问题 填空题

有效地利用现有新能源和开发新能源已受到各国的重视。

(1)可用改进汽油组成的办法来改善汽油的燃烧性能。例如,在汽油中加入乙醇来生产“无铅汽油”。乙醇的分子式为C2H6O,试根据C、H、O成键的特点,写出C2H6O所有可能的结构式或结构简式

____________。

(2)天然气的主要的成分是甲烷,其燃烧产物无毒、热值高、管道输送方便,将成为我国西部开发的重点之一。能说明甲烷是正四面体而非正方形平面结构的理由是____________。(填写编号,多选倒扣分)

①其一氯取代物不存在同分异构体       

②其二氯取代物不存在同分异构体

③其三氯取代物不存在同分异构体

④其四氯取代物不存在同分异构体

(3)将两个石墨电极插入KOH溶液中,向两极分别通入CH4和O2,构成甲烷燃料电池。通入CH4的一极电极反应式是:CH4+10OH--8e-=CO32-+7H2O;通入O2的一极,其电极反应式是___________________。已知4g甲烷完全燃烧生成CO2气体和液态水时放出222.5kJ的热量,则甲烷燃烧的热化学方程式为

_________________________________;

(4)氢能是人类未来的理想能源。1980年我国首次制成一辆燃氢汽车,乘员12人,以50km/h行驶了

40km。为了有效发展民用氢能源,首先必须制得廉价的氢气。下列既可供开发又消耗较低经济的制氢方法是____________(填写编号,多选倒扣分)

①电解水    

②锌和稀硫酸反应   

③光解海水

其次,制得纯氢气后,还需要解决的问题是____________________。(写出其中的一个)

答案

(1)CH3CH2OH、CH3OCH3 

(2)②  

(3)2O2+4H2O+8e-==8OH-(或O2+2H2O+4e-==4OH-

CH4(g)+2O2(g)==CO2(g)+2H2O(l);△H=-890kJ/mol

(4)③;贮存或运输

多项选择题
单项选择题

Addiction is such a harmful behavior, in fact, that evolution should have long ago weeded it out of the population: if it’s hard to drive safely under the influence, imagine trying to run from a saber-toothed tiger or catch a squirrel for lunch. And yet, says Dr. Nora Volkow, director of NIDA and a pioneer in the use of imaging to understand addiction, "the use of drugs has been recorded since the beginning of civilization. Humans in my view will always want to experiment with things to make them feel good."

That’s because drugs of abuse co-opt the very brain functions that allowed our distant ancestors to survive in a hostile world. Our minds are programmed to pay extra attention to what neurologists call salience—that is, special relevance. Threats, for example, are highly salient, which is why we instinctively try to get away from them. But so are food and sex because they help the individual and the species survive. Drugs of abuse capitalize on this ready-made programming. When exposed to drugs, our memory systems, reward circuits, decision making skills and conditioning kick in—salience in overdrive—to create an all consuming pattern of uncontrollable craving. "Some people have a genetic predisposition to addiction," says Volkow. "But because it involves these basic brain functions, everyone will become an addict if sufficiently exposed to drugs or alcohol."

That can go for nonchemical addictions as well. Behaviors, from gambling to shopping to sex, may start out as habits but slide into addictions. Sometimes there might be a behavior-specific root of the problem. Volkow’s research group, for example, has shown that pathologically obese people who are compulsive eaters exhibit hyperactivity in the areas of the brain that process food stimuli—including the mouth, lips and tongue. For them, activating these regions is like opening the floodgates to the pleasure center. Almost anything deeply enjoyable can turn into an addiction, though.

Of course, not everyone becomes an addict. That’s because we have other, more analytical regions that can evaluate consequences and override mere pleasure seeking. Brain imaging is showing exactly how that happens. Paulus, for example, looked at drug addicts enrolled in a VA hospital’s intensive four-week rehabilitation program. Those who were more likely to relapse in the first year after completing the program were also less able to complete tasks involving cognitive skills and less able to adjust to new rules quickly. This suggested that those patients might also be less adept at using analytical areas of the brain while performing decision-making tasks. Sure enough, brain scans showed that there were reduced levels of activation in the prefrontal cortex, where rational thought can override impulsive behavior. It’s impossible to say if the drugs might have damaged these abilities in the relapsers an effect rather than a cause of the chemical abuse—but the fact that the cognitive deficit existed in only some of the drug users suggests that there was something innate that was unique to them. To his surprise, Paulus found that 80% to 90% of the time, he could accurately predict: who would relapse within a year simply by examining the scans.

Another area of focus for researchers involves the brain’s reward system, powered largely by the neurotransmitter dopamine. Investigators are looking specifically at the family of dopamine receptors that populate nerve cells and bind to the compound. The hope is that if you can reduce the effect of the brain chemical that carries the pleasurable signal, you can loosen the drug’s hold.

According to the text, anyone may be addicted to drugs if they()

A. are born with a predisposition to addiction

B. use certain chemicals long and frequently enough

C.have sufficient drugs or alcohol to use

D. create an all consuming pattern of uncontrollable craving