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FINAL EXAM REVIEW (Chapters #1-6)
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Defining Chemistry.... ✴ Chemistry is the study of the composition of matter and the changes that matter undergoes ✴ Known as the “central science” ✴ Matter is anything that has mass and occupies space ✴ Trees, water, buildings, air, etc.
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Chemistry has 5 specific areas of study: ✴ Organic chemistry ✴ Inorganic chemistry ✴ Biochemistry chemistry ✴ Analytical chemistry ✴ Physical chemistry
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Organic Chemistry ✴ Defined as the study of all chemicals containing carbon ✴ Most chemicals that are found in organisms contain carbon
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Inorganic Chemistry ✴ Defined as the study of chemicals that, in general, do not contain carbon ✴ Many inorganic chemicals are found in non- living things ✴ Rocks ✴ Bones
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Biochemistry ✴ Defined as the study of processes that take place in living organisms ✴ Muscle contraction, digestion, metabolism
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Analytical Chemistry ✴ The area of study that focuses on the composition of matter ✴ Measuring the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere ✴ Used to assure the safety and quality of food, pharmaceuticals, and water
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Physical Chemistry ✴ The area of chemistry that deals with the mechanism, rate, and energy transfer that occurs when matter undergoes change ✴ Rate of photosynthesis in trees
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Inorganic chemistry Organic chemistry Analytical chemistry Physical chemistry Biochemistry
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States of Matter There are three states of matter: ✴ Solid ✴ Definite shape and volume ✴ Liquid ✴ Indefinite shape and a definite (fixed) volume ✴ Gas ✴ Indefinite shape and indefinite volume (Takes the shape of the container it is in)
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Extensive vs. Intensive Properties ✴ An extensive property is a property that depends on the amount of matter in a sample ✴ The mass of an object is a measure of the amount of matter the object contains ✴ The volume of an object is a measure of the space occupied by the object
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Extensive vs. Intensive Properties ✴ An intensive property is a property that depends on the type of matter in a sample, not the amount of matter ✴ Density, melting point, boiling point, color, hardness
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Classifying Changes in Matter ✴ Physical change ✴ The appearance of the matter may change but the composition does not ✴ Melt, boil, freeze, condense, break, split, grind, crush ✴ Chemical change ✴ A change that produces matter with a different composition than the original matter ✴ Burn, rot, rust, decompose, explode, corrode
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Classification of Matter ALL matter can be classified as either a pure substance or a mixture
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Mixtures ✴ A mixture is a blend of two or more types of matter, each of which retains its own identity and properties ✴ Chicken noodle soup ✴ Air ✴ Salad dressing ✴ Lucky charms
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Homogenous vs. Heterogenous Mixtures ✴ Homogenous mixture (solution) ✴ Composition is uniform throughout the mixture ✴ Air, salt water, vinegar (water + acetic acid), stainless steel (Fe,Cr, and Ni) ✴ Heterogenous mixture ✴ Composition is not uniform throughout the mixture ✴ Chicken noodle soup, Italian salad dressing ✴ Based on the distribution of their components, mixtures can be classified as:
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✴ A homogeneous mixture can sometimes look the same ✴ They appear the same until light is passed through ✴ In a colloid, the light is scattered–Tyndall Effect ✴ Examples: Milk, orange juice (no pulp), pudding Colloid
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Pure Substances
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ATLANTIC vs. PACIFIC RULE (Determining the number of significant figures)
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Atlantic = decimal point is absent Count the significant figures starting with the first non-zero digit on the right Pacific = decimal point is present Count the significant figures starting with the first non-zero digit on the left
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Addition and Subtraction with Significant Figures ✴ The answer should be rounded to the same number of decimal places (not digits) as the measurement with the least number of decimal places Examples: 1. 12.52 meters + 349.0 meters + 8.24 meters = 2. 74.626 meters – 28.34 meters =
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✴ Round the answer to the same number of significant figures as the measurement with the least number of significant figures Multiplying and Dividing with Significant Figures Examples: 1. 7.55 meters x 0.34 meter = 2. 2.10 meters x 0.70 meter = 3. 2.4526 meters 2 ÷ 8.4 meters = 4. 0.365 meter 2 ÷ 0.0200 meter =
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✴ There are six SI base units SI Base Units QuantitySI base unitSymbol Lengthmeterm Masskilogramkg TemperaturekelvinK Timeseconds Amount of substancemolemol Volumemeter cubedm3m3
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Commonly Used Metric Prefixes PrefixSymbolFactor kilok10 3 = (1000) hectoh10 2 = (100) decaD10 1 = (10) gram, liter, meterg, L, m decid10 -1 = (1/10) centic10 -2 = 1/100) millim10 -3 = (1/1000)
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Density ✴ Density is the ratio of the mass of an object to its volume ✴ The relationship between an object’s mass and its volume tells you whether it will float or sink mass volume Density =
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Properties of Subatomic Particles ParticleSymbol Relative charge Relative mass (mass of proton = 1) Actual mass (g) Electrone–e– 1–1/1840 9.11 10 –28 Protonp+p+ 1+ 1 1.67 10 –24 Neutronn0n0 0 1 1.67 10 –24 The table below summarizes the properties of these subatomic particles:
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Atomic Number The atomic number identifies the element (like a social security number identifies you) ✴ An element’s atomic number is the number of protons in the nucleus of an atom of that element ✴ Atomic number = protons
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Mass Number The total number of protons and neutrons in an atom is called the mass number ✴ Mass number = protons + neutrons
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Isotopes Isotopes are atoms of the same element that have the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons ✴ Same number of protons, different mass
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Principle Quantum Number (n) ✴ Indicates the main energy level (shell) occupied by the electron ✴ These numbers are assigned the values n = 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6....
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Angular Momentum Number (l) ✴ Indicates the shape of the orbital ✴ l = s,p,d,f ✴ More commonly referred to as the sublevel (subshell)
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Sublevel (subshells) s-subshell contains 1 orbital p-subshell contains 3 orbitals d-subshell contains 5 orbitals f-subshell contains 7 orbitals **Each orbital can hold a maximum of 2 electrons (2e - )
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RULES FOR ELECTRON CONFIGURATION & ORBITAL NOTATION 1. Aufbau principle ✴ An electron occupies the lowest energy orbital that can receive it ✴ Fill the electrons lowest to highest energy 2. Hund’s Rule ✴ Orbitals of the same energy must be occupied by one electron before it can be occupied by two electrons 3.Pauli-Exclusion principle ✴ Each orbital can only hold 2 electrons with opposite spins
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Increasing energy 1s 2s 3s 4s 5s 6s 7s 2p 3p 4p 5p 6p 3d 4d 5d 7p 6d 4f 5f
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The elements in Group 1A are called alkali metals The elements in Group 2A are called alkaline earth metals. Groups of the Periodic Table
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The nonmetals of Group 7A are called halogens The nonmetals of Group 8A are called Noble Gases
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Representative Elements Elements in Groups 1A through 7A (s and p blocks) are often referred to as representative elements S and P Blocks! They display a wide range of physical and chemical properties.
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More positively charged protons than negatively charged electrons, the ion has a net positive charge The charge for a cation is written as a number (number of electrons lost) followed by a plus sign Metals tend to form cations Cation (Positively charged atom)
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Anion (Negatively Charged atom) More negatively charged electrons than positively charged protons, the ion has a net negative charge The charge for an anion is written as a number (number of electrons gained) followed by a minus sign Nonmetals tend to form anions
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PERIODIC TRENDS Chapter 6.3
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Atomic Size The size is expressed as an atomic radius
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In general, atomic size increases from top to bottom within a group, and decreases from left to right across a period
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Ionization Energy Ionization energy is the energy required to remove an electron from an atom Ionization energy tends to decrease from top to bottom within a group and increase from left to right across a period
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Ionic Size Cations are always smaller than the atoms from which they form Anions are always larger than the atoms from which they form
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Electronegativity Electronegativity is the ability of an element to attract electrons Low values = low ability to attract electrons (donates electrons to form cations) High values = high ability to attract electrons (gains electrons to form anions)
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Electronegativity values decrease from top to bottom within a group and increase from left to right across a period
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