@Awesome2020 that’s bs 
See thats what I thought, thats why i think they are both postive.
@awesome500 and is an electrolytic cell spontaneous? Nope which was the other question to that FRQ
Yeah Idk why college board only releases the answers
@Awesome2020 Wait do they only release the answers or only the questions?
I honestly thought it was both so that’s a disappointment
They don’t release answers because the scoring guidelines (official answer key) will be made at the AP reading in Salt Lake City at the beginning of June.
So will it be released early June, then?
@awesome500 That’s what I’m saying…
I think the scoring guidelines are released mid to late June, but I’m not positive on that.
I screwed up my earlier post, I meant they only release questions not answers, because answers and scoring guidelines are determined in June. And then scores are received in July. Hoping for a 4, but I’ll be satisfied with a 3.
Scoring guidelines and FRQ answers come out a few weeks after the scores themselves, so late July/early August
So if we say that HCl has LDFs and dipole-dipole interactions (including H bonding) would we lose the entire point? I also remember seeing a diagram of a lot of H-bonding, but I couldn’t tell the difference so I guessed. If only I knew about the exception
Question not on the exam but what is the pH when you have 100mL of NaOH and 100mL of HCl
Is it 7.0?
@bhargavaa it depends on concentration
^^
That’s probably because it’s a solution and has water in it, but I assume the question on the exam is only pure HCL liquid, so no hydrogen bonding present?
what’s the one on MC about if the galvanic cell is spontaneous or not? (I think it’s from 31-33 three Question about galvanic)
I hope this year’s exam was genuinely harder than last year’s exam. Did people complain this much for the 2016 test? cause the curve on that for the international test was high af. but then again, it’s curved… and lots of people probably knew about buffers and chromatography