AQA Level 1/2 Certificate in Chemistry - IGCSE' (Draft) - Atoms and Bonding

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AQA Level 1/2 Certificate in Chemistry IGCSE (Draft) - Atoms

and Bonding
These are the things you need to know and understand for tests, end of
year exams and your GCSE.
(the first part on atoms was taught in Year 9)
1.2

Atoms

a)

All substances are made of atoms. A substance that is made of only one sort of atom is called an element.
There are about 100 different elements. Elements are shown in the periodic table. The groups contain
elements with similar properties.
Candidates should know where metals and non-metals appear in the periodic table.

b)

Atoms of each element are represented by a chemical symbol, eg O represents an atom of oxygen, Na
represents an atom of sodium.
Knowledge of the chemical symbols for elements other than those named in the specification is not required.

c)

Atoms have a small central nucleus, which is made up of protons and neutrons, and around which there are
electrons.

d)

The relative electrical charges are as shown:


Name of particle
Proton
Neutron
Electron

Charge
+1
0
1

e)

In an atom, the number of electrons is equal to the number of protons in the nucleus. Atoms have no overall
electrical charge.

f)

The number of protons in an atom of an element is its atomic number. The sum of the protons and neutrons
in an atom is its mass number.
Candidates will be expected to calculate the number of each sub-atomic particle in an atom from its atomic
number and mass number.

g)

All atoms of a particular element have the same number of protons. Atoms of different elements have
different numbers of protons.

h)

Atoms of the same element can have different numbers of neutrons; these atoms are called isotopes of that
element.

i)

Atoms can be represented as shown in this example:


(Mass number)

23

Na
j)

(Atomic number) 11
Electrons occupy particular energy levels. Each electron in an atom is at a particular energy level (in a
particular shell). The electrons in an atom occupy the lowest available energy levels (innermost available
shells).
Candidates may answer questions in terms of either energy levels or shells and be able to represent the
electronic structure of the first twenty elements of the periodic table in the following forms:

sodium
k)

l)

2,8,1

The relative masses of protons, neutrons and electrons are:


Name of particle
Mass
Proton
1
Neutron
1
Electron
Very small
The relative atomic mass of an element (Ar) compares the mass of atoms of the element with the 12C isotope.
It is an average value for the isotopes of the element.

Candidates will not be expected to calculate relative atomic masses from isotopic abundances.

Bonding

2.1

Bonding

a)

Compounds are substances in which atoms of two or more elements are chemically combined.

b)

Chemical bonding involves either transferring or sharing electrons in the highest occupied energy levels
(shells) of atoms in order to achieve the electron arrangement of a noble gas.

c)

When atoms form chemical bonds by transferring electrons, they form ions. Atoms that lose electrons
become positively charged ions. Atoms that gain electrons become negatively charged ions. Ions have the
electron arrangement of a noble gas (Group 0). Compounds formed from metals and non-metals consist of
ions.
Candidates should know that metals form positive ions, whereas non-metals form negative ions.
Candidates should be able to represent the electron arrangement of ions in the following form:

for sodium ion (Na+)


Candidates should be able to relate the charge on simple ions to the group number of the element in the
periodic table.
d)

The elements in Group 1 of the periodic table, the alkali metals, all react with non-metal elements to form
ionic compounds in which the metal ion has a single positive charge.
Knowledge of the chemical properties of alkali metals is limited to their reactions with non-metal elements
and water.

e)

The elements in Group 7 of the periodic table, the halogens, all react with metals to form ionic compounds in
which the halide ions have a single negative charge.
Knowledge of the chemical properties of the halogens is limited to reactions with metals and displacement of
less reactive halogens.

f)

An ionic compound is a giant structure of ions. Ionic compounds are held together by strong electrostatic
forces of attraction between oppositely charged ions. These forces act in all directions in the lattice and this
is called ionic bonding.
Candidates should be familiar with the structure of sodium chloride but do not need to know the structures of
other ionic compounds.

g)

When atoms share pairs of electrons, they form covalent bonds. These bonds between atoms are strong.
Some covalently bonded substances, such as H2, Cl2, O2, HCl, H2O, NH3 and CH4, consist of simple
molecules. Others, such as diamond and silicon dioxide, have giant covalent structures (macromolecules).

h)

Compounds formed from non-metals consist of molecules. In molecules, the atoms are held together by
covalent bonds.
Candidates should be able to represent the covalent bonds in molecules such as water, ammonia, hydrogen,
hydrogen chloride, methane and oxygen in the following forms:

Candidates should be able to recognise other simple molecules and giant structures from diagrams that
show their bonding.

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