01
Section: 01.01
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Subtopic: Fundamental Definitions
Subtopic: Properties of Matter
Topic: Components of Matter
Mixtures include more than one pure substance.
7. Which is not a pure substance?
A. Helium
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B. Copper wire
C. Air
D. Sucrose
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Bloom's Level: 2. Understand
Chapter: 01
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Section: 01.01
Subtopic: Properties of Matter
Topic: Components of Matter
Feedback: Mixtures are not pure substances.
8. Which squares contain mixtures?
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A. II and III only
B. III and IV only
C. I, III, and IV only
D. I and IV only
Bloom's Level: 3. Apply
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Chapter: 01
Section: 01.01
Subtopic: Molecules
Subtopic: Properties of Matter
Topic: Components of Matter
Feedback: Mixtures will have different substances in the same box.
9. Which square(s) contain(s) only an element?
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Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of
McGraw-Hill Education.