Honors Chemistry Midterm Review 2008
... gases. List their properties. Metals- Left of the staiarcase except Hydrogen; solids except Hg; good conductors of heat and electricity/ malleable; ductile; lustrous. Silver/grey in color. ...
... gases. List their properties. Metals- Left of the staiarcase except Hydrogen; solids except Hg; good conductors of heat and electricity/ malleable; ductile; lustrous. Silver/grey in color. ...
The “classically forbidden regions” are where … a. a particle`s total
... (takes more energy) • You can instead change their internal quantum numbers (if they have them). • Electrons do have 1 internal number that can be +1/2 or -1/2 so 2 of them can get into a state. ...
... (takes more energy) • You can instead change their internal quantum numbers (if they have them). • Electrons do have 1 internal number that can be +1/2 or -1/2 so 2 of them can get into a state. ...
Shapes of the Charge Clouds
... theory that quanta of energy are absorbed and emitted in whole-number units (in simple atoms!!) •In larger atoms it is assumed that the electrons do not interfere with each other but they probably do (at least a little bit) •4 Quantum Numbers must be used to describe the position of the electrons in ...
... theory that quanta of energy are absorbed and emitted in whole-number units (in simple atoms!!) •In larger atoms it is assumed that the electrons do not interfere with each other but they probably do (at least a little bit) •4 Quantum Numbers must be used to describe the position of the electrons in ...
Unit 4 review sheet
... Blast from the Past III – Quantum Numbers and Electron Configuration Practice! 1. When an electron in a hydrogen atom moves from a higher to a lower energy state, the energy difference is emitted as a quantum of ________. 2. Define the four quantum numbers (n, l, ml, ms) explain what information is ...
... Blast from the Past III – Quantum Numbers and Electron Configuration Practice! 1. When an electron in a hydrogen atom moves from a higher to a lower energy state, the energy difference is emitted as a quantum of ________. 2. Define the four quantum numbers (n, l, ml, ms) explain what information is ...
Electrons and Photons
... atoms/molecules and their parts move really fast • Energy is given off as the atoms constantly vibrate. • Photons of all colors can be emitted. • All colors blend into “white light” ...
... atoms/molecules and their parts move really fast • Energy is given off as the atoms constantly vibrate. • Photons of all colors can be emitted. • All colors blend into “white light” ...
Chemistry I – Semester I Final Review
... All students will complete a semester exam review regardless of exemption status. The student should be able to do the following: Chapter 1 (Matter) & 2 (Measurements) - interpret a correctly made graph from laboratory data - list and define common metric base units and prefixes - construct conversi ...
... All students will complete a semester exam review regardless of exemption status. The student should be able to do the following: Chapter 1 (Matter) & 2 (Measurements) - interpret a correctly made graph from laboratory data - list and define common metric base units and prefixes - construct conversi ...
Student - Davison Chemistry Website
... I. Modern Atomic Theory A. Neils Bohr (1885 – 1962) – Danish Physicist 1. Improved Rutherford’s work by saying electrons do not lose energy in the atoms so they will stay in orbit. 2. Stated there are definite levels in which the electrons follow set paths without gaining or losing energy (Planetary ...
... I. Modern Atomic Theory A. Neils Bohr (1885 – 1962) – Danish Physicist 1. Improved Rutherford’s work by saying electrons do not lose energy in the atoms so they will stay in orbit. 2. Stated there are definite levels in which the electrons follow set paths without gaining or losing energy (Planetary ...
Chemistry 330 Chapter 11
... Energy of the oscillators has only certain allowed values! Set the energy of the oscillator inversely proportional to the wavelength Energy gap ...
... Energy of the oscillators has only certain allowed values! Set the energy of the oscillator inversely proportional to the wavelength Energy gap ...
NAME REVIEW 1: JUST THE BASICS ___1) In which material are
... 20) 1) HI it is produced endothermically and that means more energy is absorbed by the breaking of bonds than is released as the new H-I polar covalent bond(s) is (are) produced. Thus HI is less stable than the reactants. 21) 3 an increase in temp favors the endo. rxn which in this case is the forwa ...
... 20) 1) HI it is produced endothermically and that means more energy is absorbed by the breaking of bonds than is released as the new H-I polar covalent bond(s) is (are) produced. Thus HI is less stable than the reactants. 21) 3 an increase in temp favors the endo. rxn which in this case is the forwa ...
Quantum Atom
... Wave function (Ψ2) – series of solutions that describes the allowed energy levels for electrons Shows regions of probability of finding an electron Regions of high electron density have large values of Ψ2 ...
... Wave function (Ψ2) – series of solutions that describes the allowed energy levels for electrons Shows regions of probability of finding an electron Regions of high electron density have large values of Ψ2 ...
1. Modern Physics
... (electrons). Solutions to the wave equations defined the characteristics of the particles. Led to the Electron Cloud Model of the atom and removed the limitations inherent in Bohr’s model of the atom. ...
... (electrons). Solutions to the wave equations defined the characteristics of the particles. Led to the Electron Cloud Model of the atom and removed the limitations inherent in Bohr’s model of the atom. ...
Trends in the Periodic Table
... • A: How does temperature affect ionization energy? • Q: Temperature has no affect on ionization energy. Heat is only powerful enough to change kinetic energy of a particle or molecule. ...
... • A: How does temperature affect ionization energy? • Q: Temperature has no affect on ionization energy. Heat is only powerful enough to change kinetic energy of a particle or molecule. ...
X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy
X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) is a surface-sensitive quantitative spectroscopic technique that measures the elemental composition at the parts per thousand range, empirical formula, chemical state and electronic state of the elements that exist within a material. XPS spectra are obtained by irradiating a material with a beam of X-rays while simultaneously measuring the kinetic energy and number of electrons that escape from the top 0 to 10 nm of the material being analyzed. XPS requires high vacuum (P ~ 10−8 millibar) or ultra-high vacuum (UHV; P < 10−9 millibar) conditions, although a current area of development is ambient-pressure XPS, in which samples are analyzed at pressures of a few tens of millibar.XPS is a surface chemical analysis technique that can be used to analyze the surface chemistry of a material in its as-received state, or after some treatment, for example: fracturing, cutting or scraping in air or UHV to expose the bulk chemistry, ion beam etching to clean off some or all of the surface contamination (with mild ion etching) or to intentionally expose deeper layers of the sample (with more extensive ion etching) in depth-profiling XPS, exposure to heat to study the changes due to heating, exposure to reactive gases or solutions, exposure to ion beam implant, exposure to ultraviolet light.XPS is also known as ESCA (Electron Spectroscopy for Chemical Analysis), an abbreviation introduced by Kai Siegbahn's research group to emphasize the chemical (rather than merely elemental) information that the technique provides.In principle XPS detects all elements. In practice, using typical laboratory-scale X-ray sources, XPS detects all elements with an atomic number (Z) of 3 (lithium) and above. It cannot easily detect hydrogen (Z = 1) or helium (Z = 2).Detection limits for most of the elements (on a modern instrument) are in the parts per thousand range. Detection limits of parts per million (ppm) are possible, but require special conditions: concentration at top surface or very long collection time (overnight).XPS is routinely used to analyze inorganic compounds, metal alloys, semiconductors, polymers, elements, catalysts, glasses, ceramics, paints, papers, inks, woods, plant parts, make-up, teeth, bones, medical implants, bio-materials, viscous oils, glues, ion-modified materials and many others.XPS is less routinely used to analyze the hydrated forms of some of the above materials by freezing the samples in their hydrated state in an ultra pure environment, and allowing or causing multilayers of ice to sublime away prior to analysis. Such hydrated XPS analysis allows hydrated sample structures, which may be different from vacuum-dehydrated sample structures, to be studied in their more relevant as-used hydrated structure. Many bio-materials such as hydrogels are examples of such samples.