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Chemistry 100

Chemistry 100. Chapter 2 Atoms, Molecules and Ions. Law of Conservation of Matter. By 1800, chemists had noted that the mass of reactants equals the mass of products - provided you capture any escaping gas Matter is not created or destroyed in a chemical reaction. Law of Constant Composition.

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Chemistry 100

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  1. Chemistry 100 Chapter 2 Atoms, Molecules and Ions

  2. Law of Conservation of Matter • By 1800, chemists had noted that the mass of reactants equals the mass of products - provided you capture any escaping gas • Matter is not created or destroyed in a chemical reaction

  3. Law of Constant Composition • Chemists (notably Proust) • The relative amount (percentage) of each element in a compound was the same no matter how the compound was made • These two laws lead Dalton to revive the Atomic Theory • Matter is made up of small, indivisible particles

  4. Dalton’s Atomic Theory • An element is composed of atoms. • All atoms of a given element are the same. • Atoms of different elements are different and have different properties.

  5. Dalton’s Theory-II • Atoms are not changed, created or destroyed in a chemical reaction. • Compounds are the combination of more than one element. • A given compound has the same relative number and kind of atoms.

  6. Law of Multiple Proportions • Accorrding to Dalton’s Theory • Two elements (A and B) form two distinct compounds • The amounts of B combining with a fixed amount of A would be a small whole number ratio. • Water: 1 g hydrogen + 8 g oxygen • Hydrogen peroxide: 1 g hydrogen +16 g oxygen

  7. Atomic Structure • Roentgen discovered X-rays (1895) • Becquerel discovered radioactivity (1896) • J. J. Thompson discovered the electron (1897) • Rutherford classified radioactivity emissions: alpha (), beta () and gamma ()

  8. Alpha, beta, gamma • Rutherford’s findings: • Alpha are positive particles (+2) ; heavier than electrons • Beta are high speed electrons; negatively charged particles (-1) • Gamma are neutral rays • Alpha particles are nucleus of He atom

  9. Thompson’s Model “Plum pudding” model A cloud of positive charge holding the negatively charge electrons in place

  10. Rutherford’s alpha experiment • Scattering of alpha particles by gold foil • Most particles were undeflected • Some were deflected by large angles

  11. Rutherford’s Explanation

  12. Rutherford’s Model • Centre - the nucleus - is small but positively charged • Most of the atom is empty spaces • Electrons rotate about the nucleus - like the solar system

  13. Modern Model • Additional experiments showed • Nucleus consists of protons (positive) and neutrons (neutral) • Electrons (negative) exist around the nucleus • Number of protons = number of electrons

  14. Mass of Elementary Particles • Protons and neutrons have a mass of about 1 amu • Electrons have very small mass • Most of the mass of an atoms comes from nucleus (1 amu is 1.66054  10-24 grams)

  15. Quantum Mechanical Model

  16. Atomic Mass & Atomic Number

  17. Isotopes • All atoms of a given element have the same number of protons. All Carbon atoms have 6 protons (and 6 electrons). • The number of protons is different for each element. • Atoms of a given element that differ in the number of neutrons are called isotopes. • Examples : carbon-12 and carbon-14

  18. Atomic Masses • By international agreement, the carbon-12 atom is defined as having a mass of exactly 12 atomic mass units (amu’s). • All atomic masses are referenced to this standard.

  19. Ca 20 40.078 The Periodic Table • A typical entry in the periodic table Atomic number Atomic mass

  20. Periodic Table (II) • Elements in the periodic table are arranged in • Groups or families – they have similar chemical and physical properties • Metals – towards the left • Nonmetals – towards the right • Metalloids – in the middle region

  21. Atomic Masses in the Periodic Table • Question: why is the mass of C in the periodic table reported as 12.01 amu and not as 12.000 … amu, exactly? • Another example: the atomic mass of Cl is = 35.453 amu’s. We would expect Cl to be  35 amu?

  22. Ionic Compounds • Tables of common ions in textbook (pages 60 and 63). • Ionic compounds • Cation name followed by anion name, e.g., sodium bromide (NaBr) • Multiple ion types • FeCl2 – iron (II) chloride • FeCl3– iron (III) chloride

  23. Binary Molecular Compounds • Binary compounds containing two nonmetals • name of the first element in the formula followed by the stem of the name of the second element with the suffix -ide. • The number of atoms of each element in the compound is indicated by a prefix. • Some common names must be committed to memory. • Examples – nitrous oxide, N2O, and nitric oxide, NO. mono di tri tetra 1 2 3 4

  24. Formulas and Names of Acids • An acid usually is a compound of hydrogen and a nonmetal or a polyatomic anion. • Treat the hydrogen atoms of the acid as H+ ions. • For acids containing monatomic anions, • When these acids are found in water solution, add the prefix hydro- and the suffix -ic to the stem of the name of the anion • Hydrofluoric acid (HF), hydrochloric acid (HCl)

  25. Acids From Polyatomic Anions • If the anion name ends in ‘ate’, the ‘ate’ in the name of the anion is replaced by ‘ic acid ’ • The acid of the sulfate ion is sulfuric acid (H2SO4) • The acid of the nitrate ion is nitric acid (HNO3) • If the anion names end in ‘ite’, we change the suffix to –ous and add the word acid. • The acid of the nitrite is called nitrous acid, HNO2 • The acid of the hypochlorite ion is called hypochlorous acid, HClO

  26. Average Atomic Masses • Most elements in nature exist as mixtures of isotopes. • Atomic masses reported in the periodic table - weighted averages of the different isotopes. • The amount of each isotope in a sample of as an element may vary considerably with the source of the sample. • This is the reason why some elements in the periodic table have few significant figures for their mass.

  27. Organic Compounds • Many organic compounds have complex three dimensional structures • chains, and/or rings • branches. • The highlighted groups are called functional groups. • They are primarily responsible for the chemical and some physical properties of the molecules.

  28. Alkanes

  29. Alcohols

  30. Organic Amines

  31. Organic Acids

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