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Revision: Study of Compounds B. Ammonia Chemistry (English Medium) ICSE Class 10 CISCE

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Key Points

key Points: Ammonia
  • Molecular Details: Ammonia (NH₃) has a molecular mass of 17 and exhibits covalent bonding with a lone pair on nitrogen.
  • Occurrence: Found in small amounts in air and water; occurs in compounds like ammonium chloride and ammonium sulphate.
  • Formation: Produced by bacterial decomposition of urea in decaying organic matter and urine.
  • Forms of Use: Used as dry gas, liquid (under pressure), and as liquor ammonia fortis—a saturated aqueous solution with density 0.880.
  • Laboratory Use: Dilute ammonia solution is widely used as a reagent in laboratories.
Key Points: Manufacture of Ammonia
  • Reactants: Nitrogen and hydrogen in 1:3 ratio by volume.
  • Conditions: 450–500°C, 200+ atm pressure, iron catalyst with molybdenum or Al₂O₃.
  • Reaction: Reversible, exothermic, and reduces volume:
      N₂ + 3H₂ ⇌ 2NH₃ + heat
  • Yield: 15% per pass; up to 98% yield by recycling unreacted gases.
  • Purification: CO₂, CO, and H₂S must be removed to protect the catalyst.
Key Points; Physical Properties of Ammonia
Property Description
Colour Colourless gas
Smell Strong, pungent odour
Taste Slightly bitter (alkaline)
Effect Non-poisonous but irritates eyes and lungs; dangerous in large amounts
Density Vapour density = 8.5 (lighter than air)
Nature Alkaline
Liquefaction Liquefies at 10°C under 6 atm pressure
Boiling Point –33.5°C
Freezing Point –77.7°C
Solubility Highly soluble; 1 vol. water dissolves 702 vols
Key Points: Chemical Properties of Ammonia
  • Decomposition: Ammonia breaks into nitrogen and hydrogen on heating.
  • Basic Nature: Aqueous ammonia is a weak base and turns red litmus blue.
  • Burning: Does not burn in air, but burns in oxygen forming nitrogen and water.
  • Reducing Agent: Reduces hot metal oxides and chlorine.
  • Reactions: Forms ammonium salts with acids and hydroxide precipitates with metal salts.
Key Points: Uses of Ammonia
  • Refrigerant: Liquid ammonia is a good, eco-friendly refrigerant—better than harmful CFCs.
  • Cleaning & Lab Use: Used for cleaning stains and as a lab reagent to detect metal ions.
  • Fertilizers & Explosives: Used to make urea, ammonium nitrate, and other useful ammonium salts.

Important Questions [37]

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