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CHAPTER 2: ATOMS, MOLECULES AND IONS The Atomic Theory of Matter The Discovery of Atomic Structure The Modern View of Atomic Structure The Periodic Table Ions and Ionic Compounds Naming Inorganic Compounds 840948843 2-1 CONSERVATION OF MASS Law of conservation of mass: mass is neither created or destroyed during a reaction. The atoms form new bonds and thus are present after reaction only bound to some other atoms. E.g. 2H2(g) + O2(g) 2H2O(l); 2 g of H2 plus 16 g of O2 produce how many grams of water? 840948843 2-2 ATOMIC THEORY OF MATTER (DALTON'S THEORY) Law of definite proportions led to theory that all matter made up of atoms. 1. Atoms- basic building blocks and don't change when react with other atoms. 2. Element- describes matter composed of only one type of atom. 3. Compound- combination of atoms in specific proportions. 4. Chemical reaction- atoms exchange partners producing other compounds. 840948843 2-3 LAW OF MULTIPLE PROPORTIONS Some elements can form more than one compound when they react together (C & O: CO and CO2; N & O: N2O, NO, NO2, etc.). Dalton’s law predicted that the mass proportions should be proportional. Experiment confirmed this leading to this law. Law of multiple proportions: when two elements form more than one compound, the ratio of the masses in one compound divided by the ratio of these masses in the other compound gives a ratio of small whole numbers. E.g. There are three binary compounds that form between barium and nitrogen. There was 4.9021 g , 9.8050 g and 14.7060 g of Ba per 1.0000 g N in the three compounds. Show that these compounds obey the law of multiple proportions. 840948843 2-4 The Discovery of Atomic Structure 1. Thompson - Cathode rays. 2. Milliken - Oil drops. 3. Rutherford - backscattering -particles. 4. Radioactivity, the spontaneous emission of radiation from an atom led to the discovery of -, -, and -rays. 840948843 2-5 The Modern View of Atomic Structure 1. Building Blocks a) protons have a + charge, mp = 1.67 x 1027kg b) neutrons are neutral, mn = mp c) electrons have a charge, me = mp/1835 2. Neutral atom: # electrons = # protons 3. Mass of atom is found by adding the mass of protons and neutrons 4. Protons identify the element (# protons called the atomic number, Z). 5. Isotopes have varying numbers of neutrons, 11H , 12 H , 13 H 840948843 2-6 The Periodic Table 1A H Li Na K Rb Cs Fr 2A Be Mg Ca Sr Ba Ra 8A 3A 4A 5A 6A 7A He B C N O F Ne Al Si P S Cl Ar Sc Ti V Cr Mn Fe Co Ni Cu Zn Ga Ge As Se Br Kr Y Zr Nb Mo Tc Ru Rh Pd Ag Cd In Sn Sb Te I Xe La Hf Ta W Re Os Ir Pt Au Hg Tl Pb Bi Po At Rn Ac Elements in a column have similar reactivity. Grayed elements are semi-metals (metalloids). Elements to left of gray area are metals. Elements to right of gray area are non-metals. Special names: Group Name Elements 1A Alkali metals Li, Ma, K, Rb, Cs, Fr 2A Alkaline earth Be, Mg, Ca, metals Sr, Ba, Ra 6A Chalcogens O. S, Se, Te, Po 7A Halogens F, Cl, Br, I, At 8A Noble gases He, Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe, Rn 840948843 2-7 BONDING An electron from each atom strongly interacts to form a bond. Bonding can be either: a) Ionic: Occurs between metal atoms or between metal and nonmetal atoms. b) Covalent: occurs between nonmetal atoms and forms molecules. Covalent: sharing of electrons occurs. Ionic: electron(s) is (are) transferred from one atom to the other to produce a) a positively charged substance (cation) and b) a negatively charged substance (anion). c) Ions bound by electrostatic attractions. d) The formula of the ionic compound can be determined from the charge on the cation and the anion (even with a polyatomic ion): i) Mg2+ and Cl form an ionic compound with the formula: MgCl2. ii) Fe3+ and O2 form an ionic compound with the formula: Fe2O3. iii) Fe2+ and NO 3 form a compound with the formula: Fe(NO3)2 840948843 2-8 ACIDS AND BASES Acid = a substance that donates an H+ when it dissolves in water. HA 2 H (aq ) A (aq ) where A is the rest of the compound. H O a) HCl: HCl 2 H (aq ) Cl (aq ) b) H3PO4: H O H3PO 4 (l) 2 H (aq ) H 2 PO 4 (aq ) H O H 2 PO 4 (aq ) 2 H (aq ) HPO 24 (aq ) H O HPO 24 (aq ) 2 H (aq ) PO34 (aq ) Base = a substance that donates OH when it dissolves in water. a) NaOH(s): H O NaOH (s) 2 Na (aq ) OH (aq ) H O 840948843 2-9 NAMING INORGANIC COMPOUNDS IUPAC and Common Usage Methods of naming used for both organic and inorganic compounds. a) Organic compounds = predominantly carbon containing compounds. b) Inorganic compounds = all others Binary ionic compounds: compounds having a cation (a metal) and an anion (one of the main group anions). a) Cations: i) Accepted method: Roman numeral in parentheses to indicate the charge. Not necessary when only one ionic charge possible. See Table 2.2. ii) Common method: Remove ending and add either -ous or -ic to iii) Latin form of the element used instead on some: Stannous, Stannic; Ferrous, Ferric; Cuprous, Cupric. b) Anions: i) For monoatomic anions add -ide to the stem. Fluor-, Ox-, Nitr-, Sulf-, etc. 840948843 2-10 NOMENCLATURE 2 Binary molecular compounds: More cationlike appears first; -ide ending is placed on the anionlike substance. The more cationlike element appears to the left of or below the other element in the periodic table With hydrogen as one of the two, hydrogen is first; place an -ide on the other element. If a compound contains a group VI or VII element, an –ide ending is added to it. Numerical prefixes are used especially with the element listed second. Mono- not used with the first element. a) When oxygen with fluorine, oxygen first in name: E.g. Oxygen difluoride = OF2. 840948843 2-11 Compounds with Polyatomic ions Name these the same way that ionic binary compounds are named replacing the name of the anion (in a few cases cation) with the name of the polyatomic ion. Oxy anions (anions containing at least 1 oxygen atom): difficult because there are often several possible anions. 1) Add -ate to the stem (carbonate, sulfate, nitrate, etc); but 2) Many oxyanions can have other proportions of oxygen e.g. SO 32 , SO 24 . These can be named by adding: a) per- x -ate for most oxygen b) -ite for a small number of oxygen c) hypo- x -ite gives least E.g. oxychlorides. If ion contains H, write: “hydrogen” + name of ion without hydrogen, e.g. hydrogen sulfate. A prefix of mono- or di- to indicate the number of hydrogens may be needed. E.g. dihydrogen phosphate- H 2 PO 4 . Oxyacids: 840948843 2-12 Binary compounds which are acids: Prefix hydro- added to the anion part; change the ide ending to -ic. H O HCl(g ) 2 HCl(aq) . Hydrogen chloride becomes hydrochloric acid. The ending -ite is changed to -ous and -ate to -ic. 840948843 2-13