
Chemical Reactions
Authored by Lisa Thompson
Science
7th Grade
NGSS covered

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15 questions
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1.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Jamie works at a company that makes cleaning chemicals. She is trying to make a chemical that smells like flowers. She took two samples that were gases at room temperature and mixed them in a sealed container. The diagram above shows the repeating groups of atoms that make up the two starting substances.
After mixing, Jamie found two substances that smelled like flowers in the sealed container. (Nothing had escaped.) Which of the diagrams to the left shows the repeating groups of atoms that make up the ending substances?
Diagram A
Diagram B
Diagram C
Diagram D
Tags
NGSS.MS-PS1-1
NGSS.MS-PS1-5
NGSS.MS-PS1-2
2.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
A chemist mixed two samples together: a gray liquid that boils at 103°C and a colorless gas that boils at 19°C. She analyzed the results and found two ending substances. One of the ending substances was a pink liquid. This ending substance is made up of the repeating group of atoms shown above. Which of the diagrams to the left shows the repeating groups of atoms that make up the samples the chemist mixed together?
Diagram A
Diagram B
Diagram C
Diagram D
Tags
NGSS.MS-PS1-1
NGSS.MS-PS1-2
3.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Patrik works at a company that makes paper and needs a chemical to make the paper brighter. He mixed two colorless substances together in a sealed container. The diagram above shows the repeating groups of atoms that make up the two starting substances.
After mixing, Patrik found two white substances in the sealed container. (Nothing had escaped.) Which of the diagrams to the left shows the repeating groups of atoms that make up the ending substances?
Diagram A
Diagram B
Diagram C
Diagram D
Tags
NGSS.MS-PS1-1
NGSS.MS-PS1-5
NGSS.MS-PS1-2
4.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
A chemist mixed two substances together: a blue powder with no smell and a colorless liquid with a strong smell. Their repeating groups of atoms are shown above on the left. After they were mixed, the chemist analyzed the results and found two substances. One ending substance had the repeating group of atoms shown above on the right. Is the ending substance the same substance as the blue powder? What happened to the atoms of the starting substances when the ending substances formed? Be sure to explain your answers to both of these questions.
I really don't know and I am too lazy to figure it out.
The ending substance is not a different substance from the blue powder.
The ending substance is the same substance as the blue powder.
The ending substance is a different substance than the blue powder.
Tags
NGSS.MS-PS1-5
NGSS.MS-PS1-2
5.
MULTIPLE SELECT QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Sahil watched a demonstration in which a scientist combined two substances in a sealed container and analyzed the results. The ending substances did not look the same as the starting substances. Sahil was given a diagram with the repeating groups of atoms that make up the starting substances, plus information about the properties of the starting and ending substances. He created a model of the repeating groups of atoms that might make up the two ending substances. Does his model correctly show why the properties of the ending substances are different from the properties of the starting substances?
No, the model is incomplete.
No, because one atom is missing from the starting samples.
Yes, the model is completely correct.
Yes, all the atoms are still there.
Tags
NGSS.MS-PS1-1
NGSS.MS-PS1-5
NGSS.MS-PS1-2
6.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
The diagram above shows the repeating groups of atoms that make up two samples. Will the properties of the two samples likely be the same or different? (Examples of properties are smell, color, and the temperature at which a substance melts.)
The properties will likely be different because the repeating groups of atoms that make up each sample are different.
The properties will likely be different because there are more repeating groups of atoms in Sample 2.
The properties will likely be the same because the repeating groups of atoms that make up the two samples have the same number of atoms.
The properties will likely be the same because the repeating groups of atoms that make up the two samples have two of the same types of atoms.
Tags
NGSS.MS-PS1-1
7.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
The diagram above shows the repeating groups of atoms that make up two samples. Will the properties of the two samples likely be the same or different? (Examples of properties are smell, color, and the temperature at which a substance melts.)
The properties will likely be different because the repeating groups of atoms that make up each sample are different.
The properties will likely be different because there are more repeating groups of atoms in Sample 1.
The properties will likely be the same because the repeating groups of atoms that make up the two samples have one of the same types of atoms.
The properties will likely be the same because the repeating groups of atoms that make up the two samples have the same number of atoms.
Tags
NGSS.MS-PS1-1
NGSS.MS-PS1-2
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