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WK LSN TOPIC SUB-TOPIC OBJECTIVES T/L ACTIVITIES T/L AIDS REFERENCE REMARKS
1 4
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY I
Introduction to Organic Chemistry and Hydrocarbons
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Define organic chemistry and hydrocarbons
Explain why carbon forms many compounds
Classify hydrocarbons into alkanes, alkenes, and alkynes
Identify the bonding in carbon compounds
Teacher exposition: Definition of organic chemistry. Discussion: Unique properties of carbon - tetravalency, catenation, multiple bonding. Q/A: Examples of hydrocarbons in daily life. Introduction to three main groups of hydrocarbons.
Carbon models, Hydrocarbon structure charts, Molecular model kits
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 86-87
1 5
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY I
Sources of Alkanes - Natural Gas, Biogas, and Crude Oil
Fractional Distillation of Crude Oil
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Identify natural sources of alkanes
Describe composition of natural gas and biogas
Explain crude oil as major source of alkanes
Describe biogas digester and its operation
Discussion: Natural gas composition (80% methane). Explanation: Biogas formation from organic waste decomposition. Teacher demonstration: Biogas digester model/diagram. Q/A: Environmental benefits of biogas production.
Biogas digester model/diagram, Natural gas composition charts, Organic waste samples
Crude oil sample, Boiling tubes, High-temperature thermometer, Sand/porcelain chips, Bunsen burner, Test tubes
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 86-87
2 1
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY I
Cracking of Alkanes - Thermal and Catalytic Methods
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Define cracking of alkanes
Distinguish between thermal and catalytic cracking
Write equations for cracking reactions
Explain industrial importance of cracking
Teacher exposition: Definition and purpose of cracking. Discussion: Thermal vs catalytic cracking conditions. Worked examples: Cracking equations producing smaller alkanes, alkenes, and hydrogen. Q/A: Industrial applications and hydrogen production.
Cracking process diagrams, Chemical equation charts, Catalyst samples for demonstration
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 89-90
2 2
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY I
Alkane Series and Homologous Series Concept
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Define homologous series using alkanes
Write molecular formulas for first 10 alkanes
Identify characteristics of homologous series
Apply general formula CₙH₂ₙ₊₂ for alkanes
Teacher exposition: Homologous series definition and characteristics. Table completion: Names, molecular formulas, and structures of first 10 alkanes. Discussion: General formula application. Pattern recognition: Gradual change in physical properties.
Alkane series chart, Molecular formula worksheets, Periodic table
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 90-92
2 3-4
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY I
Nomenclature of Alkanes - Straight Chain and Branched
Isomerism in Alkanes - Structural Isomers
Laboratory Preparation of Methane
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Name straight-chain alkanes using IUPAC rules
Identify parent chains in branched alkanes
Name branched alkanes with substituent groups
Apply systematic naming rules correctly
Define isomerism in alkanes
Draw structural isomers of butane and pentane
Distinguish between chain and positional isomerism
Predict number of isomers for given alkanes
Teacher demonstration: Step-by-step naming of branched alkanes. Rules application: Longest chain identification, numbering from nearest branch, substituent naming. Practice exercises: Various branched alkane structures. Group work: Name complex branched alkanes.
Teacher exposition: Isomerism definition and types. Practical exercise: Draw all isomers of butane and pentane. Discussion: Physical property differences between isomers. Model building: Use molecular models to show isomeric structures.
Structural formula charts, IUPAC naming rules poster, Molecular model kits
Molecular model kits, Isomerism charts, Structural formula worksheets
Sodium ethanoate, Soda lime, Round-bottomed flask, Gas collection apparatus, Bromine water, Wooden splints
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 90-92
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 92-94
2 5
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY I
Laboratory Preparation of Ethane
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Prepare ethane using sodium propanoate and soda lime
Compare preparation methods of methane and ethane
Test properties of ethane gas
Write general equation for alkane preparation
Experiment: Prepare ethane from sodium propanoate and soda lime. Compare with methane preparation method. Carry out similar tests as for methane. Discussion: General pattern for alkane preparation from sodium alkanoates.
Sodium propanoate, Soda lime, Gas collection apparatus, Testing materials
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 94-96
3 1
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY I
Physical Properties of Alkanes
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe physical properties of alkanes
Explain trends in melting and boiling points
Relate molecular size to physical properties
Compare solubility in different solvents
Data analysis: Study table of physical properties of first 10 alkanes. Graph plotting: Boiling points vs number of carbon atoms. Discussion: Intermolecular forces and property trends. Q/A: Solubility patterns in polar and non-polar solvents.
Physical properties data tables, Graph paper, Calculators, Solubility demonstration materials
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 96-97
3 2
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY I
Chemical Properties of Alkanes - Combustion and Substitution
Uses of Alkanes in Industry and Daily Life
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Write equations for complete and incomplete combustion
Explain substitution reactions with halogens
Describe conditions for halogenation reactions
Name halogenated alkane products
Worked examples: Combustion equations for various alkanes. Teacher demonstration: Methane + bromine in sunlight (or simulation). Discussion: Free radical mechanism in substitution. Practice: Write equations for chlorination of methane.
Molecular models, Halogenation reaction charts, Chemical equation worksheets
Industrial application charts, Product samples, Environmental impact materials
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 97-98
3 3-4
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY I
Introduction to Alkenes and Functional Groups
Nomenclature of Alkenes
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Define alkenes and unsaturation
Identify the C=C functional group
Write general formula for alkenes (CₙH₂ₙ)
Compare alkenes with alkanes
Apply IUPAC rules for naming alkenes
Number carbon chains to give lowest numbers to double bonds
Name branched alkenes with substituents
Distinguish position isomers of alkenes
Teacher exposition: Alkenes definition and unsaturation concept. Introduction: C=C double bond as functional group. Table study: First 6 members of alkene series. Comparison: Alkenes vs alkanes - formulas and structures.
Teacher demonstration: Step-by-step naming of alkenes. Rules application: Longest chain with double bond, numbering from end nearest double bond. Practice exercises: Name various alkene structures. Group work: Complex branched alkenes with substituents.
Alkene series charts, Molecular models showing double bonds, Functional group posters
IUPAC naming charts for alkenes, Structural formula worksheets, Molecular model kits
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 100-101
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 101-102
3 5
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY I
Isomerism in Alkenes - Branching and Positional
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Draw structural isomers of alkenes
Distinguish between branching and positional isomerism
Identify geometric isomers in alkenes
Predict isomer numbers for given molecular formulas
Practical exercise: Draw all isomers of butene and pentene. Teacher exposition: Branching vs positional isomerism in alkenes. Model building: Use molecular models for isomer visualization. Discussion: Geometric isomerism introduction (basic level).
Molecular model kits, Isomerism worksheets, Geometric isomer models
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 102
4 1
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY I
Laboratory Preparation of Ethene
Alternative Preparation of Ethene and Physical Properties
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Prepare ethene by dehydration of ethanol
Describe role of concentrated sulfuric acid
Set up apparatus safely for ethene preparation
Test physical and chemical properties of ethene
Experiment: Dehydration of ethanol using concentrated H₂SO₄ at 170°C. Use sand bath for controlled heating. Pass gas through NaOH to remove impurities. Tests: Bromine water, acidified KMnO₄, combustion. Safety precautions with concentrated acid.
Ethanol, Concentrated H₂SO₄, Round-bottomed flask, Sand bath, Gas collection apparatus, Testing solutions
Aluminum oxide catalyst, Glass wool, Alternative apparatus setup, Physical properties charts
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 102-104
4 2
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY I
Chemical Properties of Alkenes - Addition Reactions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Explain addition reactions due to C=C double bond
Write equations for halogenation of alkenes
Describe hydrogenation and hydrohalogenation
Explain addition mechanism
Teacher exposition: Addition reactions definition and mechanism. Worked examples: Ethene + Cl₂, Br₂, HBr, H₂. Discussion: Markovnikov's rule for unsymmetrical addition. Practice: Various addition reaction equations.
Addition reaction charts, Mechanism diagrams, Chemical equation worksheets
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 105-107
4 3-4
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY I
Oxidation Reactions of Alkenes and Polymerization
Tests for Alkenes and Uses
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe oxidation by KMnO₄ and K₂Cr₂O₇
Explain polymerization of ethene
Define monomers and polymers
Write equations for polymer formation
Perform chemical tests to identify alkenes
Use bromine water and KMnO₄ as test reagents
List industrial and domestic uses of alkenes
Explain importance in plastic manufacture
Demonstration: Decolorization of KMnO₄ by alkenes. Teacher exposition: Polymerization process and polymer formation. Examples: Ethene → polyethene formation. Discussion: Industrial importance of polymerization. Practice: Write polymerization equations.
Practical session: Test known alkenes with bromine water and acidified KMnO₄. Observe rapid decolorization compared to alkanes. Discussion: Uses in plastics, ethanol production, fruit ripening, detergents. Assignment: Research alkene applications.
Oxidizing agents for demonstration, Polymer samples, Polymerization charts, Monomer-polymer models
Test alkenes, Bromine water, Acidified KMnO₄, Plastic samples, Uses reference charts
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 107-108
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 108-109
4 5
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY I
Introduction to Alkynes and Triple Bond
Nomenclature and Isomerism in Alkynes
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Define alkynes and triple bond structure
Write general formula for alkynes (CₙH₂ₙ₋₂)
Identify first members of alkyne series
Compare degree of unsaturation in hydrocarbons
Teacher exposition: Alkynes definition and C≡C triple bond. Table study: First 6 members of alkyne series with structures. Discussion: Degrees of unsaturation - alkanes vs alkenes vs alkynes. Model demonstration: Triple bond representation.
Alkyne series charts, Triple bond molecular models, Unsaturation comparison charts
IUPAC naming rules for alkynes, Structural formula worksheets, Molecular model kits
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 109-110
5 1
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY I
Laboratory Preparation of Ethyne
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Prepare ethyne from calcium carbide and water
Set up gas collection apparatus safely
Test physical and chemical properties of ethyne
Write equation for ethyne preparation
Experiment: Calcium carbide + water reaction. Use sand layer for heat absorption. Collect ethyne over water. Tests: Color, smell, combustion, bromine water, acidified KMnO₄. Safety: Dry apparatus, controlled water addition.
Calcium carbide, Sand, Flat-bottomed flask, Dropping funnel, Gas collection apparatus, Testing solutions
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 111-112
5 2
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY I
Physical and Chemical Properties of Alkynes
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe physical properties of alkynes
Compare alkyne properties with alkenes and alkanes
Write combustion equations for alkynes
Explain addition reactions of alkynes
Data analysis: Physical properties of alkynes table. Comparison: Alkynes vs alkenes vs alkanes properties. Worked examples: Combustion reactions of ethyne. Teacher exposition: Two-step addition reactions due to triple bond.
Physical properties charts, Comparison tables, Combustion equation examples
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 112-113
5 3-4
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY I
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY I
NITROGEN AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Addition Reactions of Alkynes and Chemical Tests
Uses of Alkynes and Industrial Applications
Introduction to Nitrogen - Properties and Occurrence
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Write equations for halogenation of alkynes
Describe hydrogenation and hydrohalogenation
Compare reaction rates: alkynes vs alkenes
Perform chemical tests for alkynes
List industrial uses of alkynes
Explain oxy-acetylene welding applications
Describe use in synthetic fiber production
Evaluate importance as chemical starting materials
Worked examples: Two-step addition reactions of ethyne with Br₂, Cl₂, H₂. Discussion: Faster reaction rates in alkynes compared to alkenes. Practical session: Test alkynes with oxidizing agents. Comparison: Rate of decolorization vs alkenes.
Discussion: Industrial applications of alkynes in adhesives, plastics, synthetic fibers. Teacher demonstration: Oxy-acetylene flame principles (or video). Q/A: Starting materials for chemical synthesis. Assignment: Research local industrial uses.
Addition reaction charts, Chemical equation worksheets, Test solutions, Stopwatch for rate comparison
Industrial application charts, Welding equipment demonstration/video, Synthetic fiber samples
Periodic table charts, Atmospheric composition diagrams, Molecular models showing N≡N triple bond
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 113-115
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 115-116
5 5
NITROGEN AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Isolation of Nitrogen from Air - Industrial and Laboratory Methods
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe isolation of nitrogen from air
Explain fractional distillation of liquid air
Set up apparatus for laboratory isolation
Identify impurities removed during isolation
Experiment: Laboratory isolation using aspirator. Pass air through KOH solution to remove CO₂, then over heated copper to remove oxygen. Teacher demonstration: Fractional distillation principles. Flow chart study: Industrial nitrogen production steps.
Aspirator, KOH solution, Copper turnings, Heating apparatus, Fractional distillation flow chart
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 119-121
6 1
NITROGEN AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Laboratory Preparation of Nitrogen Gas
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Prepare nitrogen gas from ammonium compounds
Use sodium nitrite and ammonium chloride method
Test physical and chemical properties of nitrogen
Write equations for nitrogen preparation
Experiment: Mix sodium nitrite (7g) and ammonium chloride ( 5g) with water. Heat gently and collect gas over water. Tests: Color, smell, burning splint, litmus paper, lime water, burning Mg and S. Safety precautions during heating.
Sodium nitrite, Ammonium chloride, Round-bottomed flask, Gas collection apparatus, Test reagents, Deflagrating spoon
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 121-123
6 2
NITROGEN AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Properties and Uses of Nitrogen Gas
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe physical properties of nitrogen
Explain chemical inertness of nitrogen
Describe reactions at high temperatures
List industrial uses of nitrogen
Analysis of test results: Colorless, odorless, does not burn or support combustion. Discussion: Triple bond strength and chemical inertness. High temperature reactions with metals forming nitrides. Uses: Haber process, light bulbs, refrigerant, inert atmosphere.
Property summary charts, Uses of nitrogen displays, Industrial application diagrams
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 121-123
6 3-4
NITROGEN AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Nitrogen(I) Oxide - Preparation and Properties
Nitrogen(II) Oxide - Preparation and Properties
Nitrogen(IV) Oxide - Preparation and Properties
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Prepare nitrogen(I) oxide from ammonium nitrate
Test physical and chemical properties
Explain decomposition and oxidizing properties
Describe uses of nitrogen(I) oxide
Prepare nitrogen(IV) oxide from copper and concentrated nitric acid
Prepare from thermal decomposition of nitrates
Test properties including equilibrium with N₂O₄
Describe reactions and uses
Experiment: Heat ammonium nitrate carefully in test tube. Collect gas over warm water. Tests: Color, smell, glowing splint test, reaction with heated copper and sulfur. Safety: Stop heating while some solid remains to avoid explosion.
Experiment: Add concentrated HNO₃ to copper turnings. Collect red-brown gas by downward delivery. Alternative: Heat lead(II) nitrate with cooling U-tube. Tests: Solubility, effect on litmus, burning elements, cooling/heating effects.
Ammonium nitrate, Test tubes, Gas collection apparatus, Copper turnings, Sulfur, Glowing splints
Copper turnings, Dilute nitric acid, Gas collection apparatus, Iron(II) sulfate solution, Test reagents
Copper turnings, Concentrated nitric acid, Lead(II) nitrate, Gas collection apparatus, U-tube with ice, Testing materials
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 123-125
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 127-131
6 5
NITROGEN AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Comparison of Nitrogen Oxides and Environmental Effects
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Compare preparation methods of nitrogen oxides
Distinguish between different nitrogen oxides
Explain formation in vehicle engines
Describe environmental pollution effects
Comparative study: Properties table of N₂O, NO, NO₂. Discussion: Formation in internal combustion engines. Environmental effects: Acid rain formation, smog, health problems. Worked examples: Distinguishing tests for each oxide.
Comparison charts, Environmental impact diagrams, Vehicle emission illustrations
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 123-131
7 1
NITROGEN AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Laboratory Preparation of Ammonia
Preparation of Aqueous Ammonia and Solubility
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Prepare ammonia from ammonium salts and alkalis
Set up apparatus with proper gas collection
Test characteristic properties of ammonia
Explain displacement reaction principle
Experiment: Heat mixture of calcium hydroxide and ammonium chloride. Collect gas by upward delivery using calcium oxide as drying agent. Tests: Color, smell, combustion, HCl fumes test, litmus paper. Safety: Slanted flask position.
Calcium hydroxide, Ammonium chloride, Round-bottomed flask, Calcium oxide, HCl solution, Glass rod, Litmus paper
Ammonia generation apparatus, Funnel, Universal indicator, Fountain apparatus, pH meter/paper
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 131-134
7 2
NITROGEN AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Reactions of Aqueous Ammonia with Metal Ions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Test reactions of aqueous ammonia with various metal ions
Observe precipitate formation and dissolution
Explain complex ion formation
Use reactions for metal ion identification
Experiment: Add aqueous ammonia dropwise to solutions of Ca²⁺, Mg²⁺, Al³⁺, Zn²⁺, Fe²⁺, Fe³⁺, Pb²⁺, Cu²⁺. Record observations with few drops vs excess ammonia. Identify complex ion formation with Zn²⁺ and Cu²⁺.
Various metal salt solutions, Aqueous ammonia, Test tubes, Droppers, Observation recording tables
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 136-138
7 3-4
NITROGEN AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Chemical Properties of Ammonia - Reactions with Acids and Combustion
Industrial Manufacture of Ammonia - The Haber Process
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Test neutralization reactions with acids
Investigate combustion of ammonia
Examine catalytic oxidation with platinum
Study reducing properties with metal oxides
Describe raw materials and their sources
Explain optimum conditions for ammonia synthesis
Draw flow diagram of Haber process
Explain economic considerations and catalyst use
Experiments: (a) Neutralize H₂SO₄, HCl, HNO₃ with aqueous ammonia using indicators. (b) Attempt combustion in air and oxygen. (c) Catalytic oxidation with heated platinum wire. (d) Reduction of CuO by ammonia. Record all observations.
Teacher exposition: N₂ from air, H₂ from natural gas/cracking. Process conditions: 500°C, 200 atm, iron catalyst. Flow diagram study: Purification, compression, catalytic chamber, separation, recycling. Economic factors: Compromise between yield and rate.
Various dilute acids, Methyl orange, Oxygen supply, Platinum wire, Copper(II) oxide, Combustion apparatus, U-tube for collection
Haber process flow charts, Industrial diagrams, Catalyst samples, Economic analysis sheets
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 138-140
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 140-141
7 5
NITROGEN AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Uses of Ammonia and Introduction to Nitrogenous Fertilizers
Nitrogenous Fertilizers - Types and Calculations
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
List major uses of ammonia
Explain importance as fertilizer
Calculate nitrogen percentages in fertilizers
Compare different nitrogenous fertilizers
Discussion: Uses - fertilizer, refrigerant, cleaning agent, hydrazine production. Introduction to fertilizers: Ammonium sulfate, ammonium nitrate, ammonium phosphate, urea, CAN. Calculations: Percentage nitrogen content in each fertilizer type.
Fertilizer samples, Percentage calculation worksheets, Use application charts, Calculator
Various fertilizer formulas, Scientific calculators, Laboratory preparation materials, Environmental impact data
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 141-144
8

Midterm break

9 1
NITROGEN AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Laboratory Preparation of Nitric(V) Acid
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Prepare nitric acid from nitrate and concentrated sulfuric acid
Set up all-glass apparatus safely
Explain brown fumes and yellow color
Purify nitric acid by air bubbling
Experiment: Heat mixture of KNO₃ and concentrated H₂SO₄ in all-glass apparatus. Collect yellow nitric acid. Explain brown fumes (NO₂) and yellow color. Bubble air through to remove dissolved NO₂. Safety: Gentle heating, fume cupboard.
Potassium nitrate, Concentrated sulfuric acid, All-glass apparatus, Condenser, Retort stand, Safety equipment
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 144-145
9 2
NITROGEN AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Industrial Manufacture of Nitric(V) Acid
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe catalytic oxidation process
Explain raw materials and conditions
Draw flow diagram of industrial process
Calculate theoretical yields and efficiency
Teacher exposition: Ostwald process - NH₃ oxidation with Pt-Rh catalyst at 900°C. Flow diagram: Oxidation chamber, cooling, absorption tower. Equations: NH₃ → NO → NO₂ → HNO₃. Economic factors: Catalyst cost, heat recovery.
Industrial process flow charts, Catalyst samples, Process condition charts, Efficiency calculation sheets
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 145-147
9 3-4
NITROGEN AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Reactions of Dilute Nitric(V) Acid with Metals
Reactions of Dilute Nitric(V) Acid with Carbonates and Hydroxides
Reactions of Concentrated Nitric(V) Acid - Oxidizing Properties
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Test reactions with various metals
Explain absence of hydrogen gas production
Observe formation of nitrogen oxides
Write equations for metal-acid reactions
Test reactions with carbonates and hydrogen carbonates
Test neutralization with metal hydroxides and oxides
Identify products formed
Write balanced chemical equations
Experiment: Add dilute HNO₃ to Mg, Zn, Cu. Test gases produced with burning splint. Observe that no H₂ is produced (except with Mg in very dilute acid). Explain oxidation of any H₂ formed to water. Record observations and write equations.
Experiments: (a) Add dilute HNO₃ to Na₂CO₃, CaCO₃, ZnCO₃, CuCO₃, NaHCO₃. Test gas evolved with lime water. (b) Neutralize NaOH, CaO, CuO, PbO with dilute HNO₃. Record color changes and write equations.
Various metals (Mg, Zn, Cu), Dilute nitric acid, Test tubes, Gas testing apparatus, Burning splints
Various carbonates and hydroxides, Dilute nitric acid, Lime water, Universal indicator, Test tubes
Concentrated nitric acid, Iron(II) sulfate, Sulfur powder, Copper turnings, Test tubes, Fume cupboard access
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 3, Pages 147-150
9 5
SULPHUR AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Extraction of Sulphur
Allotropes of Sulphur
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Define sulphur and state its position in the periodic table. Describe the occurrence of sulphur in nature. Explain the Frasch process for extraction of sulphur. Evaluate the effectiveness of the Frasch process.
Q/A: Review group VI elements and electron configuration of sulphur. Teacher demonstration: Using diagrams to explain the Frasch process setup. Discussion: Why ordinary mining is impossible for sulphur deposits. Group work: Students draw and label the Frasch process diagram.
Charts showing periodic table, Diagram of Frasch process, Samples of sulphur compounds (pyrites, gypsum)
Powdered sulphur, Carbon(IV) sulphide, Evaporating dish, Glass rod, Hand lens, Boiling tubes, Filter paper, Beakers
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 160-161
10 1
SULPHUR AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Physical Properties of Sulphur - Solubility
Physical Properties of Sulphur - Effect of Heat
Chemical Properties of Sulphur - Reactions with Elements
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Investigate the solubility of sulphur in different solvents. Explain the molecular structure of sulphur. Compare solubility in polar and non-polar solvents. State the physical properties of sulphur.
Practical work: Experiment 2(a) - Testing solubility of sulphur in water, benzene, methylbenzene, and carbon(IV) sulphide. Observation and recording in Table Discussion: Explain why sulphur dissolves in organic solvents but not water. Drawing: Puckered ring structure of S8 molecule.
Powdered sulphur, Water, Benzene, Methylbenzene, Carbon(IV) sulphide, Test tubes, Charts showing molecular structure
Powdered sulphur, Test tubes, Bunsen burner, Cold surface for condensation, Thermometer, Safety equipment
Sulphur, Iron powder, Copper powder, Oxygen gas jar, Deflagrating spoon, Moist litmus papers, Test tubes, Bunsen burner
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 163-164
10 2
SULPHUR AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Chemical Properties of Sulphur - Reactions with Acids
Uses of Sulphur and Introduction to Oxides
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Investigate the reaction of sulphur with concentrated acids. Identify the products formed in these reactions. Write balanced equations for oxidation reactions. Test for sulphate ions using barium chloride.
Practical work: Experiment 3(b) - Reactions with concentrated nitric(V) acid, sulphuric(VI) acid, and hydrochloric acid. Testing with barium chloride solution. Observation: Formation of sulphate ions, brown fumes, no reaction with HCl. Discussion: Sulphur as a reducing agent, acids as oxidizing agents.
Sulphur powder, Concentrated HNO3, Concentrated H2SO4, Concentrated HCl, Barium chloride solution, Test tubes, Fume cupboard access
Charts showing uses of sulphur, Samples of vulcanized rubber, Fungicides, Industrial photographs, Textbook diagrams
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 167-168
10 3-4
SULPHUR AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Preparation of Sulphur(IV) Oxide
Physical and Chemical Properties of Sulphur(IV) Oxide
Bleaching Action of Sulphur(IV) Oxide
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe laboratory preparation of sulphur(IV) oxide. Set up apparatus for gas preparation and collection. Write balanced equations for the preparation reactions. Explain the drying and collection methods used.
Investigate the bleaching properties of SO Compare SO2 bleaching with chlorine bleaching. Explain the mechanism of SO2 bleaching. Relate bleaching to paper manufacturing.
Practical work: Experiment 4 - Preparation of SO2 using sodium sulphite and dilute HCl. Apparatus setup: Round-bottomed flask, delivery tube, gas jars. Collection: Downward delivery method. Testing: Using acidified potassium chromate(VI) paper. Alternative method: Copper + concentrated H2SO
Practical work: Experiment 6 - Placing colored flower petals in SO2 gas. Observation: Temporary bleaching effect. Discussion: SO2 + H2O → H2SO3, reduction of organic dyes. Comparison: Permanent vs temporary bleaching. Application: Paper industry bleaching processes.
Sodium sulphite, Dilute HCl, Round-bottomed flask, Delivery tubes, Gas jars, Concentrated H2SO4 for drying, Acidified potassium chromate(VI) paper
SO2 gas from previous preparation, Litmus papers, Universal indicator, 0.1M NaOH solution, Water, Test tubes, Safety equipment
Colored flower petals (red/blue), SO2 gas jars, Hand lens for observation, Charts comparing bleaching agents
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 170-171
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 173
10 5
SULPHUR AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Reducing Action of Sulphur(IV) Oxide
Oxidising Action of Sulphur(IV) Oxide
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Investigate SO2 as a reducing agent. Test reactions with various oxidizing agents. Write ionic equations for redox reactions. Identify color changes in redox reactions.
Practical work: Experiment 7 - Testing SO2 with acidified potassium dichromate(VI), potassium manganate(VII), bromine water, iron(III) chloride. Recording observations in Table 6. Color changes: Orange to green, purple to colorless, brown to colorless, yellow to pale green. Writing half-equations and overall equations.
SO2 gas, Acidified K2Cr2O7, Acidified KMnO4, Bromine water, Iron(III) chloride solution, Concentrated HNO3, Test tubes
SO2 gas jars, Magnesium ribbon, Deflagrating spoon, Hydrogen sulphide gas, Water droppers, Safety equipment
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 173-176
11 1
SULPHUR AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Test for Sulphate and Sulphite Ions & Uses of SO2
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Carry out confirmatory tests for sulphate and sulphite ions. Distinguish between sulphate and sulphite using chemical tests. List the uses of sulphur(IV) oxide. Explain the applications in industry.
Practical work: Experiment 9 - Testing sodium sulphate and sodium sulphite with barium chloride. Adding dilute HCl to precipitates. Recording observations in Table 8. Discussion: BaSO4 insoluble in acid, BaSO3 dissolves. Uses: Raw material for H2SO4, bleaching wood pulp, fumigant, preservative.
Sodium sulphate solution, Sodium sulphite solution, Barium chloride solution, Dilute HCl, Test tubes, Charts showing industrial uses
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 178-179
11 2
SULPHUR AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Large-scale Manufacture of Sulphuric(VI) Acid - Contact Process
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe the contact process for manufacturing H2SO Identify raw materials and conditions used. Explain the role of catalyst in the process. Draw flow diagrams of the contact process.
Study of flow diagram: Figure 12 - Contact process. Discussion: Raw materials (sulphur, air), burning sulphur to SO Purification: Electrostatic precipitation, drying with H2SO Catalytic chamber: V2O5 catalyst at 450°C, 2-3 atmospheres. Formation of oleum: H2S2O7. Safety and environmental considerations.
Flow chart diagrams, Charts showing industrial plant, Samples of catalyst (V2O5), Photographs of Thika chemical plant, Calculator for percentage calculations
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 179-181
11 3-4
SULPHUR AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Properties of Concentrated Sulphuric(VI) Acid - Dehydrating Properties
Properties of Concentrated Sulphuric(VI) Acid - Oxidizing Properties
Properties of Concentrated Sulphuric(VI) Acid - Displacement Reactions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Investigate the dehydrating properties of concentrated H2SO Demonstrate removal of water from hydrated salts. Show dehydration of organic compounds. Explain the hygroscopic nature of the acid.
Investigate acid displacement reactions. Demonstrate formation of volatile acids. Test the evolved gases for identification. Write equations for displacement reactions.
Practical work: Experiment 10 - Adding concentrated H2SO4 to copper(II) sulphate crystals, sucrose crystals, ethanol. Observations: Blue to white crystals, charring of sugar, formation of ethene. Safety: Proper dilution technique - acid to water. Testing evolved gases. Discussion: Chemical vs physical dehydration.
Practical work: Experiment 10 (continued) - Reactions with potassium nitrate and sodium chloride. Testing evolved gases with moist blue litmus, concentrated ammonia. Observations: Brown fumes (NO2), white fumes (HCl). Discussion: Less volatile acid displacing more volatile acids. Industrial applications.
Concentrated H2SO4, Copper(II) sulphate crystals, Sucrose, Ethanol, KMnO4 solution, Test tubes, Beakers, Safety equipment, Fume cupboard
Copper foil, Zinc granules, Charcoal powder, Concentrated H2SO4, Acidified K2Cr2O7 paper, Lime water, Test tubes, Bunsen burner
Potassium nitrate crystals, Sodium chloride crystals, Concentrated H2SO4, Moist blue litmus paper, Concentrated ammonia, Test tubes, Bunsen burner
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 181-183
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 184
11 5
SULPHUR AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Reactions of Dilute Sulphuric(VI) Acid - With Metals
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Investigate reactions of dilute H2SO4 with metals. Compare reactivity of different metals. Test for hydrogen gas evolution. Relate reactions to reactivity series.
Practical work: Experiment 11 - Reactions with magnesium, zinc, copper. Testing evolved gas with burning splint. Recording observations in Table 10. Discussion: More reactive metals above hydrogen displace it. Vigour of reaction decreases down reactivity series. Writing ionic equations.
Magnesium ribbon, Zinc granules, Copper turnings, Dilute H2SO4, Test tubes, Burning splints, Reactivity series chart
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 184-185
12 1
SULPHUR AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Reactions of Dilute Sulphuric(VI) Acid - With Carbonates
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Investigate reactions of dilute H2SO4 with carbonates. Test for carbon dioxide evolution. Explain why some reactions stop prematurely. Compare reactions of different metal carbonates.
Practical work: Experiment 12 - Reactions with sodium carbonate, zinc carbonate, calcium carbonate, copper(II) carbonate. Testing evolved gas with lime water. Recording observations in Table 1 Discussion: Formation of insoluble calcium sulphate coating. Effervescence and CO2 identification.
Sodium carbonate, Zinc carbonate, Calcium carbonate, Copper(II) carbonate, Dilute H2SO4, Lime water, Test tubes
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 185-186
12 2
SULPHUR AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Reactions of Dilute Sulphuric(VI) Acid - With Oxides and Hydroxides
Hydrogen Sulphide - Preparation and Physical Properties
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Investigate reactions of dilute H2SO4 with metal oxides and hydroxides. Identify neutralization reactions. Explain formation of insoluble sulphates. Write equations for acid-base reactions.
Practical work: Experiment 13 - Reactions with magnesium oxide, zinc oxide, copper(II) oxide, lead(II) oxide, sodium hydroxide. Recording observations in Table 1 Discussion: Salt and water formation, immediate stopping with lead(II) oxide due to insoluble PbSO Acid-base neutralization concept.
Metal oxides (MgO, ZnO, CuO, PbO), NaOH solution, 2M H2SO4, Test tubes, Bunsen burner for warming
Iron(II) sulphide, Dilute HCl, Apparatus for gas generation, Anhydrous CaCl2, Gas jars, Safety equipment, Fume cupboard
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 186-187
12 3-4
SULPHUR AND ITS COMPOUNDS
Chemical Properties of Hydrogen Sulphide
Pollution Effects and Summary
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Investigate H2S as a reducing agent. Test reactions with oxidizing agents. Demonstrate precipitation of metal sulphides. Write ionic equations for redox reactions.
Explain environmental pollution by sulphur compounds. Describe formation and effects of acid rain. Suggest methods to reduce sulphur pollution. Summarize key concepts of sulphur chemistry.
Practical demonstrations: H2S with bromine water, iron(III) chloride, acidified KMnO4, K2Cr2O7. Precipitation tests: H2S with copper(II) sulphate, lead(II) nitrate, zinc sulphate. Color changes: Brown to colorless, yellow to green, purple to colorless. Formation of black, yellow, and white precipitates.
Discussion: Sources of SO2 pollution - burning fossil fuels, metal extraction, H2SO4 manufacture. Formation of acid rain: SO2 + H2O → H2SO3 → H2SO Effects: Plant damage, aquatic life destruction, building corrosion, soil acidification. Control measures: Scrubbing with Ca(OH)2, catalytic converters. Revision: Key reactions, properties, uses.
H2S gas, Bromine water, Iron(III) chloride, KMnO4, K2Cr2O7, Metal salt solutions, Test tubes, Droppers
Charts showing pollution effects, Photographs of acid rain damage, Environmental data, Summary charts of reactions, Industrial pollution control diagrams
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 188-190
KLB Secondary Chemistry Form 4, Pages 190-194

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