This document appears to be an exam for a Physical and Applied Chemistry course, containing multiple choice and short answer questions. It covers topics like octane number, Kevlar, partition chromatography, NMR spectroscopy, the Tyndall effect, applications of nanomaterials in medicine, the differences between soda glass and pyrex glass, thin layer chromatography, the Hardy-Schulze rule, atom economy, normal modes of vibration of water molecules, requirements of a good dye, classification of polymers and nanomaterials, molecular energy diagrams, purification of sols, consequences and control of global warming, classification of chromatographic techniques, and types of spectroscopic techniques. Students must answer short questions in 2-3 sentences each and longer questions in paragraph form
This document appears to be an exam for a Physical and Applied Chemistry course, containing multiple choice and short answer questions. It covers topics like octane number, Kevlar, partition chromatography, NMR spectroscopy, the Tyndall effect, applications of nanomaterials in medicine, the differences between soda glass and pyrex glass, thin layer chromatography, the Hardy-Schulze rule, atom economy, normal modes of vibration of water molecules, requirements of a good dye, classification of polymers and nanomaterials, molecular energy diagrams, purification of sols, consequences and control of global warming, classification of chromatographic techniques, and types of spectroscopic techniques. Students must answer short questions in 2-3 sentences each and longer questions in paragraph form
This document appears to be an exam for a Physical and Applied Chemistry course, containing multiple choice and short answer questions. It covers topics like octane number, Kevlar, partition chromatography, NMR spectroscopy, the Tyndall effect, applications of nanomaterials in medicine, the differences between soda glass and pyrex glass, thin layer chromatography, the Hardy-Schulze rule, atom economy, normal modes of vibration of water molecules, requirements of a good dye, classification of polymers and nanomaterials, molecular energy diagrams, purification of sols, consequences and control of global warming, classification of chromatographic techniques, and types of spectroscopic techniques. Students must answer short questions in 2-3 sentences each and longer questions in paragraph form
I. Answer the following questions in two or three sentences
(Each question carries 2 Marks): (Ceiling 20 Marks) 1. What is octane number? What is its significance? 2. What is Kevlar? Give two uses of Kevlar. 3. Explain partition coefficient in partition chromatography. 4. What is spin-spin splitting in NMR spectroscopy? 5. What is Tyndall effect? 6. Write a note on applications of nanomaterials in medicine. 7. Differentiate soda glass and pyrex glass. 8. What is TLC? Give any two advantages of this technique. 9. Define Hardy-Schulze rule. Give an example. 10. What is atom economy? Give one example. 11. Draw the normal modes of vibration of water molecule. 12. What are the requirements of a good dye?
II. Answer the following questions in a paragraph
(Each question carries 5 Marks): (Ceiling 30 Marks) 13. How do polymers classified according to their molecular forces? 14. Explain various quantized energy levels in molecules with the help of molecular energy diagram. 15. Describe the methods adopted for the purification of sols. 16. How do nanomaterials classified according to their dimension? 17. What are the consequences and control measures of global warming? 18. Explain the classification of chromatographic techniques. 19. What are the different kinds of spectroscopic techniques available based on their basic principles?
III. Write an essay on any one of the following: (1 x 10 = 10 Marks)
20. Explain different types of food additives and its role in foods. 21. Give a detailed explanation of various air pollutants. Write a note on pollution due to plastics.