Answers to AQA GCSE biofuels
Practice Questions
1.Both coal and wood come from living organisms, but only wood is classed as a biofuel. Explain why wood is a biofuel, but coal is not.
Coal is formed over millions of years, so it is not a biofuel. Wood comes from trees which is a recently living organism, so it is a biofuel.
2.Suggest why it is important to maintain the temperature in biogas generator.
Bacteria use enzymes to carry out decomposition. If the temperature is too low, then rate of reaction is too slow for decomposition to occur. If the temperature is too high, bacteria are killed and their enzymes are denatured.
3. What is the environmental advantage of using biogas to heat our homes compared to natural gas?
When biogas and natural gas are burnt, they both produce carbon dioxide. However, the biogas is carbon neutral because the next set of crops that are grown to provide the animal feed will take in carbon dioxide.
4.Explain why ethanol produced by fermentation is classed as carbon neutral.
Sugar cane that is grown to produce the ethanol through fermentation will take in carbon dioxide. The amount of carbon dixoide that is produced by burning the ethanol, is equal to the amount of carbon dioxide that is absorbed by the sugar cane during growing process.
Absorption and Emission of EM Radiation
JJ Thomson and Plum pudding model
Ernest Rutherford and the Nuclear Model
Niels Bohr changing the Nuclear Model
Discovering the Proton and Neutron
Measuring radiation from radioactivity
Radiation types and properties
Random nature of radioactive decay
Radioactive contamination or irradiation
Hazards of contamination and irradiation
Studies on the effects of radiation on humans
Different half lives of radioactive isotopes
Nuclear Fission Chain Reaction
Writing nuclear fission equations