Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
9/12/2011 Chapter 2 Atoms, Molecules, and Ions Chapter 2 • Atomic Theory – Model for atom and ions that works well for chemistry • Molecules – Combinations of atoms – Ways of representing molecules: formulas and models • Names and formulas – Binary molecular compounds – Ionic compounds – Acids • Organic compounds – Brief introduction 1 9/12/2011 Atomic Theory • Elements composed of small particles called atoms – All atoms of a given element are identical • What does experiment tell us about atoms? Radioactivity • Discovered in late 19th century α-particles: positive (+2) and heavy Β-particles: negative (-1) and light γ-rays: energy (now know: He nuclei) (now know: electrons) (Incredible Hulk) Conclusion: atoms contain smaller particles 2 9/12/2011 Rutherford’s Experiment What does this experiment tell us about the atom? The Nuclear Atom • Atoms contain a heavy core • Called the nucleus of the atom 3 9/12/2011 Atomic Structure • Our model: Atoms made of three particles – Electrons (e-): light (1/2000 amu) negative (-1) + – Protons (p ): heavy (1 amu) positive (+1) o – Neutrons (n ): heavy (1 amu) neutral • Atoms are electrically neutral – What does this imply about # electrons and # protons? – Imply anything about neutrons? Atomic and Mass Numbers • Atomic Number (Z) : # protons in nucleus – Characteristic of a given element • Mass Number (A): #protons + # neutrons in nucleus • Isotopes: atoms with same atomic number but different mass numbers (AZX) – Carbon isotopes: – Oxygen isotopes: 12 16 6C 13 8O 17 6C 14 6C 8O 18 8O 4 9/12/2011 Ions • Electrons can be added or removed from an atom or molecule. – Electrons added: negative ion – Electrons removed: positive ion (anion) (cation) • Examples: – Li ion (1 electron removed) – O ion (2 electrons added) 3 protons, 2 electrons +1 8 protons, 10 electrons -2 Polyatomic Ions • Polyatomic ions: Ions that are made of two or more atoms – Hydroxide: OH– Phosphate: PO43– Ammonium: NH4+ 5 9/12/2011 Molecules • Two or more atoms held together by a chemical bond. – Examples: H2O, NH3, CH4 – Diatomic: two atoms in molecule (H2) – Polyatomic: three or more atoms in molecule (H2O, O3) • Examples above are molecular formulas, which show exact number of atoms of each element in molecule. Molecular Models • Molecules are small. • We frequently represent them with models. Lines represent covalent bonds. Structural formula Ball-and-stick Space-filling 6 9/12/2011 Condensed Structural Formulas • Organic molecules usually contain a large number of atoms – Need to simplify their structural formulas – Use subscripts for multiple atoms bonded to same atom • Atoms are bonded to element on left • Sometimes omit C-C bonds represents ? ? Skeletal Formulas • Carbon and hydrogen atoms frequently left off – Each junction is a C atom – H: 1 bond C: 4 bonds O: 2 bonds N: 3 bonds • H not left off O or H 7 9/12/2011 Skeletal Formulas • Let’s write skeletal formulas for the following: • What is the molecular formula for ? Skeletal Formulas • Why do this? – – – – Organic molecules can be huge Easy to draw Take up less space Carbon backbone frequently not as important as non-carbon atoms Cholesterol 8 9/12/2011 Two Types of Compounds • Molecular Compounds – Made of molecules • Two or more atoms held together by a chemical bond • Chemical bond = shared electrons – Examples: H2O, CH3CH2CH3 – Condensed and skeletal structures represent molecules • Ionic Compounds – Made of positive and negative ions • Charges must balance – Model as a large stack of ions – Examples: NaCl, K2O Two Types of Compounds • Molecular compounds usually formed between two nonmetals – Right side of periodic table • H2O, C5H12, BF3, XeF4 • Ionic compounds usually formed between a metal and a nonmetal – Opposite sides of periodic table • NaCl, K2O – Also involve polyatomic ions • K3PO4 • Know names and formulas in Table 2.3 (see blog) 9 9/12/2011 Names and Formulas • Vocabulary of chemistry • We deal with MANY compounds • Need a standard method for representing them with names and formulas • Will look at – Binary molecular compounds – Ionic compounds • Will mention organic compounds, but won’t cover on exams Naming: Binary Molecular Compounds • First element: same name as element • Second element: “ide” suffix • Greek prefixes tell the number of atoms present (Table 2.4) – 1: mono – 2: di – 3: tri – 4: tetra 5: penta 6: hexa 7: hepta 8: octa 9: nona 10: deca • Examples: – CO -- carbon monoxide CO2 -- carbon dioxide 10 9/12/2011 Naming: Binary Molecular Compounds • Question: What are the names or formulas of these compounds? – NO2 – Carbon tetrachloride – P2O5 Ionic Compounds • Ionic compounds are arrays of positive and negative ions. – Model of sodium chloride • The formulas for ionic compounds always are empirical formulas. – Empirical formula: simplest whole-number ratio of elements – Sodium chloride: NaCl 11 9/12/2011 Formulas of Ionic Compounds • Most of Table 2.3 in picture at right • Compounds are electrically neutral • Question: What is formula of a compound of sodium and oxygen? • Question: What is formula of aluminum oxide? • Question: What is formula of potassium phosphate? (PO43-) Naming Ionic Compounds • Cation Names • If only one ion possible (Group 1A, IIA, Al): – Cation name = element name – Na+ = sodium Ca2+ = calcium • More than one ion (transition metals): – Use Stock notation – Roman numeral for charge – Cu+ = copper(I) Cu2+ = copper(II) 12 9/12/2011 Naming Ionic Compounds • Anion names – Add “ide” to stem of element’s name (Table 2.3 Chang) – Cl- = chloride – O2- = oxide Naming Ionic Compounds • Question: What are the names or formulas of the following compounds? – – – – – – – – KCl calcium bromide FeCl2 ammonium nitrate Co(MnO4)2 Lead (II) sulfate Aluminum sulfate Potassium hydride • Potassium ion always +1 13 9/12/2011 Naming Acids • Binary Acids – HCl (aq) – HF (aq) hydrochloric acid hydrofluoric acid • Oxoacids – – – – H2SO4 HNO3 HClO3 H3PO4 sulfuric acid nitric acid chloric acid phosphoric acid Naming Acids • Often more than one oxoacid for a given element. • Start with “ic” acid, such as chloric acid, HClO3 – – – – One more O per... ic The “ic” acid is here One less O ... ous Two less O hypo ... ous HClO4 perchloric acid HClO3 chloric acid HClO2 chlorous acid HClO hypochlorous acid • Note: “per” and “hypo” acids don’t always exist 14 9/12/2011 Naming Oxoacid Anions • …ous acid • … ic acid anion = ... ite anion = … ate • Examples: – – – – ClO3ClO2ClOClO4- Chlorate Chlorite Hypochlorite Perchlorate (HClO3 = chloric acid) (HClO2 = chlorous acid) (HClO = hypochlorous acid) (HClO4 = perchloric acid) Hydrates • Specific number of water molecules attached • Use Greek prefixes to specify number of waters • CuSO4·5H2O copper(II) sulfate pentahydrate CuSO4·5H2O CuSO4 15 9/12/2011 Organic Compounds • This is an introduction. Naming organics can be complicated • Alkanes: straight-chain hydrocarbons (CnH2n+2) – CH4 – C2H6 – C3H8 methane ethane propane • More in table 2.8 • I will not include organic naming on the exam Functional Groups • Give organic compounds their “personality” • -OH alcohol • -NH2 amine • -COOH carboxyl 16 9/12/2011 Functional Groups • Ethyl alcohol CH3CH2OH • Methyl amine CH3NH2 Solubility • Functional groups help us understand the solubility of organic compounds – Compounds similar to water (H-O-H) tend to dissolve in water – Contain –OH or –NH bonds • Which of the following would you predict to be water-soluble? – – – CH3CH2OH CH3CH2CH3 17 9/12/2011 Drug Metabolism • Caffeine metabolism occurs in the liver. – cytochrome P450 oxidase enzyme • Adding –NH groups makes compound more water soluble • Excreted in urine 18