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Chemistry
Atomic Structure & Periodic Table
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Cards (38)
Ion
A
charged
particle, could be a
single
atom or a group of atoms
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Formation of ions
1.
Atoms
gain or lose
electrons
2. To have a
full
outer shell
3. For
stability
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Group number
Tells us how many
electrons
the atoms of that group have in the
outermost
shell
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Atoms need to
lose
or
gain
electrons
To become
stable
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Losing and gaining electrons
Requires
energy
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Group 1 elements (
alkaline metals
)
Only have to lose
1
electron to have a
full outer shell
Easily lose that electron to become
1+ ions
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Group 2 elements
Can easily lose
2
electrons to become
2+
ions
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Group 6 elements
Gain
2
electrons to become
2-
ions
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Group 7 elements
Have to gain
1
electron
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Groups
3-5
elements
Would have to lose or
gain
3-4 electrons, which requires a lot of energy, so they don't form
ions
often
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Equation for
ion
formation
1. Atom goes to form ion +
electron
(if
losing
electrons)
2. Atom +
electron
goes to form ion (if
gaining
electrons)
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Everything whether it's living, non-living or even a cell itself is made up of lots of
tiny
particles which we call
atoms
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A single cell probably contains more than
100 trillion
atoms
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Atom
Basic structure is a central
nucleus
surrounded by electrons which orbit around the nucleus in rings that we call
shells
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Particles that make up the nucleus
Protons
Neutrons
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Protons and neutrons
Have the same
mass
, with a relative mass of
1
Protons have a
positive
charge of
1+
Neutrons have no charge (are
neutral
)
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Electrons
Have a mass
2000
times smaller than
protons
and neutrons
Have a
negative
charge of
1-
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The
size
of an atom depends on which
element
it is
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Atoms have a radius of around
0.1
nanometers
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Most of an atom is actually
empty space
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The nucleus is
10,000
times
smaller
than the width of the atom
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Electrons
are even smaller than the
nucleus
and would be too small to see in the atom diagram
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Periodic table
Each box represents a different type of atom, which we call an
element
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Nuclear
symbol
Provides information about the
element
, including the elemental symbol, atomic number, and
mass
number
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The atomic number tells us the number of
protons
(and
electrons
) in the atom
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The
mass number
tells us the total number of
protons
and neutrons in the atom
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The number of
neutrons
in an atom is not always the same as the number of
protons
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Atom
Central nucleus comprising
protons
and neutrons, with
electrons
orbiting the nucleus
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Protons
Determine which
element
the atom is
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Hydrogen
Smallest
element, with 1
proton
and 1 electron
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Elements
Around
100
different elements
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Periodic table
Organizes elements, each box represents a
different
element
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Nuclear
symbol
Represents an
element
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Atomic number
Unique number representing the number of
protons
in the element
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Atoms with the same number of
protons
are the same
element
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Isotopes
Different forms of the same element that have the same number of
protons
but different number of
neutrons
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Relative atomic mass
Average mass
of all the
isotopes
that make up a particular element
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Calculating relative atomic mass
Multiply each isotope's
abundance
by its
mass
, sum these, then divide by the sum of all the abundances
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