What are the charges and masses of protons, neutrons and electrons?
made of only one type of atom
what is an element?
a substance made of more than one element chemically bonded together
what is a compound?
the number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus
what does the mass number show?
Atoms of the same element with the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons
what are isotopes?
Average mass of all the isotopes of an element
what is the relative atomic mass of an element?
RAM = sum of (isotope abundance x isotope mass number) / sum of abundances of all the isotopes
how can you calculate the RAM using mass numbers of its isotopes and % abundance?
filtration
how can you separate an insoluble solid from a solution?
fractional distillation
how can you separate a mixture of liquids with similar boiling points?
Chromatography
how can you separate mixtures of liquids of different colours?
as pencil is insoluble so won't dissolve in the solvent
in paper chromatography, why must the origin line be in pencil?
To stop the solvent evaporating
why do you place a lid on top of the container in paper chromatography?
heat in an evaporating dish on bunsen until almost all liquid has evaporated. Then leave solution to cool. Filter the crystals out of solution and leave in a warm place to dry
how do you carry out crystallisation?
at the top
In fractional distillation, where is the coolest part of the column?
J.J. Thomson (1897)
Who discovered the electron?
Plum Pudding Model
What was JJ Thomson's atomic model called?
James Chadwick (1932)
whose experiments provided evidence of the neutron?
most alpha particles went straight through. Some deflected and very few bounced back. This shows that there is a positive nucleus but most of the atom is empty space
Rutherford and Marsden developed the nuclear model. They fired alpha particles at gold leaf. What did they show?
electrons are contained in shells
How did Niels Bohr develop the nuclear model?
2,8,8
how many electrons fit in the 1st, 2nd and 3rd energy shell?
the number of energy shells it has
What does the period number of an element tell you about the atom?
2,8,2
period 3, group 2
Magnesium has an atomic number of 12. What is its electronic configuration? therefore, where is it in the periodic table?
2,8,7
period 3, group 7
Chlorine has an atomic number of 17. What is its electronic configuration? therefore, where is it in the periodic table?
In order of relative atomic mass
before Mendeleev's periodic table, how were elements arranged?
He left gaps
how did Mendeleev overcome early problems with the periodic table?
Metals (left)
What type of element forms positive ions when they react? Where can they be found on the periodic table?
negative
what kind of ions do non-metals form in ionic compounds?
Alkali metals
What are elements of group 1 called?
Reactivity increases down the group
state trend in reactivity as you go down group 1
fizz on surface, produce hydrogen gas, produce a metal hydroxide (alkaline)
how do alkali metals react with water?
vigorously, to produce a white metal chloride salt
how do alkali metals react with chlorine?
alkali metal + water --> metal hydroxide + hydrogen
What is the equation showing how alkali metals react with water?
K is further down the group. Its outer electron is further from the positive nucleus and so is more shielded by electrons, making it easier to lose
explain why potassium is more reactive than lithium
Halogens
what are group 7 elements called?
reactivity decreases. Halogens need to gain an electron. The further from the nucleus, the more shielding from other electrons, therefore harder to gain the electron
what happens to reactivity down group 7 and why?
mp and bp increase
What happens to melting and boiling points as you go down group 7?
-1
because they gain one electron to have a full outer shell
What is the charge of a Halide ion? Explain why
+1
because they lose one electron to have a full outer shell
What is the charge of a Alkali metal ion? Explain why
Noble gases
they already have a full outer shell
What are group 0 elements called? Why are they unreactive?