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Matter
all substances that make up our world, anything that takes up space and has mass, energy is NOT matter
Atom
smallest particle of an element that cannot be chemically or mechanically divided into smaller particles
Types of pure substances
element (all atoms are the same) and compounds (different kinds of atoms)
Element
a pure substance that cannot be separated into simpler substances
Compound
a pure substance composed of two or more elements that are chemically bonded in a fixed proportion
Metallic bonding
weak, not the same as covalent or ionic bonding, can be heated up until different metal types can separate physically
Law of definite proportions
a compound always contains the same proportion of its component elements, ex. Water always has 2 hydrogens per every oxygen no matter its state of matter
Law of multiple proportions
when two elements combine to make two 9 or more) compounds, the ratio of the masses of one of the elements that combine with a given mass of the second element is always a ratio of small whole numbers, ex. CO2 is not the same as CO
Intensive properties
properties that are independent of the amount of the substance
Extensive properties
dependent on the amount of a substance, ex. Mass, volume
Physical properties
properties that can be measured without changing the substance into another substance
Chemical properties
properties that can be observed only by reacting the substance with something else to form another substance
Density
intensive property, the ratio of the mass (m) of a substance or object to its volume (v), d = m/v
Homogeneous mixture
substances are distributed uniformly and the composition and appearance of the mixture are uniform
Heterogeneous mixture
the substances are not distributed uniformly and contain distinct regions of different composition
Solid
has a definite shape and a definite volume
Liquid
has a definite volume but not definite shape
Gas
no definite volume or shape
Energy
the capacity to do work
Work
an exertion of force through distance, w =f x d
Law of conservation of energy
energy cannot be created or destroyed, but it can be converted from one form to another
Potential energy
the energy stored in an object because of its position or composition
Kinetic energy
energy of motion, KE = ½ mu^2
numbers used in counting AND quantities that are assumed to be exact, no fractions or decimals. Metric prefixes are used
Exact values
Measured values
temp. Mass volume, height, pH, etc. needs to have a magnitude and a unit. Uncertainty is always present
SI units
often used by scientists, provides for consistency in measurements
Precision
reproducibility of an experiment
Random errors
uncontrolled fluctuations that occur which affect precision of results, they arise from uncontrollable variables in the measurement
Systematic errors
impact accuracy, can be from a flaw in design, method, equipment, can be corrected
Significant figures
the part of a numerical value you are sure about, give the magnitude of the experiment that you are interested in
Dimensional analysis
a method for converting quantities 9 and other types of problems), conversion factors allow the initial units to be canceled out, leaving the desired units remaining
Atom
the fundamental building block of all matter, made of subatomic particles: protons, neutrons, and electrons, teh # of each of these dictates the properties of the atoms
Isotope
any atom or molecule that has unequal number of protons and electrons
form of element whose atoms have the same number of protons but a different number of neutrons
Average atomic mass
to calculate the average atomic mass (the one found on the periodic table), you sum the products of % abundance x mass isotope
Molecular mass
these are the sum of the atomic mass (from periodic table) that make up a molecule
Mole
unit that allows for quantity values to be more manageable, rather than mass values
Stoichiometry
calculations involving converting from an amount of one substance to the amount of another substance using a stoichiometric ratio (quantity ratio)
Ionic bonds
bonds that can be between both metals and nonmetals, electrons transferred from one atom to another, atoms with opposite charges attract, creates lattice structure
Covalent bonds
bonds can be between nonmetals and metalloids, electrons shared
Metallic bonds
bonds between metals, electrons are delocalized, atoms in metallic solids are held together by a "sea" of mobile electrons that flow freely among all the atoms in a piece of metal, lattice structures
Most commonly occurring polyatomic ions
carbonate/bicarbonate, sulfate, phosphate, nitrate, ammonium, acetate
Naming binary molecular compounds
first word is the name of the first element in the formula, for the second word change the ending of the name of the second element to "ide", use prefixes to indicate the number of each atom , element with smaller group number appears first in formula/name
resonance structures
when there can be more than one lewis structure
Electrostatic attractions
oppositely charged particles are held together by electrostatic attractions between the particles, metal wants to lose electrons and nonmetals want to gain them
Ionic compounds are formed by ions that each have noble gas electron configurations
Formula unit is the lowest whole-number ratio of the ions present
Covalent bonds
formed when two atoms share one or more pairs of electrons equally, the bond length is the distance between the nuclei of two atoms joined together in a bond. The bond energy is the energy required to break one or more covalent bonds
Core electrons
electrons in lower energy levels; spend more time close to nucleus; not very accessible
Valence electrons
electrons in high energy levels; farther from the nucleus; exposed to interaction with other atoms
Valency
the number of covalent bonds that each atom forms is determined by the number of valence electrons that the atom can have in its valence shell
Octet
full valence shell, most stable structures, 8 electrons
Electronegativity
relative measure of the ability of an atom to attract electrons to itself within a bond (covalent)
- Electronegativity increases from left to right and bottom to top of periodic table
- Elements with higher electronegativity are less likely to share electrons and are likely to be the outer atoms in a molecule
formal charges
- The most likely lewis structures are those that have small formal charges or no formal charges, especially for the central atom
- Formal charge = higher electronegativity, while + formal charge = lower electronegativity
exceptions to the octet rule
hydrogen (2 valence electrons), beryllium (4), and boron (6)
Molecules with single unpaired electrons are called radicals
Polarity of a bond
depends on the difference in the electronegativity values of the two elements
Emission spectra
each molecule has a different fingerprint of energy levels
Spectroscopy
the study of the interaction of light with matter
Electromagnetic radiation
an oscillating electromagnetic field that propagates through space
Frequency
the number of waves that pass per unit of time
- When wavelength increases, frequency decreases
- When speed increases, frequency increases
- when energy increases, wavelength decreases
Particle nature of light
light can also be described as a "packet of energy" (a particle) moving through space. We call this a photon. The energy of a photon is related mathematically to its frequency and therefore its wavelength, when energy increases, wavelength decreases
Spectroscopy
- All atoms/molecules have discrete energy levels
- When an atom/molecule absorbs energy, its excited to a higher energy level
- When an excited atom/molecule relaxes back down to a lower energy level, it emits a photon of light
- When an atom/molecule goes between any 2 energy states, it undergoes a transition
Hydrogen atom spectroscopy
- the electron in a hydrogen atom exists on an energy level described using the quantum number n.
- As n increases, energy increases
- Any atom/molecule in its lowest energy level is said to be in its ground state. Any energy levels higher than this is an excited state
- The ground state of H is n=1
Atomic orbitals
electrons , like photons, can be treated as particles or waves
- When we treat them as waves, we use equations called wave functions
- These wave functions essentially tells us all we need to know about the electron, including energy and most probable location around the nucleus
- We can plot the wave functions in a specific way that represents the 3D volume in which we are most likely going to find the electron. These volumes are called orbitals
Principle quantum number (n)
specifies overall energy and size of orbital, possible values are 1,2,3,4,5.... (not 0)
identifies the principal energy level in which the electrons can be found
CORRESPONDS TO: the energy level the electron occupies
l (angular momentum Q.N)
specifies the general shape of the orbital, values can be 0,1,2,3.. Up to (n-1)
CORRESPONDS TO: the type of subshell the electron occupies
ml (magnetic Q.N)
specifies the orbitals general orientation in space, possible values depend on l, can be -l up to +l
CORRESPONDS TO: the orbital the electron occupies
ms (spin orientation Q.N)"
can be ½ or -½
CORRESPONDS TO: the particular electron in a filled orbital
Cations
positively charged by removing an electron, main group elements (s and p blocks), remove electrons in the opposite order they are added, for d and f blocks: remove electrons from the higher n s orbital first
Anions
negatively charged by adding electrons, add electrons to the next available spot as you'd expect
Binary ionic compounds
in the ionic formula, we include the quantity of each ion needed to neutralize the charge
Polyatomic ions
covalent molecules of multiple atoms with extra/fewer electrons to make them an ion , when using in a name, just "copy and paste" into it without any edits
Polyatomic ions we should know
acetate, hydroxide, cyanide, peroxide
Oxyanions
carbonate, chlorate, nitrate, phosphate, sulfate, ammonium, ammonia
Binary covalent compounds
the quantities of each element can vary, since no charges are involved, prefixes are used to denote quantities, add " ide to end"
Prefixes
mono - 1, di - 2, tri - 3, tetra - 4, penta - 5, hexa - 6, hepta - 7, octa - 8 , nona - 9, deca - 10
the "o" or "a" at the end of the prefix is dropped when the element name starts with a vowel
Acids
a covalent molecule that produces H+ when dissolved in water, the formulas often start with H
Binary acids
a single non-metal with H+, ex. HCl - hydrochloric acid, written as " hydro - second element - ic acid"
Oxyacids
acids with oxyanions, if oxyanion ends in "ate" it changes to "ic acid", if ends in "ite" changed to "ous acid"
Empirical formula
a chemical formula that represents the number of each element
Molecular formula
a chemical formula that represents the number of each element
Determining empirical formula
1) calculate the number of moles of each element in the molecule, 2) use appropriate math to scale values up or down to the smallest integers to preserve the ration
Combustion reaction
a reaction between an organic hydrocarbon and oxygen gas (O2), produces carbon dioxide gas (CO2) and water (H2O), and heat
combustion analysis
The C and H in the compound are converted to CO2 and H2O
The masses of Co2 and H2O are then used to determine the masses of C and H in the original sample
If there is a third element in the compound, its mass can be calculated by the difference in mass between the sample mass and the combined mass of C and H in the sample
Dalton's Atomic Theory
matter is made of small particles (atoms) that have properties characteristic of an element
- Atoms contain an equal amount of protons and electrons
- Electrons are a lot smaller than protons and neutrons
atomic number
number of protons in an element, determines the type of element
ions
charged molecules, formed when an atom gains or loses electrons
atomic mass
weighted average of the masses of the naturally occurring mixture of isotopes of an element
period
one of the 7 rows of the periodic table
group
column on the periodic table that includes elements with similar chemical properties
ductile
can be drawn into wire
Wavelength
length of a single wave, measured from one crest to the next, or one trough to the next
- The farther away the crests, the longer the wavelength
- More crests = greater frequency
- Higher the amplitude, higher the energy
Amplitude
height of the wave, determines intensity of the light
Frequency
the number of times a wave crest passes a certain point per second
Photoelectric effect
an experiment that demonstrates the particle nature of light
Threshold frequency
the minimum frequency of light required to eject an electron from the surface of a metal in the photoelectric effect
Light absorption
the process in which the energy of certain wavelengths of light increases the energy of electrons in atoms
Light emissions
the process in which light of specific wavelengths is produced when electrons in atoms fall to lower energy levels
Ground state
lowest energy state of the set of electrons in an atom
Excited state
the state of an atom that has more energy than does its lowest energy state
Ionization energy
the energy required to remove an electron from a gaseous atom to produce a gaseous cation
Rydberg equation
an equation that predicts the wavelengths of a hydrogen atomic emission line
orbital
a region of space in an atom that makes up part or all of a subshell and can hold a maximum of 2 electrons
Subshell: s,p,d,f