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CHEMISTRY NOTES 9.1.1 ATOMS, ELEMENTS, PERIODIC TABLE 1. Classify matter according to its atomic structure. 1.1. Review physical and chemical changes of matter using comparisons 1.2. Analyze the relationship and properties of chemical elements taking into account the atomic and mass numbers; relate to the subatomic particle composition. 1.3. Identify and understand how ions form based on the elemental electron configuration and locations on the Periodic Table. 1.4. Identify and explain the different types of elements based on the position in the Periodic Table and the characteristics they express. MATTER Matter: any substance that has mass and occupies space; physical material of the universe Atom: building blocks of matter Molecule: two or more atoms joined together Physical states of matter Solid: definite shape, definite volume; molecules arranged orderly and close together Liquid: definite volume, no specific shape, form shape of container it occupies; molecules arranged less orderly and are farther apart than solid Gas (Vapor): no fixed volume or shape, conforms to the volume and shape of the container it occupies; molecules are dispersed much farther apart than liquid or solid Pure substance: matter that has distinct properties and consistent composition (e.g. H 2O, NaCl) Element: each element is composed of only one type of atom; cannot be decomposed Relative abundance of elements (percent by mass) Universe: @75% hydrogen, @25% helium, <1% other elements Earth’s crust: 46.6% oxygen, 27.7% silicon, 8.1% aluminum, 5.0% iron, 3.6% calcium, 2.8% sodium, 2.6% potassium, 2.1% magnesium, 1.5% other elements Human body: 65% oxygen, 18.5% carbon, 9.5% hydrogen, 3.2% nitrogen, 1.5% calcium, 1% phosphorus, 0.4% potassium, 0.3% sulfur, 0.2% sodium, 0.2% chlorine, 0.1% magnesium, <1% other elements Compound: a substance composed of two or more elements Law of Constant Composition: elemental composition of a pure compound is always the same 1 e.g. H2O is always 11% hydrogen and 89% oxygen by mass Mixture: Combinations of two or more substances in which they retain their own chemical identity Heterogeneous: do not have same composition, properties, and appearance throughout (e.g. rocks, wood) Homogeneous (solutions): uniform throughout (e.g. air, salt water) PROPERTIES OF MATTER Physical properties: Can be measured without changing the identity and composition of a substance (e.g. color, odor, density, melting point, boiling point, hardness) Chemical properties: Describes the way a substance may change, or react, to form other substances (e.g. flammability) Physical change: changes of state Solidification: liquid → solid (hot molten iron left to cool) Melting: solid → liquid (e.g. ice melting) Evaporation: liquid → gas (water boiling) Condensation: gas → liquid (water vapor is cooled and forms into liquid water) Deposition: gas → solid (water vapor in sub-zero temperature forms in ice [e.g. snow]) Sublimation: solid → gas (dry ice [solid CO2] changes to gas form at very low temperatures) Chemical change (chemical reaction): A substance is transformed into a chemically different substance e.g. hydrogen burns in air; hydrogen combines with oxygen to form water ATOMIC STRUCTURE Subatomic particles: components of atoms Some of these components can have a positive or negative charge. Particles with the same charge repel each other; particles with unlike charges are attracted to one another Nucleus: most of the mass of the atom; very little volume occupied o Proton: positive charge (+) o Neutron: neutral charge (0) Electron cloud: occupies most of the volume of an atom; very little mass of the atom 2 o Electron: negative charge (−); located in the space outside the nucleus Atomic number: number of protons or electrons Mass number: number of protons plus neutrons Isotopes: atoms with identical atomic numbers but different mass numbers (neutrons vary) Isotopes of Carbon Symbol 11C 12C 13C 14C Number of Protons 6 6 6 6 Number of Electrons 6 6 6 6 Number of Neutrons 5 6 7 8 Atomic Mass: uses the units amu Actually the average atomic mass because most elements occur as a mixture of isotopes with various relative abundances PERIODIC TABLE Periodic Table: Arrangement of elements in order of increasing atomic number, electron configurations, and chemical properties; 115 known elements Element information: most periodic table have four pieces of information Atomic number: number of protons Atomic symbol: symbol used to represent the name of the element Atomic symbols that don’t match the English name Element Name Antimony Copper Gold Iron Lead Mercury Potassium Silver Sodium Tin Tungsten Atomic Symbol Sb Cu Au Fe Pb Hg K Ag Na Sn W Origin Stibium (Latin) Cuprum (Latin) Aurum (Latin) Ferrum (Latin) Plumbum (Latin) Hydrargyrum (Latinized Greek) Kalium (Neo-Latin) Argentum (Latin) Natrium (Latinized Greek) Stannum (Latin) Wolfram (German) Element name Atomic weight Periods: horizontal rows; all elements in a period have the same number of electron shells Groups: vertical columns; often elements in a group have similarities in properties Metals: 92 of the 115 elements (80%) 3 Malleable (can be shaped), fusible (can be fused or melted), ductile (can be formed into wire) Lose the electrons in their outer shell; form metallic and ionic bonds; transmit heat & electricity easily because of flow of electrons; form metallic bonds between atoms of the same element All metals are solid except Mercury (Hg), which is liquid at room temperature (20°C) Group 1: Alkali Metals: shiny, soft, highly reactive metals Group 2: Alkaline Earth Metals: shiny, silvery-white, semi-reactive metals Groups 3-12: Transition Metals Form alloys: mixture of two or more elements; main component is metal (e.g. steel is an alloy of iron and carbon) Nonmetals: 17 of the 115 elements (15%) Volatile (easily vaporized), low elasticity, insulators of heat and electricity; high electronegativity (tendency to attract electrons) At room temperature (20°C) the nonmetals occurs in these states: o Gases: H, He, N, O, F, Ne, Cl, Ar, Kr, Xe, Ra o Liquid: Br o Solid: C, P, S, Se, I Diatomic molecules: composed of 2 atoms of the same element o H2, N2, O2, F2, Cl2, Br2, I2 Group 17: Halogens: react with metals to produce salts Group 18: Noble Gases: odorless, colorless, non-reactive, monatomic gases o Full electron shells result in low reactivity Metalloids: 6 of the 115 elements (5%) Have a mixture or properties of both metals and nonmetals B, Si, Ge, As, Sb, Te Blocks: a set of adjacent groups; named after the orbital (area that contain electrons) s-block: Groups 1 and 2 and He p-block: Groups 13-18, not He d-block: Groups 3-12 (Transition Metals) f-block: Inner Transition Metals Electron configuration: distribution of electrons of an atom in atomic orbitals Useful for understanding the structure of the Periodic Table; describing the chemical bonds that connect atoms together 4 Shell 1 2 3 4 5 Aufbrau Principle: electrons fill the lowest energy orbitals before occupying the higher energy orbitals Atomic Orbital: area of the electron subshell where 2 electrons are located Electron Shell o Valence shell: the highest (outer) energy shell of an atom; contains the valence electrons; the electrons that normally will be involved in chemical bonding Electron Subshells: grouping of atomic orbitals within electron shells Subshells 1s 2s, 2p 3s, 3p, 3d 4s, 4p, 4d, 4f 5s, 5p, 5d, 5f, 5g Max e− per Subshell 2 2, 6 2, 6, 10 2, 6, 10, 14 2, 6, 10, 14, 18 Max e− per Shell 2 8 18 32 50 Diagonal Rule: guideline that explains the order in which electrons fill orbitals Blocks 5 6