Atomic Structure Flashcards

1
Q

what are isotopes?

A

atoms of the same element with the same number of protons but different number of neutrons

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2
Q

what is the atomic number?

A

(proton number)
number of protons in the nucleus
identifies the element

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3
Q

what is the mass number?

A

total number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus

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4
Q

what does the relative charge/mass table look like?

A

proton 1 +1
neutron 1 0
electron almost 0 -1

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5
Q

where is the mass concentrated in an atom?

A

the nucleus

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6
Q

what makes up most of the volume in an atom?

A

orbitals

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7
Q

define relative atomic mass

A

average mass of an atom of an element on a scale where carbon-12 is 12

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8
Q

define relative isotopic mass

A

mass of an isotope of an element on a scale where carbon-12 is 12

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9
Q

explain the difference between relative molecular mass and relative formula mass

A

relative formula mass is used for ionic or giant covalent compounds

to find, just add up all relative atomic masses for the atoms in the formula

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10
Q

describe electrospray ionisation

A
  1. ionisation
    sample is dissolved and pushed through high pressure needle gaining H+ ion and turned into gas
  2. acceleration
    positive ions accelerated by electric field so all have same kinetic energy

3.ion drift
no electric field so lighter ions will drift through faster

  1. detection
    lighter ions drift faster so will reach detector in less time
    negatively charged plate detects positive ions creating a current
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11
Q

electron impact ionisation

A
  1. ionisation
    sample is vaporised and electron gun fires high energy electrons to knock off one electron so they become +1 ions
  2. acceleration
  3. ion drift
  4. detection
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12
Q

how do you calculate relative atomic mass from a mass spectrum?

A

times the abundance by the mass
add up each answer to the first part
divide by the overall abundance

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13
Q

how does a mass spectrum determine relative molecular mass?

A

positive ions produce a peak in spectrum with a mass/charge ratio equal to relative molecular mass

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14
Q

write down the sub shells up to 4p

A

1s 2s 2p 3s 3p 4s 3d 4p

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15
Q

how many electrons does each sub shell hold?

A

s=2
p=6
d=10

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16
Q

why do chromium and copper fill up their shells in a different way?

A

they donate one of their 4s electrons to the 3d sub shell to make it more stable

Cr = 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s1 3d5

Cu= 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s1 3d10

17
Q

which groups in the periodic table gain electrons to form negative ions?

A

groups 5,6 and 7ncan gain 1,2 or 3 electrons

18
Q

define first ionisation energy and give an equation as an example

A

energy needed to remove 1 electron from an atom in 1 mole in a gaseous state to form a +1 ion

O(g) > O+(g) + e-

19
Q

describe the three main factors affecting ionisation energies

A
  1. Nuclear Charge
    the more protons, the more positively charged the nucleus is, the stronger the attraction is between electrons and nucleus
  2. distance from nucleus
    electrons close to the nucleus have a stronger attraction then those further away

3.sheilding
the further away the electron the less attraction, the lessening of pull is called shielding

20
Q

explain the relationship between ionisation energy and FoA

A

a high ionisation energy means a high FoA between electron and nucleus so more energy is required to remove the electron

21
Q

describe the ionisation energy trend in group 2

A

it decreases as you go down the group

  • shielding
  • electrons further away less FoA
22
Q

describe the ionisation energy trend across a period

A

ionisation energy increases
-number of protons increase
-nuclear attraction
x
1st drop is moving sub shell
3p higher energy than 3s so further away from nucleus x

2nd drop is electron repulsion x
easier to remove x
x
x
x
x
x

23
Q

is it easier to remove a lone electron in an orbital or one in a pair?

A

it is easier to remove an electron from a shared orbital due to electron repulsion