Chemistry all Y9 Notes & Flashcards [end of years revision]
Separation and Purification
States of matter
State changes are physical changes - they cannot be reversed and the chemical properties of what you’re changing stay the same
Particles
State | Arrangement | Distance | Movement |
---|---|---|---|
Gas | random | far apart | moving fast in all directions |
Liquid | random | close | flowing around each other |
Solid | regular | close | vibrating in a fixed position |
Filtration and Crystallisation
Filters separate mixtures by letting smaller things through but trapping bigger things (aka insoluble substances)
Solute: a dissolved substance
Solution: a mix of solutes
Solvent: what the solutes dissolve in
Saturated solution: a solution containing the most amount of solute that can dissolve in that amount of solvent
Crystallisation
Crystallisation: a method of separation involving evaporating the solvent to leave the solutes behind. This forms solid crystals.
If crystals form slowly, the particles have longer to form an ordered pattern and will make larger crystals. If crystals form quickly, they will be smaller.
Crystallisation risk assessment:
Wear eye protection
Use steam to heat the evaporating basin gently
Remove the bunsen burner before the solution is completely dry
Care must be taken not to overheat the solution as hot crystals may spit out
Crystallisation in the lab:
Further heating may cause the crystals to change chemically
Filtration
Residue: bits of insoluble substances that don’t get through filter paper and are left in it
Distillation
Distillation is a way of separating multiple liquids by boiling them one by one. The one with the lowest boiling point evaporates first, and so on
Still: the apparatus used for distillation
Ways to make a still more efficient:
Plugging gaps in apparatus with bungs to stop any gas escaping
Condenser: a tube surrounded with a jacket of cold water (used instead of a delivery tube). Helps liquid condense quicker with lowered temperatures
Anti-bumping granules: makes the liquid boil more smoothly, reduces risk of liquid boiling over (put in the solution)
Fractional distillation
Apparatus for fractional distillation
Examples of uses of fractional distillation:
Separate different products of crude oil
Make alcoholic drinks like whisky and vodka
Separate gasses in the air
Mixtures
The composition of a pure substance can’t be changed, and is the same everywhere in the substance. For example, pure gold contains only gold atoms.
Compounds can be pure if it is the only thing in the substance e.g. pure water is only H2O
A pure substance can’t be separated into other substances
Mixture: contains elements and/or compounds not chemically joined together. They can be separated and don’t have a fixed composition
Melting points
When something melts its particles gain enough energy to overcome the forces of attraction between them. The temperature at which this happens is the melting point
Pure substances have fixed melting points.
Mixtures don’t have fixed melting points and instead melt over a range of temperatures. This is because there are different things with different melting points inside it.
Chromatography
When a solvent moves along paper, different substances in it move at different speeds, so they separate.
Mobile phase = the solvent (e.g. water)
Stationary phase = the paper
Chromatogram: the paper with the separated components
Rf value = distance moved by spot distance moved by solvent
Measurements are made from the starting points of samples
Atomic Structure
Periodic Table
Mendeleev was a Russian chemist credited with the first periodic table
He arranged the elements in increasing order of atomic masses, and elements with similar properties were near each other.
He left gaps in his table for unknown elements, and so was able to predict the properties of them by looking at where they fitted and the properties of the elements around them
His law couldn’t explain the existence of isotopes or where they would go on his table. As they have different atomic masses, they should have been in a separate place, but Mendeleev didn’t give them their column, which didn’t make sense with his law.
Structure of atoms
Atoms have a central nucleus containing protons and neutrons, and electrons arranged in shells surrounding it.
Protons have a positive charge (+1)
Neutrons have a neutral charge (0)
Electrons have a negative charge (-1)
Atomic number: number of protons/electrons
Mass number: number of protons + number of neutrons
aka atomic number + neutrons
The number of protons and electrons is always the same
To work out:
number of protons: atomic number
number of electrons: atomic number
number of neutrons: mass number - atomic number
The mass number is always the largest of the two numbers
The atomic number determines what element and atom is
Isotopes
Isotope: an atom with the same atomic number but a different mass number
They are the same element but are chemically slightly different as they have a different number of neutrons
Example: Chlorine
Chlorine has two isotopes: chlorine-35 and chlorine-37
Both of their atomic numbers are 17 - they are still chlorine, but their mass numbers are 35 and 37
Isotopes have the same chemical reactions as they have the same electron arrangement (the only thing that is different is the number of neutrons)
Isotopes can be written in two ways:
Relative atomic mass
Relative atomic mass: the weighted average mass of an atom’s isotopes
How to work it out:
(percentage x mass number of isotope 1) + (percentage x mass number of isotope 2) 100
If there are more than two isotopes you just add more brackets on the end
Example:
chlorine-35 is 75% and chlorine-37 is 25%
(75 x 35) + (25 x 37)
100
= 35.5
So chlorine’s relative atomic mass is 35.5
Electron Configuration
The first (most inner) shell can hold max 2 electrons
All the other shells can hold max 8 electrons
When a shell is full you have to go onto the next one out
Writing electron configuration:
Numbers of electrons in each shell starting in the centre and going outwards e.g. 2, 8, 6
Atoms in the same group have the same number of electrons in their outer shell
Atoms in the same period have the same number of shells
Metals have 1, 2, 3 electrons in their outer shell
Non-metals have 4, 5, 6, 7 electrons in their outer shell
Periodic Table
Staircase line: (remember down from B) metals to the left, non-metals to the right
Transition metals: middle section of un-grouped metals, the most common metals
Vertical columns are groups (0-7, missing out transition metals)
Horizontal rows are periods (1-7)
Ionic bonding
Bonds are the forces of attraction that hold atoms together. When bonds form between atoms, energy is released, making them more stable & less reactive. The most stable atoms are the ones with a full outer shell - they contain as many electrons as possible.
Atoms can achieve a full outer shell by transfer of electrons between atoms, which form charged particles called ions.
Metal atoms loose electrons and form positive ions aka cations, which have more protons than electrons.
Non-metal atoms gain electrons and form negative ions aka anions, which have more electrons than protons
When non-metals form negative ions the end of the name changes to -ide
Electrostatic forces: forces of attraction between all positively and negatively charged objects. They hold the oppositely charged ions together and form an ionic bond between them.
Atoms that easily form ions will either have a nearly full or nearly empty outer shell.
Most ionic bonds will be formed between a metal and a non-metal.
The ion formed depends on the element’s position in the periodic table and its number of outer electrons
Group 1 | Group 2 | Group 6 | Group 7 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
outer electrons | 1 | 2 | 6 | 7 |
electrons lost/gained | 1 lost | 2 lost | 2 gained | 1 gained |
charge on ion | 1+ | 2+ | 2- | 1- |
Groups of the periodic table
The periodic table is arranged so that elements in the same vertical column or group have similar chemical and physical properties and show trends in those properties
Group 1 - Alkali metals
They are called alkali metals because they react with water to form alkalis
The alkali metals in group 1 have similar physical properties that are specific to the group - they have low melting points, are soft and easily cut, are very reactive and readily form compounds with non-metals.
Reactivity of the metals increases down the group.
Reactants | What happens | Products |
---|---|---|
Lithium in water | bubbles fiercely on the surface | lithium hydroxide + hydrogen gas |
Sodium in water | melts into a ball and fizzes about the surface | sodium hydroxide + hydrogen gas |
Potassium in water | bursts into flames and flies about the surface | potassium hydroxide + hydrogen gas |
Alkali metals are so reactive because they only have one electron they have to loose for a complete outer shell, making it easy to happen. They all create positive (1+) ions.
As we go down the group, an extra electron shell is added, making the force of attraction between the nucleus and the outer electron weaker, as there is more space between them. This means that it is easier to remove the outer electron, explaining the trend in reactivity
Group 7 - Halogens
Similarities in group 7:
As you go down the group, the melting points, boiling points and densities all increase:
Appearance | Melting point | Boiling point | Density | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Chlorine | green gas | -101 | -34 | 0.0032 |
Bromine | brown liquid | -7 | 59 | 3.12 |
Iodine | purple/black solid | 114 | 184 | 4.95 |
Halogens react with metals forming salts. They can also all be used as disinfectants and bleaches, as they can kill microorganisms and remove the colour from materials.
If you put damp blue litmus paper in chlorine, it will turn red and then bleach white. This is the test for chlorine
Halogens react with hydrogen to form hydrogen halides, which dissolve in water to form acids including hydrochloric acid
Reactivity increases up the group in halogens.
Halogen | Effect on iron wool |
---|---|
Fluorine | bursts into flames |
Chlorine | glows brightly |
Bromine | glows dull red |
Iodine | changes colour |
Displacement reaction: a reaction where a more reactive element takes the place of a less reactive element in a compound.
Group 0 - Noble gasses
This group wasn’t known until the 19th centry, and were so difficult to detect because they don’t react with anything. There are only very small amount of each noble gas in our atmosphere.
Noble gasses are:
They are also all inert, meaning they don’t react easily with anything. This is because they all already have full outer shells, meaning they don’t need to loose/gain any more electrons.
They all exist as single atoms, because they don’t form bonds easily with other atoms
Trends:
Melting point | Boiling point | Density | |
---|---|---|---|
Helium | -272 | -269 | 0.00018 |
Neon | -249 | -246 | 0.0009 |
Argon | -189 | -186 | 0.0018 |
Krypton | -157 | -153 | 0.0038 |
Uses:
Krypton is used in photography lighting because it produces a brilliant white light when electricity is passed through it.
Argon is denser than air, so it is added to the space above the wine in wine barrels to stop oxygen reacting with the wine.
Helium has a very low density and is non-flammable, so it is used in balloons and airships.
Neon produces a red-orange light when electricity is passes through it, and so it is used to make neon lights.
Redox
When a metal reacts with oxygen in looses electrons, and the opposite of it is reduction, gain of electrons.
OIL RIG
Oxidation Is Loss Reduction Is Gain
These two processes occur at the same time in displacement reactions and they are called reduction-oxidation or redox reactions.
For example, when one element looses electrons to become a positively charged ion it is oxidised, and when another gains electrons to become a negatively charged ion it is reduced.
Separation and Purification
States of matter
State changes are physical changes - they cannot be reversed and the chemical properties of what you’re changing stay the same
Particles
State | Arrangement | Distance | Movement |
---|---|---|---|
Gas | random | far apart | moving fast in all directions |
Liquid | random | close | flowing around each other |
Solid | regular | close | vibrating in a fixed position |
Filtration and Crystallisation
Filters separate mixtures by letting smaller things through but trapping bigger things (aka insoluble substances)
Solute: a dissolved substance
Solution: a mix of solutes
Solvent: what the solutes dissolve in
Saturated solution: a solution containing the most amount of solute that can dissolve in that amount of solvent
Crystallisation
Crystallisation: a method of separation involving evaporating the solvent to leave the solutes behind. This forms solid crystals.
If crystals form slowly, the particles have longer to form an ordered pattern and will make larger crystals. If crystals form quickly, they will be smaller.
Crystallisation risk assessment:
Wear eye protection
Use steam to heat the evaporating basin gently
Remove the bunsen burner before the solution is completely dry
Care must be taken not to overheat the solution as hot crystals may spit out
Crystallisation in the lab:
Further heating may cause the crystals to change chemically
Filtration
Residue: bits of insoluble substances that don’t get through filter paper and are left in it
Distillation
Distillation is a way of separating multiple liquids by boiling them one by one. The one with the lowest boiling point evaporates first, and so on
Still: the apparatus used for distillation
Ways to make a still more efficient:
Plugging gaps in apparatus with bungs to stop any gas escaping
Condenser: a tube surrounded with a jacket of cold water (used instead of a delivery tube). Helps liquid condense quicker with lowered temperatures
Anti-bumping granules: makes the liquid boil more smoothly, reduces risk of liquid boiling over (put in the solution)
Fractional distillation
Apparatus for fractional distillation
Examples of uses of fractional distillation:
Separate different products of crude oil
Make alcoholic drinks like whisky and vodka
Separate gasses in the air
Mixtures
The composition of a pure substance can’t be changed, and is the same everywhere in the substance. For example, pure gold contains only gold atoms.
Compounds can be pure if it is the only thing in the substance e.g. pure water is only H2O
A pure substance can’t be separated into other substances
Mixture: contains elements and/or compounds not chemically joined together. They can be separated and don’t have a fixed composition
Melting points
When something melts its particles gain enough energy to overcome the forces of attraction between them. The temperature at which this happens is the melting point
Pure substances have fixed melting points.
Mixtures don’t have fixed melting points and instead melt over a range of temperatures. This is because there are different things with different melting points inside it.
Chromatography
When a solvent moves along paper, different substances in it move at different speeds, so they separate.
Mobile phase = the solvent (e.g. water)
Stationary phase = the paper
Chromatogram: the paper with the separated components
Rf value = distance moved by spot distance moved by solvent
Measurements are made from the starting points of samples
Atomic Structure
Periodic Table
Mendeleev was a Russian chemist credited with the first periodic table
He arranged the elements in increasing order of atomic masses, and elements with similar properties were near each other.
He left gaps in his table for unknown elements, and so was able to predict the properties of them by looking at where they fitted and the properties of the elements around them
His law couldn’t explain the existence of isotopes or where they would go on his table. As they have different atomic masses, they should have been in a separate place, but Mendeleev didn’t give them their column, which didn’t make sense with his law.
Structure of atoms
Atoms have a central nucleus containing protons and neutrons, and electrons arranged in shells surrounding it.
Protons have a positive charge (+1)
Neutrons have a neutral charge (0)
Electrons have a negative charge (-1)
Atomic number: number of protons/electrons
Mass number: number of protons + number of neutrons
aka atomic number + neutrons
The number of protons and electrons is always the same
To work out:
number of protons: atomic number
number of electrons: atomic number
number of neutrons: mass number - atomic number
The mass number is always the largest of the two numbers
The atomic number determines what element and atom is
Isotopes
Isotope: an atom with the same atomic number but a different mass number
They are the same element but are chemically slightly different as they have a different number of neutrons
Example: Chlorine
Chlorine has two isotopes: chlorine-35 and chlorine-37
Both of their atomic numbers are 17 - they are still chlorine, but their mass numbers are 35 and 37
Isotopes have the same chemical reactions as they have the same electron arrangement (the only thing that is different is the number of neutrons)
Isotopes can be written in two ways:
Relative atomic mass
Relative atomic mass: the weighted average mass of an atom’s isotopes
How to work it out:
(percentage x mass number of isotope 1) + (percentage x mass number of isotope 2) 100
If there are more than two isotopes you just add more brackets on the end
Example:
chlorine-35 is 75% and chlorine-37 is 25%
(75 x 35) + (25 x 37)
100
= 35.5
So chlorine’s relative atomic mass is 35.5
Electron Configuration
The first (most inner) shell can hold max 2 electrons
All the other shells can hold max 8 electrons
When a shell is full you have to go onto the next one out
Writing electron configuration:
Numbers of electrons in each shell starting in the centre and going outwards e.g. 2, 8, 6
Atoms in the same group have the same number of electrons in their outer shell
Atoms in the same period have the same number of shells
Metals have 1, 2, 3 electrons in their outer shell
Non-metals have 4, 5, 6, 7 electrons in their outer shell
Periodic Table
Staircase line: (remember down from B) metals to the left, non-metals to the right
Transition metals: middle section of un-grouped metals, the most common metals
Vertical columns are groups (0-7, missing out transition metals)
Horizontal rows are periods (1-7)
Ionic bonding
Bonds are the forces of attraction that hold atoms together. When bonds form between atoms, energy is released, making them more stable & less reactive. The most stable atoms are the ones with a full outer shell - they contain as many electrons as possible.
Atoms can achieve a full outer shell by transfer of electrons between atoms, which form charged particles called ions.
Metal atoms loose electrons and form positive ions aka cations, which have more protons than electrons.
Non-metal atoms gain electrons and form negative ions aka anions, which have more electrons than protons
When non-metals form negative ions the end of the name changes to -ide
Electrostatic forces: forces of attraction between all positively and negatively charged objects. They hold the oppositely charged ions together and form an ionic bond between them.
Atoms that easily form ions will either have a nearly full or nearly empty outer shell.
Most ionic bonds will be formed between a metal and a non-metal.
The ion formed depends on the element’s position in the periodic table and its number of outer electrons
Group 1 | Group 2 | Group 6 | Group 7 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
outer electrons | 1 | 2 | 6 | 7 |
electrons lost/gained | 1 lost | 2 lost | 2 gained | 1 gained |
charge on ion | 1+ | 2+ | 2- | 1- |
Groups of the periodic table
The periodic table is arranged so that elements in the same vertical column or group have similar chemical and physical properties and show trends in those properties
Group 1 - Alkali metals
They are called alkali metals because they react with water to form alkalis
The alkali metals in group 1 have similar physical properties that are specific to the group - they have low melting points, are soft and easily cut, are very reactive and readily form compounds with non-metals.
Reactivity of the metals increases down the group.
Reactants | What happens | Products |
---|---|---|
Lithium in water | bubbles fiercely on the surface | lithium hydroxide + hydrogen gas |
Sodium in water | melts into a ball and fizzes about the surface | sodium hydroxide + hydrogen gas |
Potassium in water | bursts into flames and flies about the surface | potassium hydroxide + hydrogen gas |
Alkali metals are so reactive because they only have one electron they have to loose for a complete outer shell, making it easy to happen. They all create positive (1+) ions.
As we go down the group, an extra electron shell is added, making the force of attraction between the nucleus and the outer electron weaker, as there is more space between them. This means that it is easier to remove the outer electron, explaining the trend in reactivity
Group 7 - Halogens
Similarities in group 7:
As you go down the group, the melting points, boiling points and densities all increase:
Appearance | Melting point | Boiling point | Density | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Chlorine | green gas | -101 | -34 | 0.0032 |
Bromine | brown liquid | -7 | 59 | 3.12 |
Iodine | purple/black solid | 114 | 184 | 4.95 |
Halogens react with metals forming salts. They can also all be used as disinfectants and bleaches, as they can kill microorganisms and remove the colour from materials.
If you put damp blue litmus paper in chlorine, it will turn red and then bleach white. This is the test for chlorine
Halogens react with hydrogen to form hydrogen halides, which dissolve in water to form acids including hydrochloric acid
Reactivity increases up the group in halogens.
Halogen | Effect on iron wool |
---|---|
Fluorine | bursts into flames |
Chlorine | glows brightly |
Bromine | glows dull red |
Iodine | changes colour |
Displacement reaction: a reaction where a more reactive element takes the place of a less reactive element in a compound.
Group 0 - Noble gasses
This group wasn’t known until the 19th centry, and were so difficult to detect because they don’t react with anything. There are only very small amount of each noble gas in our atmosphere.
Noble gasses are:
They are also all inert, meaning they don’t react easily with anything. This is because they all already have full outer shells, meaning they don’t need to loose/gain any more electrons.
They all exist as single atoms, because they don’t form bonds easily with other atoms
Trends:
Melting point | Boiling point | Density | |
---|---|---|---|
Helium | -272 | -269 | 0.00018 |
Neon | -249 | -246 | 0.0009 |
Argon | -189 | -186 | 0.0018 |
Krypton | -157 | -153 | 0.0038 |
Uses:
Krypton is used in photography lighting because it produces a brilliant white light when electricity is passed through it.
Argon is denser than air, so it is added to the space above the wine in wine barrels to stop oxygen reacting with the wine.
Helium has a very low density and is non-flammable, so it is used in balloons and airships.
Neon produces a red-orange light when electricity is passes through it, and so it is used to make neon lights.
Redox
When a metal reacts with oxygen in looses electrons, and the opposite of it is reduction, gain of electrons.
OIL RIG
Oxidation Is Loss Reduction Is Gain
These two processes occur at the same time in displacement reactions and they are called reduction-oxidation or redox reactions.
For example, when one element looses electrons to become a positively charged ion it is oxidised, and when another gains electrons to become a negatively charged ion it is reduced.