There are approximately 100 elements listed in the periodic table
Groups of elements based on properties
Metals
Non-metals
Compound
Two or more elements combined chemically in fixed proportions which can be represented by formulae
Compounds have different properties than their constituent elements
Mixture
Two or more elements or compounds not chemicallycombined together
Mixtures have the same chemical properties as their constituent materials
Methods to separate mixtures
Filtration
Crystallisation
Simple distillation
Fractional distillation
Chromatography
Separation methods for mixtures do not involve chemical reactions
Simple distillation
1. Liquid boils off and condenses in the condenser
2. Thermometer reads the boiling point of the pure liquid
Crystallisation/Evaporation
1. Solution is heated until all the solvent evaporates
2. Solids stay in the vessel
3. Saturated solution is cooled to form crystals
Fractional distillation
1. Mixture of liquids with different boiling points are repeatedly condensed and vaporised in a fractionating column
2. Liquids condense at different heights of the column
Filtration
1. Insoluble solid (residue) gets caught in the filter paper
2. Filtrate is the substance that comes through the filter paper
Chromatography
Mixture dissolved in solvent is separated as the solvent rises up the paper
Separating funnel
Apparatus for separating immiscible liquids of different densities
Plum-pudding model
Atom is a ball of positive charge with negative electrons embedded in it
Bohr/nuclear model
Electrons orbit the nucleus at specific distances (shells), came from alpha scattering experiments
Later experiments led to the discovery of protons in the nucleus
James Chadwick's work provided evidence for the existence of neutrons in the nucleus
Atom structure
Small central nucleus (protons and neutrons) with electrons orbiting
Protons and electrons have relative masses of 1, neutrons have a relative mass of 1, electrons have a very small mass
Protons have a relative charge of 1, neutrons have a relative charge of 0, electrons have a relative charge of -1
Atoms are electrically neutral because they have the same number of electrons and protons
The radius of an atom is 0.1 nm
The radius of a nucleus is 1 x 10-14 m, which is 1/10000 of the radius of the atom
Number of protons in the nucleus
Atomic number
Atoms are electrically neutral
They have the same number of electrons and protons
Radius of an atom
0.1 nm
Radius of a nucleus
1 x 10-14 m
Atoms of the same element have the same number of protons in the nucleus
Majority of mass of an atom
The nucleus
Mass number
The total number of protons and neutrons
Calculating number of neutrons
Subtract the atomic number from the mass number
Isotope
Atoms of the same element (same proton number) that have a different number of neutrons. They have the same chemical properties as they have the same electronic structure.
Relative atomic mass
The average mass value which takes the mass and abundance of isotopes of an element into account, on a scale where the mass of 12C is 12.
Electronic configurations
He (2), Be (4), F (9), Na (11), Ca (20)
Ion
Charged particles formed when atoms lose electrons (positive ions) or gain electrons (negative ions)
Properties of metals vs non-metals
Metals: High boiling/melting point, Conduct heat and electricity, Shiny, Malleable, High density, Basic oxides. Non-metals: Low boiling/melting point, Don't conduct heat or electricity (except graphite), Dull, Brittle, Low density, Acidic oxides.