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Year 11
Chem
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Cards (133)
Atomic
number
The number of
protons
in the
nucleus
of an atom.
Atomic number = number of protons = number of electrons
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Isotope
Atoms of an element with the same atomic number but a different mass number, indicating a different number of neutrons.
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Mass
number
The total number of
protons
and
neutrons
in the nucleus of an atom
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Cation
A
positively
charged ion formed when a metal atom loses one or more electrons
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Protons
Positively
charged particles in the
nucleus
of an atom
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Anion
A negatively charged ion formed when a non-metal atom gains one or more electrons
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Neutrons
Neutral
particles in the
nucleus
of an atom
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Electrostatic
Relating to
stationary
electric charges and the
forces
between them
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Electrons
Negatively
charged particles that orbit the
nucleus
of an atom
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Atom
The
smallest
part of an element that can exist on its own. Inside are smaller, sub-atomic particles.
Atoms are neutral.
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Ionic
bonding
A
metal
atom transfers
electrons
to non-metals so both have a full outer shell
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Ionic bonding
Sodium chloride
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Atoms contain
protons
,
neutrons
and electrons
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Atomic structure components
Proton
Electron
Neutron
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Atoms are
electrically neutral
as they contain the same number of
positive
protons and negative electrons
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Atomic
number
Tells the number of
protons
(and in an atom, the number of
electrons
)
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Mass number
Tells the number of
protons
AND the number of
neutrons
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John Dalton proposed that
atoms
were the
smallest
particles
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J.J. Thomson proposed the
plum pudding
model where electrons were embedded in a
positive
sphere
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Rutherford
proposed planetary model where
electrons
orbit a central nucleus containing positive protons and an unknown particle
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Chadwick
discovered the
neutron
(difficult to discover as it has no charge)
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Isotopes
Atoms of the same element with the same number of
protons
but a different number of
neutrons
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Isotopes of chlorine
C135
C137
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The atomic number will always be the same for isotopes, but the
mass number
will be different from the
Periodic Table
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Electronic configuration of atoms
First shell holds max. 2 electrons
Second shell holds max. 8 electrons
Third shell holds max. 8 electrons
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Magnesium needs to lose
2
electrons and chlorine needs to gain
1
electron
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Magnesium transfers
2
electrons to
2
atoms of chlorine (each atom receives 1 electron)
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Magnesium ion has a
full
outer shell and a charge of 2+, each chloride ion has a
full
outer shell and a charge of 1-
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Positive
Mg2+ attracts
negative
Cl-
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Ionic lattice
Ions
regularly
arranged in a
giant
structure
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We can use the % abundance to work out the
Relative Atomic Mass
(RAM) of
chlorine
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Relative Atomic Mass
(RAM)
All atoms are measured relative to the mass of an atom of
carbon-12
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Cation
A
positively
charged ion formed when an atom
loses
electrons
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Anion
A
negatively
charged ion formed when an atom
gains
electrons
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Atoms will lose or gain
electrons
to get a full outer shell (like a
Noble Gas
)
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Bonding pair
A pair of shared electrons in a
covalent
bond
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Lone pair
A pair of
unshared
electrons in a
covalent
bond
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Covalent bond
A chemical bond formed by the
sharing
of one or more pairs of
electrons
between atoms
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Diatomic
A
molecule
consisting of
two
atoms
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Van der
Waals
forces
Weak
intermolecular forces
between
molecules
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