Chapter 1 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the subatomic particles found in an atom?

A

protons, neutrons, electrons

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2
Q

What does the atomic number tell you?

A

The number of protons in the atom

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3
Q

What is the charge on a proton?

A

Positive

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4
Q

What is the charge on an electron?

A

Negative

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5
Q

How do you find the number of neutrons?

A

atomic mass - atomic number

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6
Q

Which two subatomic particles have a mass?

A

protons and neutrons

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7
Q

How do you find the number of electrons?

A

It is the same as the number of protons so by looking at the atomic number

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8
Q

What is an isotope?

A

It is an atom with the same number of protons and electrons but different numbers of neutrons

Isotopes of the same element have the same properties

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9
Q

What is a mixture?

A

A mixture consists of two or more elements or compounds not chemically combined together. The chemical properties of each substance in the mixture are unchanged.

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10
Q

Where do the electrons sit in an atom?

A

In shells (orbitals) around the nucleus.

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11
Q

How do you find the mass number of an element?

A

Add the protons and neutrons together

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12
Q

How many electrons can the second and third shells hold?

A

8

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13
Q

How many electrons can the first shell hold?

A

2

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14
Q

What is the average size of an atom?

A

1x10-10 m

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15
Q

What is atomic mass realtive to?

A

Different atoms have different masses. Atoms have such a small mass it is more convenient to know their masses compared to each other. Carbon is taken as the standard atom and has a relative atomic mass (Ar) of 12.

Atomic mass is defined as being ​one twelth of the atomic mass of a carbon-12 atom.

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16
Q

What was Daltons model of the atom?

A

Solid Sphere model - smallest unit of matter (no protons, neutrons or electrons present)

17
Q

What was Thomsons model of the atom?

A

Plum pudding model.

Electrons embedded in positively charged matter.

Cathod ray tube experiemnt.

18
Q

What was Rutherfords model of the atom?

A

Nuclear model.

Gold foil experiment - some +ve alpha particels were deflected at an angle and did not pass straight through.

Small positive nucleus surrounded by -ve electrons.

19
Q

What was Bohrs model of the atom?

A

Planetary model.

Small positively charged nucleus, negative electrons move in fixed orbits (shells) around the nucleus.

20
Q

What is the quantum mechanical model of the atom?

A

Small positively charged nuceleus, negative electrons localised into orbits (electron clouds) around the nucleus.

(Based on work by Heisenberg, deBroglie and Schrodinger)

21
Q

Who discovered the presence of new uncharged particles (neutrons) in the nucleus?

A

Chadwick

22
Q

How did Rutherfords gold foil experiment disprove Thomsons model of the atom?

A

It showed that there was a positive nucleus that deflected the positive alpha particles.

23
Q

How would you calculatte the relative atomic mass of Chlorine using the mass and abundance of its isotopes?

HIGHER only

A

Chlorine’s Ar of 35.5 is an average of the masses of the different isotopes of chlorine.

The relative atomic mass of an element is a weighted average of the masses of the atoms of the isotopes.

Chlorine has two isotopes: 35Cl and 37Cl. In any sample of chlorine, 75 per cent of the atoms are 35Cl and the remaining 25 per cent are 37Cl.

Relative atomic mass (Ar) = (35x75) + (37x25) /100

24
Q

What does Ar stand for?

A

Relative atomic mass