© eRevision.uk and ZigZag Education 2023
GCSE Chemistry Edexcel (1CH0) - Foundation
As a guest user, you will be able to take selected quizzes on the easiest level. To save your scores, change your target grade, and get more practice quizzes without paying, register for free.
You have not purchased this package so you can only access some quizzes.
1. Key concepts in chemistry
1. Key concepts in chemistry
The periodic table
Bonding
Types of substance
Calculations involving masses
2. States of matter, and separating and purifying substances
2. States of matter, and separating and purifying substances
States of matter, and separating and purifying substances
3. Chemical changes
4. Extracting metals and equilibria
5. Separate chemistry 1
5. Separate chemistry 1
Transition metals, alloys and corrosion
Quantitative analysis
Dynamic equilibria, chemical cells and fuel cells
6. Groups in the periodic table
6. Groups in the periodic table
Groups 1, 7 and 0
7. Rates of reaction and energy changes
7. Rates of reaction and energy changes
Rates of reaction
Heat energy changes in chemical reactions
8. Fuels and Earth science
8. Fuels and Earth science
Earth and atmospheric science
9. Separate chemistry 2
9. Separate chemistry 2
Quantitative analysis: tests for ions
Hydrocarbons
Polymers
Alcohols and carboxylic acids
Bulk and surface properties of matter including nanoparticles
key:
Passed | Failed | Passed at a lower level | * This is an equivalent score which is calculated based on an attempt at a lower levelNote: For quizzes where the content is the same at all levels, your highest score is shown with no adjustment and no asterisk, no matter what level the attempt was made at. Whether it is a pass or a fail is determined by the passmark for your current level.
Disclaimer: you and your teacher are responsible for ensuring that you are covering the right information and to the right depth. We also recommend that you use an up-to-date copy of the specification from your examination board's website. The grading of the sample responses are the views of the author and not those of the specified exam board(s).