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6.9 KiB
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Unit 1: Chemistry
- Matter - has mass, takes up space.
- fundamental unit -> ATOMS
- One
formula unit
- repeating strucure in an ionic compound taht has the simplest ratio of ions in the compound - Ions are particles with charges
Atoms
- Atoms are the smallest unit of an element that still retains its properties
- Atoms are made of subatomic particles
- Relative Charge: compared to something.
- AMU = atomic mass units
- models allow people to make accurate preictions about the behaviour of matter
- atmoic notation \(`_{19}K`\)
- an isotope is an atom (or atoms) of an element with a unique # of neutrons
Name | Symbol | Relative mass (amu) | Location | Relative Charge |
---|---|---|---|---|
Protons | \(`p^+`\) | \(`1`\) | nucleus | \(`+1`\) |
Neutrons | \(`n^0`\) | \(`1`\) | nucleus | \(`0`\) |
Electrons | \(`e^-`\) | \(`~\dfrac{1}{2000}`\) | in orbit around nucleus (shell, energy level) | \(`-1`\) |
IUPAC
Letter | Definition |
---|---|
I | International |
U | Union |
P | Pure and |
A | Applied |
C | Chemistry |
- Involved in studying, varifying information (eg the periodic table -> Describes the elements -> pure susbtances made of only one kind of atom),and publishing.
Trends on the Periodic Table
Rows
- Same energy level in each period
- Same number of valence electrons in each group
- Across a row/period \(`\rightarrow`\) more \(`p^+`\) in nucleus \(`\rightarrow`\) greater attraction to \(`e^-`\)
- Atomic radius decreases as you move acroos a row/period, due to more protons in the nucleus that attract the negatives.
- Atomic radius is the from the center of the atom (nucleus) to the outer most shell (valence shell)
Columns
- down a column, increase of energy level, as you move down
- every atom has only one valence shell (cause its the most outer shell)
- if valence shell is further away from the nucleus, less attractive force between nucleus and valence \(`e^-`\)
- more energy levels where \(`e-`\) can be
- Negative electrons are repeling the valence shell electrons
(shielding)
Shielding
“inner electrons” repel valence electrons and “block” attraction force between valence electrons and nucleus- Atomic radius increases as you move down a column/group
Metals
- They tend to lose electrons
- They are shiny, ductile, malleable, conductive
- They have a weak/loose hold on electrons
- Most metals are considered to be multi-metals
- can form ions of differing charges
- add roman numerals to the ions name to indicate its charge, for example, iron(\(`III`\)) oxide.
Non-Metals
- They are dull, bad conductors - insulators
- Tend to gain electrons
- The have a strong hold on electrons
Bonds
- An ionic bond is a bond between a negative ion and a positive ion (so a anion and a cation)
- An convalent bond is a bond between 2 non-metals
- An ion is a charged particle
- An anion is formed when an particle gains electrons
- An cation is formed when an particle loses electrons
- We can use modesl(e.g Lewis dot diagrams) to show bonding
- Atoms will lose or gain electrons to achieve noble gas \(`e^-`\) configuration \(`\rightarrow`\) The most common stable ion. (eg, if \(`Na`\) loses electrons, it becomes like \(`Ne`\), if \(`Cl`\) gains an electron, it becomes like \(`Ar`\))
- To show that atoms are different than ions, we put square brackets around it \(`[Na]`\), then we put superscript on the top right to show its charge, \(`[Na]^+`\) (if the charge is only a \(`\pm 1`\), we just put a \(`+`\) instead of \(`+1`\))
Non Metal Ionic Names
Name | Name |
---|---|
Hydride | Boride |
Carbide | Nitride |
Oxide | Fluoride |
Silicide | Phosphide |
Sulphide/Sulfide | Chloride |
Arsenide | Selenide |
Bromide | Telluride |
Iodide | Astitide |
Chemical Nomenclature
- Naming and writing chemical formuals
- According to IUPAC
- Direct relationship beween chemical name and chemical structure
Formula | Name |
---|---|
\(`NaCl`\) | Sodium chloride |
\(`K_3P`\) | Potassium phosphide |
\(`Mg_3P_2`\) | Magnesium phosphide |
Polyatomic Ions
- Ions that are made of \(`\ge 2`\) atoms.
- Molecules with a charge
- eg. \(`CaCo_3`\)
- \(`Ca \rightarrow`\) Calcium ion
\(`Ca^{2+}`\)
(Cation)
- \(`CO_3 \rightarrow`\) Carbonate
ion \(`CO_3^{2-}`\)
(Anion)
Calcium carbonate
- \(`Ca \rightarrow`\) Calcium ion
\(`Ca^{2+}`\)
- The ones that are not multi-valent are:
- The first
20
elements alkali metals
alkaline earth metals
- non-metals (the ones hugging the staircase are also non-metals (some
of the
metalloids
)) halogens
noble gases
- The first
- Going down diagonally from aluminium, we get a pattern of 3+, 2+, 1+ of charge. Aluminium has a charge of 3+, Zinc has a charge of 2+, and silver has a charge of 1+, and they are all mono-valent. (not multi-valent)
- If there is more than one polyatomic ion in a formula unit, then surround the ion with brackets
- Oxyanion are negative ions with oxygen in them
Polyatomic Ion Name | Formula (Always Remember The Charge!) |
---|---|
Ammonium | \(`NH_4^+`\) |
Acetate | \(`CH_3COO^-`\) |
Borate | \(`BO_3^{3-}`\) |
Chlorate | \(`ClO_3^-`\) |
Cyanide | \(`CN^-`\) |
Hydroxide | \(`OH^-`\) |
Nitrate | \(`NO_3^-`\) |
Permanganate | \(`MnO_4^-`\) |
Carbonate | \(`CO_3^{2-}`\) |
Chromate | \(`CrO_4^{2-}`\) |
Dichromate | \(`Cr_2O_7^{2-}`\) |
Sulfate | \(`SO_4^{2-}`\) |
Phosphate | \(`PO_4^{3-}`\) |
Deriving Ions From Parent
Polyatomic Ion Name | Operation | Chemical Formula |
---|---|---|
Perchlorate | (add one extra oxygen to the parent) | \(`ClO_4^-`\) |
Chlorate | (parent) | \(`ClO_3^-`\) |
Chlorite | (has one less oxygen than the parent) | \(`ClO_2^-`\) |
Hypochlorite | (has two less oxygens than the parent) | \(`ClO^-`\) |
- Note that the charge remains the same
- Polyatomic ions in the same group on the periodic table from similar polyatomic ions
Chlorate | \(`ClO_3^-`\) |
---|---|
Bromate | \(`BrO_3^-`\) |
Acidic Oxyanions
- Each hydrogen added to a polyatomic ion increases the charge by one, and c hanges the name:
Name | Chemical Formula |
---|---|
Hydrogen carbonate ion | \(`HCO_3`\) |
Dihydrogen phosphate ion | \(`H2PO_4^-`\) |
Monohydrogen phosphate ion | \(`HPO_4^{2-}`\) |
- For above, we use mono for phosphate to avoid ambigious cases, where
\(`H_2PO_4^{-}`\) and \(`H_2PO_4^{2-}`\) are the same if we don’t
put
mono
infront. As for the Hyrogen carbonate ion we don’t put a mono due to no ambigious cases.
Molecular Compounds
- Are not made of ions, instead molecules
- Shared pair of electrons ->
covalent bonds
- Lone pair of electrons are electrons that are not shared
- Radicals are unpaired electrons, vefy reactive
- Molecules have no charge
- Atoms fill their valence shells to form molecules
- Double bond between oxygen atoms in an oxygen molecule
Compound | State at Room Temperature | Solubility In Water | Conductivity Of Solution | Ionic Or Molecular |
---|---|---|---|---|
ammonium chloride | solid | soluable, overtime the substance starts to get smaller and disappears | colourless | ionic |
copper | ||||