Paper IPaper I · General Science
Chemistry in Everyday Life
States of matter, atomic structure and subatomic particles, the periodic table, acids bases salts and pH, metals non-metals and metalloids, common compounds and their uses, fuels and polymers, with discoverers, formulae and applications at CAPF recognition depth
CAPF wiki•12 min read•21 sections
At a glance
PaperPaper ISubjectGeneral ScienceSyllabusGeneral Science: general awareness, scientific temper, comprehension and appreciation of scientific phenomena of everyday observation, including new areas such as Information Technology, Biotechnology, and Environmental ScienceImportanceHigh
ChemistryAtomSubatomic ParticlesPeriodic TableAcidsBasesSaltsPh
Chemistry in CAPF rewards a small set of clean static facts: the three subatomic particles and who found them, the modern periodic law, where the noble gases and halogens sit, the pH of familiar substances, and the everyday name and use of a common compound (baking soda, washing soda, bleaching powder, plaster of Paris). The exam does not ask you to balance equations; it asks you to match a common name to its chemical name, to read a litmus colour change, or to place an element in the right group. The depth target is NCERT Class IX and X, with a few Class VIII level basics. Lock down the common-name table and the pH scale and you cover most of the chemistry questions in Paper I.
- Matter exists as solid (fixed shape and volume, particles closely packed), liquid (fixed volume, takes the shape of its container) and gas (no fixed shape or volume, particles far apart). The fourth state is plasma (an ionised gas, found in the Sun, stars and lightning); a fifth, the Bose-Einstein condensate, exists near absolute zero.
- Changes of state: melting (solid to liquid), freezing, evaporation, boiling, condensation, and sublimation (solid directly to vapour, as in camphor, naphthalene balls, ammonium chloride and dry ice).
- Matter is classified into pure substances (elements and compounds) and mixtures (homogeneous, such as a salt solution, and heterogeneous, such as sand in water). An element cannot be broken into simpler substances; a compound has elements chemically combined in a fixed ratio; a mixture can be separated by physical means.
- An atom has a tiny dense central nucleus of protons (positive charge) and neutrons (no charge), with electrons (negative charge) revolving in shells around it.
- Electron discovered by J. J. Thomson (1897); proton by Ernest Rutherford (whose gold-foil experiment revealed the nucleus); neutron by James Chadwick (1932).
- Atomic number (Z) is the number of protons; it defines the element. Mass number (A) is protons plus neutrons.
- Isotopes have the same atomic number but different mass numbers (carbon-12 and carbon-14; uranium-235 and uranium-238 matter for nuclear technology, see space and defence technology). Isobars have the same mass number but different atomic numbers.
- Valency is the combining capacity of an element, set by the electrons in its outermost shell. Atoms combine to attain a stable noble-gas configuration (the octet rule).
- Dmitri Mendeleev arranged the earlier periodic table by increasing atomic mass and left gaps for undiscovered elements. The modern periodic law (Henry Moseley) states that the properties of elements are a periodic function of their atomic number.
- The modern table has 18 groups (vertical columns) and 7 periods (horizontal rows).
- Across a period (left to right) metallic character decreases and the atom gets smaller; down a group metallic character increases and the atom gets larger.
- Group 1 are the alkali metals (sodium, potassium), highly reactive. Group 17 are the halogens (fluorine, chlorine). Group 18 are the noble or inert gases (helium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon, radon), almost non-reactive with full outer shells. Hydrogen is placed separately as it shows mixed behaviour.
- An acid releases hydrogen ions (H+) in water and turns blue litmus red; it tastes sour. A base releases hydroxide ions (OH-) and turns red litmus blue; it tastes bitter and feels soapy. A base soluble in water is an alkali.
- A neutralisation reaction between an acid and a base gives a salt and water.
- The pH scale runs from 0 to 14: below 7 is acidic, exactly 7 is neutral (pure water), above 7 is basic or alkaline. The lower the pH, the stronger the acid. The pH concept was given by Sorensen.
- Common acids: hydrochloric acid (gastric acid in the stomach), sulphuric acid (the "king of chemicals"), nitric acid, acetic acid (vinegar), citric acid (citrus fruit), tartaric acid (tamarind), formic acid (ant and bee sting), lactic acid (curd), oxalic acid (spinach).
- Common bases: sodium hydroxide (caustic soda), potassium hydroxide, calcium hydroxide (slaked lime), magnesium hydroxide (milk of magnesia, an antacid), ammonium hydroxide.
- Metals are generally lustrous, malleable, ductile, sonorous and good conductors of heat and electricity (iron, copper, aluminium, gold, silver). Mercury is the only metal liquid at room temperature.
- Non-metals are generally dull, brittle and poor conductors (sulphur, carbon, oxygen, nitrogen). A key exception is graphite, a non-metal that conducts electricity; diamond and graphite are both pure carbon (allotropes).
- Metalloids (silicon, germanium, arsenic) have intermediate properties and are vital semiconductors for electronics, see information technology and computing.
- The reactivity series ranks metals from most reactive (potassium, sodium) to least reactive (gold, platinum). A more reactive metal displaces a less reactive one from its salt.
- Corrosion: rusting of iron needs both air (oxygen) and moisture (water); rust is hydrated iron oxide. It is prevented by galvanisation (zinc coating), painting, greasing, oiling or making alloys such as stainless steel.
- Alloys are mixtures of metals (or a metal with a non-metal) with improved properties: brass (copper and zinc), bronze (copper and tin), steel (iron and carbon), stainless steel (iron, chromium, nickel), solder (lead and tin).
- Carbon forms millions of compounds through catenation (chains and rings) and forms four covalent bonds. Allotropes of carbon include diamond (hardest natural substance), graphite (conductor, used as a lubricant and in pencil leads) and fullerene.
- Hydrocarbons are compounds of carbon and hydrogen; petroleum and natural gas are their main sources.
- Fuels: LPG (liquefied petroleum gas, mainly butane and propane) is the common cooking gas; CNG (compressed natural gas, mainly methane) is a cleaner vehicle fuel; an odorant (ethyl mercaptan) is added to detect gas leaks. The calorific value measures heat released per unit mass.
- Polymers are large molecules made of repeating units: natural (cellulose, rubber, proteins) and synthetic (polythene, PVC, nylon, polyester, bakelite). Plastics are durable but cause pollution, see environment and ecology.
| Item |
Fact |
| Electron discovered by |
J. J. Thomson (1897), negative charge |
| Proton discovered by |
Ernest Rutherford, positive charge |
| Neutron discovered by |
James Chadwick (1932), no charge |
| Atomic number (Z) |
number of protons, defines the element |
| Mass number (A) |
protons plus neutrons |
| Isotopes |
same atomic number, different mass number |
| Isobars |
same mass number, different atomic number |
| Modern periodic law |
properties are a periodic function of atomic number (Moseley) |
| Periodic table layout |
18 groups, 7 periods |
| Noble gases |
group 18 (helium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon, radon) |
| Halogens |
group 17 (fluorine, chlorine) |
| Alkali metals |
group 1 (sodium, potassium) |
| Item |
Fact |
| Acid turns |
blue litmus red |
| Base turns |
red litmus blue |
| pH of pure water |
7 (neutral) |
| Acidic pH |
below 7 |
| Basic or alkaline pH |
above 7 |
| Acid plus base gives |
salt plus water (neutralisation) |
| Stomach acid |
hydrochloric acid (HCl) |
| King of chemicals |
sulphuric acid |
| Vinegar acid |
acetic acid |
| Antacid example |
milk of magnesia (magnesium hydroxide) |
| Item |
Fact |
| Only liquid metal at room temperature |
mercury |
| Non-metal that conducts |
graphite |
| Hardest natural substance |
diamond (pure carbon) |
| Rusting needs |
air (oxygen) and moisture (water) |
| Rust prevention by zinc coating |
galvanisation |
| Brass |
copper and zinc |
| Bronze |
copper and tin |
| Stainless steel |
iron, chromium, nickel |
| Semiconductor elements |
silicon, germanium |
- Isotopes of uranium (U-235, fissile; U-238) are the fuel base of nuclear reactors and weapons; enrichment raises the U-235 fraction. See space and defence technology for fission, fusion and the Indian nuclear programme.
- Heavy water (deuterium oxide) is a moderator in some Indian reactors; its production is a strategic capability.
- Explosives such as TNT, RDX and ammonium nitrate are chemistry-based; their detection and regulation matter for internal security and bomb disposal.
- Chemical weapons (nerve and blister agents) are banned under the Chemical Weapons Convention; the CAPFs train in chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear (CBRN) defence.
- Tear gas (CS gas) and smoke agents are crowd-control chemistry used by paramilitary forces.
Q1The chemical name of baking soda is
- Asodium carbonate
- Bsodium chloride
- Csodium hydrogen carbonate
- Dcalcium carbonate. Answer:
- C. Washing soda is sodium carbonate; baking soda is sodium hydrogen carbonate (NaHCO3).
Q2Which one is a non-metal that conducts electricity?
- Asulphur
- Bgraphite
- Cphosphorus
- Diodine. Answer:
- B. Graphite, an allotrope of carbon, conducts electricity.
Q3The pH of pure water at room temperature is
- A0
- B7
- C10
- D14. Answer:
- B. Pure water is neutral with a pH of 7.
Q4Rusting of iron requires
- Aonly oxygen
- Bonly water
- Cboth air and moisture
- Donly carbon dioxide. Answer:
- C. Rust is hydrated iron oxide, needing both oxygen and water.
Q5The neutron was discovered by
- AJ. J. Thomson
- BErnest Rutherford
- CJames Chadwick
- DNiels Bohr. Answer:
- C. Chadwick discovered the neutron in 1932.
- Atomic number versus mass number: atomic number is protons only; mass number is protons plus neutrons.
- Isotopes versus isobars: isotopes share atomic number, differ in mass; isobars share mass number, differ in atomic number.
- Baking soda versus washing soda: baking soda is sodium hydrogen carbonate (NaHCO3); washing soda is sodium carbonate (Na2CO3.10H2O).
- Acid versus base on litmus: acid turns blue litmus red; base turns red litmus blue.
- Element versus compound versus mixture: an element is one kind of atom; a compound has fixed-ratio chemical bonding; a mixture is physically combined and separable.
- Quicklime versus slaked lime: quicklime is calcium oxide (CaO); slaked lime is calcium hydroxide (Ca(OH)2), made by adding water to quicklime.
- Particle discoverers: "Thomson the electron, Rutherford the proton, Chadwick the neutron" (T, R, C).
- "Acid turns blue to red; base turns red to blue" reads as a swap, easy to recall as opposites.
- "Brass is zinc and copper, bronze is tin and copper" (z for zinc, t for tin) keeps the alloys apart.
- pH: "7 is neutral, low is sour (acidic), high is soapy (basic)."
- Electron is Thomson (1897), proton is Rutherford, neutron is Chadwick (1932).
- Atomic number is protons and defines the element; isotopes differ only in neutrons.
- Modern periodic law (Moseley) orders by atomic number; the table has 18 groups and 7 periods.
- Acid turns blue litmus red and has pH below 7; base turns red litmus blue and has pH above 7; pure water is 7.
- Baking soda is sodium hydrogen carbonate; washing soda is sodium carbonate; bleaching powder disinfects water; plaster of Paris is for casts.
- Graphite is the conducting non-metal; mercury is the only liquid metal; rusting needs air and moisture, prevented by galvanisation.
- Plasma is the fourth state of matter; sublimation is solid directly to vapour (camphor, dry ice).
- Electron is Thomson, proton is Rutherford, neutron is Chadwick.
- Atomic number is the proton count and defines the element; isotopes differ in neutrons.
- The modern periodic law (Moseley) orders elements by atomic number; 18 groups and 7 periods.
- Group 1 are alkali metals, group 17 halogens, group 18 noble gases.
- Acids release H+ and turn blue litmus red; bases release OH- and turn red litmus blue.
- pH below 7 is acidic, 7 is neutral, above 7 is basic; stomach acid is hydrochloric acid.
- Neutralisation gives salt plus water; sulphuric acid is the king of chemicals.
- Baking soda is sodium hydrogen carbonate; washing soda is sodium carbonate.
- Bleaching powder disinfects water; plaster of Paris is used for casts and ceilings.
- Graphite is the non-metal that conducts; mercury is the only liquid metal at room temperature.
- Rusting of iron needs air and moisture; galvanisation (zinc coating) prevents it.
- Brass is copper and zinc; bronze is copper and tin; stainless steel adds chromium and nickel.
- Silicon and germanium are semiconductors used in electronics.
- LPG is mainly butane and propane; CNG is mainly methane; an odorant is added to detect leaks.
- Diamond and graphite are allotropes of carbon; diamond is the hardest natural substance.
- Atom: the smallest particle of an element that retains its chemical identity.
- Isotope: an atom of the same element with the same protons but a different number of neutrons.
- Valency: the combining capacity of an element, set by outer-shell electrons.
- Acid: a substance that releases hydrogen ions in water and turns blue litmus red.
- Base: a substance that releases hydroxide ions in water and turns red litmus blue.
- pH: a scale from 0 to 14 measuring acidity or alkalinity; 7 is neutral.
- Neutralisation: the reaction of an acid with a base to give salt and water.
- Allotrope: different physical forms of the same element (diamond and graphite of carbon).
- Alloy: a mixture of a metal with one or more other elements for improved properties.
- Corrosion: the slow eating away of a metal by reaction with its environment (rusting of iron).
- Sublimation: the direct change of a solid into vapour without melting.
- Semiconductor: a material such as silicon with conductivity between a metal and an insulator.
- Polymer: a large molecule built from many repeating units.
- Catenation: the ability of carbon atoms to bond into chains and rings.