0653 s16 QP 31
0653 s16 QP 31
0653 s16 QP 31
Write your Centre number, candidate number and name on all the work you hand in.
Write in dark blue or black pen.
You may use an HB pencil for any diagrams or graphs.
Do not use staples, paper clips, glue or correction fluid.
DO NOT WRITE IN ANY BARCODES.
At the end of the examination, fasten all your work securely together.
The number of marks is given in brackets [ ] at the end of each question or part question.
DC (LK/SW) 115952/2
UCLES 2016 [Turn over
2
1 (a) Complete the sentences below using words or phrases from the list.
You may use each word or phrase once, more than once or not at all.
(b) Fig. 1.1 shows a plant cell observed under the microscope.
1 ............................................................
starch grains
2 ............................................................
Fig. 1.1
On Fig. 1.1, name two other structures, 1 and 2, in this cell that are not found in animal
cells.
Draw label lines to these structures from the names you have written on the diagram.
...........................................................................................................................................
...........................................................................................................................................
...........................................................................................................................................
.......................................................................................................................................[4]
(ii) State one piece of evidence from the diagram of the cell in Fig. 1.1 that suggests that the
cell is found under the ground.
...........................................................................................................................................
...........................................................................................................................................
.......................................................................................................................................[2]
2 A student investigates the speed of reaction between dilute hydrochloric acid and calcium
carbonate. The reaction produces carbon dioxide gas.
(a) Fig. 2.1 shows some of the apparatus the student uses.
calcium
carbonate
bubbles of gas
dilute
hydrochloric acid
Fig. 2.1
(i) The student wants to measure the volume of gas produced in this reaction every minute
for 10 minutes.
Complete Fig. 2.1 to show how the student collects and measures the volume of the gas.
[2]
...........................................................................................................................................
...........................................................................................................................................
.......................................................................................................................................[2]
(b) Complete the symbol equation for the reaction between hydrochloric acid and calcium
carbonate.
test .............................................................................................................................................
result ......................................................................................................................................[2]
(d) Suggest the names of an acid and a base that the student can use to make sodium nitrate.
acid ............................................................................................................................................
base .......................................................................................................................................[2]
3 Fig. 3.1 shows a television camera that moves on rails alongside an athletics track.
Fig. 3.1
The camera records a race from start to finish. The camera moves alongside the athletes.
The athletes accelerate from the start and quickly reach their maximum speed. They maintain this
speed until they cross the finish line.
At the end of the race the athletes and the camera slow to a stop.
(a) Fig. 3.2 shows the speed / time graph for the camera from the start until it stops after the end
of the race.
10
9
Q R
8
6
speed
5
m/s
P S
0
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14
time / s
Fig. 3.2
(i) State how you can tell that the acceleration in section RS of the graph is not constant.
.......................................................................................................................................[1]
(ii) The camera has constant acceleration over the section PQ on Fig. 3.2.
Use the graph in Fig. 3.2 to calculate this acceleration. Show your working.
working
(iii) Use the graph in Fig. 3.2 to calculate the distance travelled by the camera as it followed
the sprinters from the start to the finishing time of 12 seconds.
(b) The camera focuses light rays coming from the athlete onto the light sensor inside the camera.
camera
light rays
from athlete
light
sensor
Fig. 3.3
[1]
(c) The camera is moved along the rails by an electric motor powered by a battery.
(i) The camera with motor and battery has a mass of 10 kg.
Calculate the kinetic energy of the camera as it travels at a constant speed of 8.5 m / s.
formula
working
(ii) The kinetic energy of the moving camera is much less than the chemical energy supplied
by the battery to the electric motor.
Use the principle of the conservation of energy to explain why this happens.
...........................................................................................................................................
...........................................................................................................................................
.......................................................................................................................................[2]
B C
D
A
Fig. 4.1
.......................................................................................................................................[1]
(ii) State the name of the blood vessel with the highest pressure.
.......................................................................................................................................[1]
(iii) Explain why this blood vessel in (ii) needs to have blood at a high pressure.
...........................................................................................................................................
.......................................................................................................................................[1]
Fig. 4.2
Describe how the structure of this artery adapts it for its function.
...................................................................................................................................................
...................................................................................................................................................
...............................................................................................................................................[2]
substance X
Fig. 4.3
...........................................................................................................................................
.......................................................................................................................................[1]
.......................................................................................................................................[1]
(iii) State two possible lifestyle choices that could increase the rate of formation of substance
X in the coronary artery.
1. ........................................................................................................................................
2. ....................................................................................................................................[2]
T
hot petroleum
Fig. 5.1
..
.. [2]
H H H H
H C C H H C C O H
H H H H
A B
H
H C H
H H H H H
H C C C H H C C C H
H H H H
C D
Fig. 5.2
.. [1]
(ii) From Fig. 5.2, give the letter of a molecule of an alkene. Explain your answer.
...........................................................................................................................................
.......................................................................................................................................[2]
(iii) Explain why alkanes and alkenes do not appear in the Periodic Table.
.......................................................................................................................................[1]
(c) Complete Fig. 5.3 to show the bonding electrons in one molecule of methane, CH4.
H C H
Fig. 5.3
[1]
(d) In the last one hundred years, the proportion of carbon dioxide in the air has increased.
(i) State one reason for the increased amount of carbon dioxide.
...........................................................................................................................................
.......................................................................................................................................[1]
(ii) State one reason why the increase in carbon dioxide may harm the environment.
...........................................................................................................................................
.......................................................................................................................................[1]
100 100
80 80
60 60
40 40
20 20
0 0
20 20
20 C 60 C
Fig. 6.1
(a) Complete the sentences below by choosing the correct words from the list.
You may use each word once, more than once, or not at all.
When the liquid is heated, the ............................................. of the liquid remains the
same. The volume of the liquid increases on heating, which means that the
(b) Water freezes at 0 C. Explain why the scale on the thermometer in Fig. 6.1 shows that the
liquid in the thermometer cannot be water.
...................................................................................................................................................
...................................................................................................................................................
...............................................................................................................................................[1]
(c) Bright sunlight shines on the thermometer. The temperature reading rises slowly.
(i) In Fig. 6.2 below, write the name of the radiation from the Sun responsible for the
temperature rise in the correct position in the electromagnetic spectrum.
Fig. 6.2
[2]
(ii) A student said he thought the radiation in (i) travelled from the Sun faster than sunlight.
...........................................................................................................................................
.......................................................................................................................................[1]
(iii) Suggest one way of making the temperature reading rise more quickly when exposed to
bright sunshine.
...........................................................................................................................................
.......................................................................................................................................[1]
Fig. 7.1
(a) Explain why food chain A transfers a greater proportion of the chemical energy in the corn to
the man.
Assume that the food chains apply to two identical areas of land.
...................................................................................................................................................
...................................................................................................................................................
...............................................................................................................................................[2]
(b) The farmer tries to improve the efficiency of food chain B by keeping the cows in heated
buildings.
...................................................................................................................................................
...................................................................................................................................................
...............................................................................................................................................[2]
(c) When the farmer adds fertiliser to the corn in the field, some of the fertiliser enters a nearby
lake.
.......................................................................................................................................[1]
...........................................................................................................................................
...........................................................................................................................................
...........................................................................................................................................
...........................................................................................................................................
.......................................................................................................................................[3]
8 Lithium and sodium are metals in Group I of the Periodic Table of Elements.
...........................................[1]
It is stored in a liquid.
Suggest a liquid in which rubidium is stored and explain why it is stored in this liquid.
liquid ..................................................................................................................................
explanation ........................................................................................................................
.......................................................................................................................................[2]
(iii) Predict the two products of the electrolysis of molten rubidium chloride.
.......................................................................................................................................[1]
(ii) State the charges on the ions formed in this reaction, and explain how these ions form.
explanation ........................................................................................................................
.......................................................................................................................................[3]
9 A student investigates the current through a lamp as she varies the potential difference (p.d.)
across the lamp.
Fig. 9.1
............................................................[1]
(ii) State and explain why the student includes this component in her circuit.
...........................................................................................................................................
...........................................................................................................................................
.......................................................................................................................................[2]
(b) The student has included all the correct components in the circuit diagram shown in Fig. 9.1,
but she has not connected them correctly.
In the space below, draw the diagram for a circuit that will allow the p.d. across the lamp and
the current through the lamp to be measured.
[2]
(c) The student used the correct circuit to carry out her experiment.
current / A
2
0
0 4 8 12 16
p.d. / V
Fig. 9.2
(i) Use the graph in Fig. 9.2 to calculate the resistance of the lamp filament when the p.d.
across the filament is 6 V.
formula
working
(ii) Use the graph to describe how the resistance of the lamp filament changes as the
p.d. across the filament increases.
...........................................................................................................................................
...........................................................................................................................................
.......................................................................................................................................[2]
UCLES 2016
Group
I II III IV V VI VII VIII
1 2
Li Be atomic symbol B C N O F Ne
lithium beryllium name boron carbon nitrogen oxygen fluorine neon
7 9 relative atomic mass 11 12 14 16 19 20
11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
Na Mg Al Si P S Cl Ar
sodium magnesium aluminium silicon phosphorus sulfur chlorine argon
23 24 27 28 31 32 35.5 40
19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36
K Ca Sc Ti V Cr Mn Fe Co Ni Cu Zn Ga Ge As Se Br Kr
potassium calcium scandium titanium vanadium chromium manganese iron cobalt nickel copper zinc gallium germanium arsenic selenium bromine krypton
39 40 45 48 51 52 55 56 59 59 64 65 70 73 75 79 80 84
37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54
Rb Sr Y Zr Nb Mo Tc Ru Rh Pd Ag Cd In Sn Sb Te I Xe
rubidium strontium yttrium zirconium niobium molybdenum technetium ruthenium rhodium palladium silver cadmium indium tin antimony tellurium iodine xenon
20
85 88 89 91 93 96 101 103 106 108 112 115 117 122 128 127 131
55 56 5771 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86
0653/31/M/J/16
lanthanoids
Cs Ba Hf Ta W Re Os Ir Pt Au Hg Tl Pb Bi Po At Rn
caesium barium hafnium tantalum tungsten rhenium osmium iridium platinum gold mercury thallium lead bismuth polonium astatine radon
133 137 178 181 184 186 190 192 195 197 201 204 207 209
87 88 89103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 114 116
actinoids
Fr Ra Rf Db Sg Bh Hs Mt Ds Rg Cr Fl Lv
francium radium rutherfordium dubnium seaborgium bohrium hassium meitnerium darmstadtium roentgenium copernicium flerovium livermorium
57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71
lanthanoids La Ce Pr Nd Pm Sm Eu Gd Tb Dy Ho Er Tm Yb Lu
lanthanum cerium praseodymium neodymium promethium samarium europium gadolinium terbium dysprosium holmium erbium thulium ytterbium lutetium
139 140 141 144 150 152 157 159 163 165 167 169 173 175
89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103
actinoids Ac Th Pa U Np Pu Am Cm Bk Cf Es Fm Md No Lr
actinium thorium protactinium uranium neptunium plutonium americium curium berkelium californium einsteinium fermium mendelevium nobelium lawrencium
232 231 238
The volume of one mole of any gas is 24 dm3 at room temperature and pressure (r.t.p.)
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