GCRA
1. Atoms, Structures, and Properties
The Scientific Approach to Knowledge
science: observation of the physical world
scientific law: amount of related observation to create a generalization
hypothesis: explanation of observations
scientific theory: explains underlying reasons for observations and laws
experiments: controlled procedures designed to produce new observations
Modern Atomic Theory and the Laws That Led to It
Law of Conservation of Mass: in a chemical reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed
Law of Definite Proportions (constant composition): All samples of a given compound, regardless of their source or how they were prepared, have the same proportions of their constituent elements
Law of Multiple Proportions: When 2 elements form 2 different compounds, the masses of element B that combine with 1 g of element A can be expressed as a ratio of small whole numbers
Dalton’s Atomic Theory:
elements are composed of tiny, indestructible particles called atoms
all atoms of an element have the same mass and other properties
atoms combine in simple, whole number ratios to form compounds
atoms of one element can’t change into atoms of another element, they simply bind together with other atoms
The Structure of the Atom
Thomson’s Plum-Pudding Model
negatively charged electrons were small particles held within a positively charged sphere
Rutherford’s Nuclear Model
most of atom’s mass and all of its positive charge are in the nucleus
most of the atom is made of empty space, with electrons dispersed
there are negatively charged electrons outside the nucleus and positively charged particles (protons) within the nucleus, making the atom neutrally charged
Chadwick → discovered neutrons in the nucleus
Subatomic Particles: Protons, Neutrons, and Electrons
protons and neutrons have nearly identical masses
protons and electrons have electrical charges
elements are defined by the amount of protons
Atomic Mass: The Average Mass of an Element’s Atoms
Atomic Mass: average mass of an elements isotopes
Elements and Isotopes
sum of the fractions of the isotopes times the mass of each isotope
masses of atoms and their abundance are measures using mass spectrometry
Intensive vs Extensive Properties
Intensive: used to identify substances based on type (ex: density)
Extensive: depends on the amount of the substance (ex: mass)
Chemical vs. Physical Properties
Physical Properties: property that a substance displays w/o changing its composition
order, taste, color, appearance, melting point, boiling point and density
Chemical Properties: property that a substance displays only by changing its composition via a chemical change
corrosiveness, flammability, acidity, toxicity
Conservation Laws: Mass and Energy
Energy: capacity to do work
Law of Conservation of Energy: energy is neither created nor destroyed
2. Measurement, Problem Solving, and the Mole Concept
The Metric System and SI Units
prefix multiplier
Giga: 109
Mega: 106
Kilo: 103
Deci: 10-1
Centi: 10-2
Milli: 10-3
Micro: 10-6
Nano: 10-9
Pico: 10-12
standard units:
length → meters
mass → kg
time → sec
temp → K
amount → mol
electric current → A
Scientific Notation
Significant Figures
Consistency vs. Precision
Density
Energy and Its Units
Converting between Units
Problem-Solving Strategies
Solving Problems Involving Equations
The Mole Concept
1 mol = 6.022 × 1023 particles
3. Chemical Bonds, Formulas, and Names
Types of Chemical Bonds
Ionic Bonds: form between metal and nonmetals, involve the transfer of electrons
metals lose electron to nonmetals, become cation and anion
form compound with a lattice (regular 3-D array) structure
Covalent Bonds: between two or more nonmetals, involve the sharing of electrons
form molecular compounds
Representing Compounds: Chemical Formulas and Molecular Models
Empirical Formula: gives the relative number of atoms of each element in a compound
Molecular Formula: actual number of atoms of each element in a molecule of a compound
Structural Formula: uses lines to represent covalent bonds and shows how atoms in a molecule bond to each other
single bond: weaker, longer
double bond: stronger, shorter
Ball-and-Stick Model
The Lewis Model:
Representing Valence Electrons with Dots
The Octet Rule
Ionic Bonding: The Lewis Model and Lattice Energies
Molecular Compounds: Formulas and Names
Formula Mass and the Mole Concept for Compounds
Composition of Compounds
Determining a Chemical Formula from Experimental Data
1. Atoms, Structures, and Properties
The Scientific Approach to Knowledge
science: observation of the physical world
scientific law: amount of related observation to create a generalization
hypothesis: explanation of observations
scientific theory: explains underlying reasons for observations and laws
experiments: controlled procedures designed to produce new observations
Modern Atomic Theory and the Laws That Led to It
Law of Conservation of Mass: in a chemical reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed
Law of Definite Proportions (constant composition): All samples of a given compound, regardless of their source or how they were prepared, have the same proportions of their constituent elements
Law of Multiple Proportions: When 2 elements form 2 different compounds, the masses of element B that combine with 1 g of element A can be expressed as a ratio of small whole numbers
Dalton’s Atomic Theory:
elements are composed of tiny, indestructible particles called atoms
all atoms of an element have the same mass and other properties
atoms combine in simple, whole number ratios to form compounds
atoms of one element can’t change into atoms of another element, they simply bind together with other atoms
The Structure of the Atom
Thomson’s Plum-Pudding Model
negatively charged electrons were small particles held within a positively charged sphere
Rutherford’s Nuclear Model
most of atom’s mass and all of its positive charge are in the nucleus
most of the atom is made of empty space, with electrons dispersed
there are negatively charged electrons outside the nucleus and positively charged particles (protons) within the nucleus, making the atom neutrally charged
Chadwick → discovered neutrons in the nucleus
Subatomic Particles: Protons, Neutrons, and Electrons
protons and neutrons have nearly identical masses
protons and electrons have electrical charges
elements are defined by the amount of protons
Atomic Mass: The Average Mass of an Element’s Atoms
Atomic Mass: average mass of an elements isotopes
Elements and Isotopes
sum of the fractions of the isotopes times the mass of each isotope
masses of atoms and their abundance are measures using mass spectrometry
Intensive vs Extensive Properties
Intensive: used to identify substances based on type (ex: density)
Extensive: depends on the amount of the substance (ex: mass)
Chemical vs. Physical Properties
Physical Properties: property that a substance displays w/o changing its composition
order, taste, color, appearance, melting point, boiling point and density
Chemical Properties: property that a substance displays only by changing its composition via a chemical change
corrosiveness, flammability, acidity, toxicity
Conservation Laws: Mass and Energy
Energy: capacity to do work
Law of Conservation of Energy: energy is neither created nor destroyed
2. Measurement, Problem Solving, and the Mole Concept
The Metric System and SI Units
prefix multiplier
Giga: 109
Mega: 106
Kilo: 103
Deci: 10-1
Centi: 10-2
Milli: 10-3
Micro: 10-6
Nano: 10-9
Pico: 10-12
standard units:
length → meters
mass → kg
time → sec
temp → K
amount → mol
electric current → A
Scientific Notation
Significant Figures
Consistency vs. Precision
Density
Energy and Its Units
Converting between Units
Problem-Solving Strategies
Solving Problems Involving Equations
The Mole Concept
1 mol = 6.022 × 1023 particles
3. Chemical Bonds, Formulas, and Names
Types of Chemical Bonds
Ionic Bonds: form between metal and nonmetals, involve the transfer of electrons
metals lose electron to nonmetals, become cation and anion
form compound with a lattice (regular 3-D array) structure
Covalent Bonds: between two or more nonmetals, involve the sharing of electrons
form molecular compounds
Representing Compounds: Chemical Formulas and Molecular Models
Empirical Formula: gives the relative number of atoms of each element in a compound
Molecular Formula: actual number of atoms of each element in a molecule of a compound
Structural Formula: uses lines to represent covalent bonds and shows how atoms in a molecule bond to each other
single bond: weaker, longer
double bond: stronger, shorter
Ball-and-Stick Model
The Lewis Model:
Representing Valence Electrons with Dots
The Octet Rule
Ionic Bonding: The Lewis Model and Lattice Energies
Molecular Compounds: Formulas and Names
Formula Mass and the Mole Concept for Compounds
Composition of Compounds
Determining a Chemical Formula from Experimental Data