Fundamental Laws of Chemistry
Fundamental Laws of Chemistry
Fundamental Laws of Chemistry
ATOMIC STRUCTURE
Two components of an atom Nucleus (pl. nuclei) - composite particle 1 = 10-10 m - size 10-15 m = 10-5 - positively charged - SI units multiples of 1.609 x 10-19 C - atomic units +1, +2, +3, , +116 - mass varies from 1.7 x 10-27 to 5 x 10-25 kg - 1 amu to 293 amu - contains almost all the mass of an atom - occupies very small volume in the atom Electrons e- fundamental particle of nature - size unknown r < 10-18 m - negatively charged - SI units -1.609 x 10-19 C - atomic units -1 - mass - SI units 9.109 x 10-31 kg - atomic units 5.486 x 10-4 amu - movement of electron occupies the size of the atom 1 = 10-10 m Definition: 1 Angstrom () = 10-10 m
NUCLEAR STRUCTURE
Two components of nucleus Proton p+ - size 10-15 m = 10-5 - charge +1 (atomic units) - mass 1.673 x 10-27 kg = 1.0073 amu - number of p+ defines element Neutron n - size 10-15 m = 10-5 (same as proton) - charge 0 (atomic units) - mass 1.675 x 10-27 kg = 1.0086 amu - number of n defines isotope of element
ATOMIC SYMBOLS -
A Z
Sy
Atomic Number - Z - number of protons in an atom - subscript before elemental symbol Mass Number A - number of protons and neutrons in an atom - superscript before elemental symbol - mass number approximates how heavy the atom is in atomic mass units
Examples Oxygen 16 has 8 p+ and 8 n element oxygen oxygen carbon carbon lead # of p+ 8 8 6 6 82 # of n 9 10 6 8 126
16 8
O
symbol
17 8 18 8
mass # 17 18 12 14 208
12 6 14 6
208 82
C C
Pb
Definition: isotope an atom with the same atomic number as another atom but a different mass number. - i. e., isotopes have the same number of protons but a different number of neutrons. - isotopes have the same chemical properties. Notes: - oxygen 16 and oxygen 18 are isotopes of oxygen - carbon 12 and carbon 14 are isotopes of carbon - nuclide refers to specific nucleus, often used interchangeably with isotope
Example: Neon nuclide abundance mass(amu) 20 Ne 90.48% 19.992 21 Ne 0.27% 20.994 22 Ne 9.25% 21.991 m(Ne) = 0.9048 (19.992 amu) + 0.0027 (20.994 amu) + 0.0925 (21.991 amu) = 20.18 amu
CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS
Chemical compounds consist of 1.) molecules 2.) ions Molecular Compounds - tightly bound atoms in a single unit - atoms held together with covalent bonding - Electrons accumulate between nuclei and draw nuclei together. Molecular Elements - gases: H2, N2, O2, F2, Cl2 - liquid: Br2 - solids: P4, S8, Se8, I2
(diatomic)
Molecular Formula - indicates which elements are incorporated in molecule using elemental symbols - indicates number of atoms within a molecule using subscripts after elemental symbols Examples: water
H2O
ammonia
N H H H
NH3
Ions and Ionic Compounds Ions -Neutral atoms have equal number of electrons and protons -Anions gain e- and become negatively charged Cl + e- Cl-Cations lose e- and become positively charged Na e- Na+ or Na Na+ + eCu Cu2+ + 2e- Metals generally become cations and nonmetals may become anions Molecules that gain or lose e- are called polyatomic ions NO3-, CO32-, NH4+ IMPORTANT: Polyatomic ions remain whole in ionic reactions, i.e. they do not break apart.
Predicting ionic charges - charges of some ions can be predicted using periodic chart - *most charges have to be memorized* Alkali metals: Alkaline earth metals: Chalcogens: Halogens: Li, Na, K, Rb, Cs Be, Mg, Ca, Sr, Ba O, S, Se, Te F, Cl, Br, I 1+ 2+ 21-
- the tendency is for atoms to gain or lose e- until the number of e- is like a noble gas Ionic Compounds Ions held together by ionic bonding. - Opposite charges attract each other. ***All compounds are electrically neutral.*** Charges on an ionic compound must balance to be neutral. Examples: KCl K+ ClLi2S Li+ Li+ S2MgBr2 Mg2+ BrBrFe2O3 Fe3+ Fe3+ O2- O2O2- O2- Fe3+ O2- Fe3+ O2 BrMg2+ Br Li+ S2- Li+ K+ Cl-
Note: Ions do not form molecules, rather they form crystal lattices
EMPIRICAL FORMULA
- lowest integer ratios between atoms Examples: hydrogen peroxide molecular formula: H2O2 empirical formula: HO sodium nitrate molecular formula: NaNO3 empirical formula: NaNO3 octane molecular formula: C8H18 empirical formula: C4H9 glucose molecular formula: C6H12O6 empirical formula: CH2O
(Note: peroxides form only with alkali or alkaline earth metals) - polyatomic ions with oxygen (oxyanions) have ite or ate suffix -ite is always one less oxygen than -ate Ex: SO42SO32Ex: ClO4ClO3ClO2ClO-
10
11
NOMENCLATURE OF ACIDS
Binary acids HyX 1. Write the prefix hydro2. Write the name of nonmetal anion with ic suffix 3. Add the word acid Examples HBr HF hydroiodic acid hydrotelluric acid Note: prefix hydro- implies a binary acid. Exception: hydrocyanic acid HCN Oxyacids 1. Write the name of the anion 2. Change suffix a) change ate to ic b) change ite to ous 3. Add word acid Examples: HClO2 H2C2O4 anion anion
acid acid
Sulfurous acid anion - note 2 H+ since SO32- has 2- charge Nitric acid anion Phosphoric acid anion HBrO3 HNO2
NOMENCLATURE OF HYDRATES
1. Name compound with previously stated rules. 2. At the end, add the word hydrate with the appropriate numerical prefix. FeCl36H2O calcium sulfate dihydrate