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GCSE Chemistry Practice Test: Ammonia - Production Using the Haber Process
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Avg score: 62% Most missed: “Pick the pressure at which the Haber process is carried out.”
Plants require nitrogen for growth. This comes from the atmosphere but plants can't use it directly - it must be converted into nitrates that dissolve in groundwater which is then taken up by plants. This 'fixing' of nitrogen occurs naturally but only very slowly. For the natural world, that isn't a problem but for farmers growing crops, it is. A field of crops uses the nitrates faster than they are naturally replenished, which is why farmers use fertilisers. Before the start of the 20th century, nitrates for use as fertilisers came mainly from South America where there were deposits of... Show more
GCSE Chemistry Practice Test: Ammonia - Production Using the Haber Process
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10 Questions

1. Pick the correct equation for the Haber process.
2. Why can't plants use the nitrogen in the air?
3. Plants need nitrogen to grow. How do we ensure that plants get the nitrogen that they need?
4. What is the name of the industrial process which turns nitrogen and hydrogen into ammonia?
5. Name the catalyst used in the Haber process.
6. To reduce the breaking down of ammonia into nitrogen and hydrogen, what is done?
7. Pick the pressure at which the Haber process is carried out.
8. Why can't plants use the nitrogen in the air?
9. Name the catalyst used in the Haber process.
10. Plants need nitrogen to grow. How do we ensure that plants get the nitrogen that they need?