Nico's CHEM 107 ARONSON
Gasoline is a complex mixture of mainly alkanes (single bonded hydrocarbons) from 7-9 Carbons
Butyric acid causes body odor
Butane is for covering up body odor
You can change the type by taking off a carbon and making it a new branch!
A fuel octane rating means how controlled its explosion is
Ethanol is made from corn
Stoichiometry is a term used to describe quantitative relationships in chemistry.
Limiting reactant is the chemical that gets fully used in the reaction and the excess is the one that there was too much of to react
Impurities hold reactions back from reaching theoretical yield
Percentage yield = (actual yield / theoretical yield) x 100%
Titration - limiting the limiter to get a precise amount
NO2 primary pollutant of cars and such
Nitrogen dioxide
That free electron at the end makes it very reactive and that’s the problem
Gas properties
Expand to fill the volume (V) of any container.
• Have much lower densities (d) than solids or
liquids.
• Have highly variable densities, depending on
conditions.
• Mix with one another readily and thoroughly.
• Change volume (V) dramatically with changing
temperature (T).
R is the universal gas constant.
R = 0.08206 L atm mol-1 K-1: used in most gas equations
R = 8.314 J mol-1 K-1 : used in equations involving energy
Pressure = force / area
Units of Pressure
• 1 torr = 1 mm Hg
• 1 atm = 760 torr (exactly)
• 1 atm = 101,325 Pa
(exactly)
• 760 torr = 101,325 Pa
(exactly)
Trace analysis: the detection of chemicals present at extremely low levels
Non-destructive testing: does not require
that that samples be decomposed or
otherwise damaged
Many trace analysis techniques rely on
microscopy or spectroscopy and take
advantage of the fact that different
elements have specific and characteristic
properties
C = speed of light = 3 x 10^8 m/s
C = frequency * wavelength
Photoelectric effect: light striking a
metal surface causes electrons to be
ejected.
• Energy from the light is transferred to
electrons in the metal.
• With sufficient energy, electrons
“break free” of the metal.
• Electrons given more energy move
faster (have higher kinetic energy)
when they leave the metal.
Periodic Table of Elements
Names and symbols of elements (e.g., "C" for Carbon, "No" for Nobelium)
/
Monatomic ions and their charges
Polyatomic ions and their charges (e.g., sulfate, ammonium)
Solubility of compounds (e.g., nitrates are always soluble)
First ten alkanes (e.g., methane, ethane) with formulas
Organic functionalities (e.g., alcohol, carboxylic acid)
Empirical formulas of ionic compounds
Naming binary inorganic compounds and oxoacids
Balancing chemical equations
Identifying reactants and products
Converting mass to moles and vice versa (stoichiometry)
Identifying limiting and excess reactants
Calculating percent yield from theoretical and actual yields
Molarity and volume calculations
Acid-base titration problems
PV = nRT calculations
Combined gas law (P1V1/T1 = P2V2/T2)
Calculating molecular weight from density using the ideal gas law
Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution
Mean free path and kinetic energy
Real gas behavior and van der Waals correction factors
Wavelength, frequency, and energy relationships
Ephoton = Binding Energy + Kinetic Energy
Energy level transitions (ΔE) in atoms
Quantum numbers and orbital types (s, p, d, f)
Electron configuration rules (Aufbau principle, Pauli Exclusion, Hund's rule)
Ground-state configurations for ions
Atomic radius, ionization energy, and electron affinity trends
Gasoline is a complex mixture of mainly alkanes (single bonded hydrocarbons) from 7-9 Carbons
Butyric acid causes body odor
Butane is for covering up body odor
You can change the type by taking off a carbon and making it a new branch!
A fuel octane rating means how controlled its explosion is
Ethanol is made from corn
Stoichiometry is a term used to describe quantitative relationships in chemistry.
Limiting reactant is the chemical that gets fully used in the reaction and the excess is the one that there was too much of to react
Impurities hold reactions back from reaching theoretical yield
Percentage yield = (actual yield / theoretical yield) x 100%
Titration - limiting the limiter to get a precise amount
NO2 primary pollutant of cars and such
Nitrogen dioxide
That free electron at the end makes it very reactive and that’s the problem
Gas properties
Expand to fill the volume (V) of any container.
• Have much lower densities (d) than solids or
liquids.
• Have highly variable densities, depending on
conditions.
• Mix with one another readily and thoroughly.
• Change volume (V) dramatically with changing
temperature (T).
R is the universal gas constant.
R = 0.08206 L atm mol-1 K-1: used in most gas equations
R = 8.314 J mol-1 K-1 : used in equations involving energy
Pressure = force / area
Units of Pressure
• 1 torr = 1 mm Hg
• 1 atm = 760 torr (exactly)
• 1 atm = 101,325 Pa
(exactly)
• 760 torr = 101,325 Pa
(exactly)
Trace analysis: the detection of chemicals present at extremely low levels
Non-destructive testing: does not require
that that samples be decomposed or
otherwise damaged
Many trace analysis techniques rely on
microscopy or spectroscopy and take
advantage of the fact that different
elements have specific and characteristic
properties
C = speed of light = 3 x 10^8 m/s
C = frequency * wavelength
Photoelectric effect: light striking a
metal surface causes electrons to be
ejected.
• Energy from the light is transferred to
electrons in the metal.
• With sufficient energy, electrons
“break free” of the metal.
• Electrons given more energy move
faster (have higher kinetic energy)
when they leave the metal.
Periodic Table of Elements
Names and symbols of elements (e.g., "C" for Carbon, "No" for Nobelium)
/
Monatomic ions and their charges
Polyatomic ions and their charges (e.g., sulfate, ammonium)
Solubility of compounds (e.g., nitrates are always soluble)
First ten alkanes (e.g., methane, ethane) with formulas
Organic functionalities (e.g., alcohol, carboxylic acid)
Empirical formulas of ionic compounds
Naming binary inorganic compounds and oxoacids
Balancing chemical equations
Identifying reactants and products
Converting mass to moles and vice versa (stoichiometry)
Identifying limiting and excess reactants
Calculating percent yield from theoretical and actual yields
Molarity and volume calculations
Acid-base titration problems
PV = nRT calculations
Combined gas law (P1V1/T1 = P2V2/T2)
Calculating molecular weight from density using the ideal gas law
Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution
Mean free path and kinetic energy
Real gas behavior and van der Waals correction factors
Wavelength, frequency, and energy relationships
Ephoton = Binding Energy + Kinetic Energy
Energy level transitions (ΔE) in atoms
Quantum numbers and orbital types (s, p, d, f)
Electron configuration rules (Aufbau principle, Pauli Exclusion, Hund's rule)
Ground-state configurations for ions
Atomic radius, ionization energy, and electron affinity trends