Ch. 2 - Atoms, Isotopes, and Nuclear Chemistry Flashcards

1
Q

Who developed the law of conservation of mass?

A

Antione Lavoisier in 1785

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2
Q

What is the law of conservation of mass?

A

Matter cannot be created of destroyed. The mass of the products equals the mass of the reactants.

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3
Q

Who developed the law of constant composition (aka the law of definite proportions)?

A

Joseph Proust in 1794

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4
Q

What is the law of constant composition?

A

The proportions of the elements in a given chemical compound are fixed.

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5
Q

Who developed the modern atomic theory?

A

John Dalton in 1808

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6
Q

What is the modern atomic theory?

A
  1. All matter consists of solid and indivisible atoms..
  2. Atoms are indestructible and retain their identity in all chemical reactions..
  3. All of the atoms of a given chemical element are identical in mass and in all other properties..
  4. Different elements have different kinds of atoms;; these atoms differ in mass from element to element..
  5. Compounds consist of elements combined in small whole - number ratios..
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7
Q

What is the mass number?

A

The Mass number (A) is the number of nucleons. It is written on the top left of an element’s symbol.

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8
Q

What are nucleons?

A

Protons and neutrons.

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9
Q

What is an atomic number?

A

An atomic number (Z) is the number of protons. Is is written on the bottom left of the element’s symbol.

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10
Q

What are isotopes?

A

Atoms of the same atomic number with differen’t mass numbers.

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11
Q

What is the formula to find the average mass of an element from its isotope masses?

A

Mav = Σ(% abundance of isotope/100%) x Misotope

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12
Q

What is the formula to calculate % abundance?

A

% abundance = (# of atoms of isotope / total # of atoms of element) x 100%

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13
Q

What is the symbol for a proton?

A

11p

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14
Q

What is the symbol for a neutron?

A

10n

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15
Q

What is the symbol for a beta particle (an electron)?

A

1-1ß

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16
Q

What is the symbol for a positron?

A

11ß

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17
Q

What is the symbol for an alpha particle?

A

42a or 42He2+

18
Q

What are the seven nuclear reactions?

A
  1. Alpha emission
  2. Beta emission
  3. Positron emission
  4. Electron capture
  5. Fission
  6. Fusion
  7. Bombardment
19
Q

What are the reactants and products of an alpha emission? Is it spontaneous?

A

1 nucleus produces 1 nucleus and 1 alpha particle spontaneously.

20
Q

What are the reactants and products of a beta emission? Is it spontaneous?

A

1 nucleus produces 1 nucleus and 1 electron spontaneously.

21
Q

What are the reactants and products of a positron emission? Is it spontaneous?

A

1 nucleus produces 1 nucleus and 1 positron spontaneously.

22
Q

What are the reactants and products of an electron capture? Is it spontaneous?

A

1 nucleus and 1 electron produce 1 nucleus spontaneously.

23
Q

What are the reactants and products of fission? Is it spontaneous?

A

1 nucleus produces 2 nuclei and some neutrons non-spontaneously.

24
Q

What are the reactants and products of fusion? Is it spontaneous?

A

2 light nuclei produce 1 nucleus and some neutrons either spontaneously or non-spontaneously.

25
Q

What are the reactants and products of bombardment? Is it spontaneous?

A

2 heavy nuclei produce 1 nucleus and some neutrons non-spontaneously.

26
Q

What are properties of alpha radiation?

A

Alpha particles are bigger than other forms of radiation and have a +2 charge so it is easliy stoped but can be highly damaging if ingested.

27
Q

What are properties of beta radiation?

A

Beta particles have a -1 charge and have a stronger penetrating power than alpha radiation that can cause radiation burns and other biological damage.

28
Q

What are properties of gamma radiation?

A

Gamma radiation is high energy electromagnetic radiation. It has no mass and no charge so it passes right through matter and causes serious biological damage.

29
Q

What are neutrinos?

A

They are particles with a neutral charge and and a small mass that creates weak interactions with matter. They carry most of the energy generated in many nuclear reactions.

30
Q

What is the absorbed dose?

A

A measure of the amount of radiation abrosbed by a given mass of tissue. Measured in grays (Gy) where 1 Gy = 1 J/kg.

31
Q

What is the euqivalent dose?

A

A measure of how much biological damage can be done by the radiation absorbed. (The absorbed dose is multiplied by a radiation weighting factor (WR) to calculate the dose in gamma rays). It is measured in sieverts (Sv) where 1 Sv = 1 J/kg.

32
Q

If Z = 1-20, what is the ideal N to Z ratio?

A

N = Z

33
Q

If Z = 20-82, what is the ideal N to Z ratio?

A

N > Z, up to N = about 1.5 Z

34
Q

If Z is 83+, what is the ideal N to Z ratio?

A

No stable nuclides exist.

35
Q

What reaction does neuclear binding energy measure?

A

When individual protons and neutrons come together to make a nucleus.

36
Q

What is the formula to find nuclear binding energy?

A

ΔE = Δmc2 = (mnuclide - mnucleons) x c2

37
Q

What is the formula to find nuclear binding energy per nucleon?

A

Eb = ΔE / A, where A is the mass number

38
Q

As Eb increases, do nuclides become more or less stable?

A

More stable.

39
Q

What is activity?

A

Activity (A) is the quantity of atoms decaying over a given time period.

40
Q

What is a Geiger counter?

A

A device that uses a tube of gas to click when radiation is present and ionizes the gas in the tube.

41
Q

What formula describes how the number of radioactive atoms decreases over time?

A

N2 = N1e-k Δt, where N = number of radioactive atoms and can be replaced by activity (A)

OR

ln(A2) = ln(A1) -k Δt

42
Q

What is the formula to find half-life?

A

ln(N2/N1) = -k Δt