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Cards (218)
Atom
The
smallest
part of an
element
that can exist
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There are
about
a
hundred
of these atoms shown in the
periodic table
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Compound
A substance formed by
chemical reactions
where different elements join together in
fixed proportions
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Chemical symbol formula
A way to
represent
a compound, e.g.
H2O
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Naming ionic compounds
1. Name of
metal
2. First
syllable
of non-metal
3. Add
'ide'
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Naming compounds with oxygen
1. Name of
metal
2. First
syllable
of non-metal
3. Add
'ate'
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Mixture
Two
or more elements or
compounds
that are not chemically combined together
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Physical processes to separate mixtures
Filtration
Crystallisation
Distillation
Simple
distillation
Fractional
distillation
Chromatography
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Filtration
Separates
insoluble
solids from
liquids
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Crystallisation
Separates
soluble
substances by
evaporating
the solvent
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Distillation
Separates
liquids based on their different
boiling
points
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Simple distillation
Separates
two different liquids
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Fractional distillation
Separates multiple different
liquids
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Chromatography
Separates substances based on how well they are retained by a
stationary
phase while a
mobile
phase passes through
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In paper
chromatography
, the start line must be drawn in
pencil
and the solvent shouldn't come above that line
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Nuclear
model of the atom
Protons
and neutrons in the nucleus,
electrons
orbiting the outside
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Atom
Protons =
atomic number
, electrons =
atomic number
, neutrons = mass number - atomic number
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Relative mass
Protons and neutrons =
1
, electrons =
very small
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Relative charge
Protons =
+1
, electrons =
-1
, neutrons = 0
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Atoms are
0.1
nanometers across
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Isotopes
Atoms
of the same element with the same number of protons but different numbers of
neutrons
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Calculating relative atomic mass of a sample with two isotopes
Multiply percentage of each isotope by its
mass
, then
add
the results
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Dalton's
atomic model
Solid spheres
that can't be
broken down
further
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Thomson's
atomic model
Electrons embedded in a large ball of
positive
charge
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Rutherford's atomic model
Positive nucleus with
electrons
orbiting, most of atom is
empty
space
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Bohr's atomic model
Electrons orbiting at fixed distances from the
nucleus
in
shells
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Chadwick's
discovery of the neutron helped explain
isotopes
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Periodic table
Arranged by atomic number, groups have same outer shell
electrons
, periods have same
number
of shells
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Periodic table groups
Group 1 (
alkali metals
)
Group
2
Group
6
Group
7
Transition
metals
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Metals
Form
positive
ions,
malleable
, conductive, high melting points
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Periodic table
Named because
properties repeat periodically
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Initial periodic tables were arranged by atomic
weight
, not atomic
number
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Mendeleev
left gaps for undiscovered elements and accurately predicted their
properties
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Group 1 (
alkali metals
)
Soft
, highly
reactive
metals with 1 electron in outer shell
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Alkali metals react with
oxygen
to form
metal oxides
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Three specific groups in the periodic table
Group 1 (
Alkali
metals)
Group 7 (
Halogens
)
Group 0 (
Noble gases
)
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Alkali metals
Soft
, highly reactive metals with one
electron
in their outer shell
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Alkali metal reactions
1.
Lose
electron
2. React with
oxygen
to form metal
oxides
3. React with
water
to form metal
hydroxides
4. React with
chlorine
to form metal
chlorides
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Halogens
Group
7
elements that all have seven electrons in their
outer
shell and form diatomic molecules
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Halogens vs Alkali metals
Halogens
gain
electrons, become more
reactive
going up the group
Alkali metals
lose
electrons, become more
reactive
going down the group
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