Atomic Structure Flashcards

1
Q

Which letter is used to
represent the atomic
number of an atom?

A

Z

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2
Q

What does the atomic

number tell us about an element?

A

Atomic number = number of protons in an atom

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3
Q

What letter represents mass number?

A

A

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4
Q

How is the mass number calculated?

A

mass number = number of protons + number of neutrons (total number of nucleons)

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5
Q

Define relative atomic mass

A

Average mass of all isotopes of an element

compared to ¹/₁₂ the mass of an atom of Carbon 12 (C¹²)

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6
Q

What are isotopes of an element?

A

Different forms of the same element, containing the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons. They still have the same chemical properties

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7
Q

How many orbitals and electrons does a 1s shell contain?

A

1 orbital, 2 electrons

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8
Q

How many orbitals and electrons does a 2p shell contain?

A

3 orbitals, 6 electrons

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9
Q

How many orbitals and electrons does a 3s shell contain?

A

1 orbital, 2 electrons

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10
Q

How many orbitals and electrons does a 3d shell contain?

A

5 orbitals, 10 electrons

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11
Q

How many orbitals and electrons does a 4s shell contain?

A

1 orbital, 2 electrons

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12
Q

Does 3d or 4s have a higher

energy?

A

3d

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13
Q

What is an orbital?

A

A region around the nucleus that can hold up to two electrons

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14
Q

What would be the
relationship between 2
electrons in the same orbital in terms of their spin?

A

Have opposite spin as repel each other as both negative

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15
Q

Explain why chromium does not fit the trend for electronic configuration

A

It only has one electron in its 4s orbital before filling 3d

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16
Q

Explain why copper does not for the trend for electronic configuration.

A

It only has one electron in its 4s orbital before
filling 3d
1s² … 3p⁶ 4s¹ 3d¹⁰

17
Q

Explain electron impact ionisation

A

A sample is vapourised and high energy electrons are fired at it by an electron gun. Knocks off 1 electron to form a 1+ ion.
X(g) -> X+(g) +e-
(these ions fragment).

18
Q

When would you use the different types of ionisation in a mass spec?

A

Electron impact used for organic or inorganic molecules with a low formula mass.
Electrospray used for substances with a higher molecular
mass including biological molecules, e.g. proteins

19
Q

Describe how a time of flight mass spectrometer works

A

Acceleration - positive ions attracted towards a negatively charged plate.
Ion Drift - ions pass through hole in plate, form a beam with constant kinetic energy, travel along tube to detector. Time of flight is therefore directly proportional to the square root of mass.
Detection - positive ions pick up electrons, current flows, m/z value and time of flight recorded. Largest current from most abundant ions

20
Q

Define first ionisation energy

A

The energy required to remove one mole of electrons from one mole of gaseous atoms to form one mole of gaseous 1+ ions

21
Q

Explain electrospray ionisation

A

A sample is dissolved in volatile solvent and injected through a fine hypodermic needle to give an aerosol. Needle attached to positive terminal of a high-voltage power supply and particles gain a proton from the solvent as they leave the needle, producing XH+ ions (+1 charge and mass of Mr + 1). (ions rarely fragment)