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Chemistry - C1 Atomic struture
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spec c1
Chemistry - C1 Atomic struture
42 cards
distillation/fractional
Chemistry - C1 Atomic struture
13 cards
crystalisation
Chemistry - C1 Atomic struture
6 cards
Separating Techniques
Chemistry - C1 Atomic struture
16 cards
Cards (146)
Atom
The
smallest
part of an
element
that can exist
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Element
A substance of only
one
type of atom
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The elements are listed in the
periodic table
; there are approximately
100
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Groups of elements based on properties
Metals
Non-metals
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Compound
Two
or more elements combined
chemically
in
fixed
proportions which can be represented by formulae
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Compounds have different
properties
than their constituent
elements
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Mixture
Two
or more elements or compounds not
chemically
combined together
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Mixtures
have the same
chemical
properties as their constituent materials
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Methods to separate mixtures
Filtration
Crystallisation
Simple
distillation
Fractional
distillation
Chromatography
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Separation
methods for
mixtures
do not involve chemical reactions
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Simple distillation
1.
Liquid
boils off and condenses in the
condenser
2.
Thermometer
reads the
boiling point
of the pure liquid
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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
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Fractional distillation
1. Mixture is
repeatedly condensed
and
vaporised
in a
fractionating
column
2. Liquids
condense
at different
heights
in the column
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Filtration
1.
Insoluble
solid is caught in the
filter paper
2.
Filtrate
is the substance that comes through the
filter paper
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Chromatography
1. Mixture is dissolved in a
solvent
and placed on
paper
2. Solvent rises up the
paper
,
separating
the mixture
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Separating funnel
Apparatus for
separating
immiscible liquids of different
densities
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Plum-pudding
model
Atom is a ball of
positive
charge with
negative
electrons embedded in it
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Bohr/nuclear model
Electrons
orbit the nucleus at specific distances (shells), came from
alpha scattering
experiments
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Protons
Smaller
, positive particles discovered in the
nucleus
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Neutrons
Particles discovered in the
nucleus
by
James Chadwick
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Atom structure
Small
central nucleus (
protons
and neutrons) with
electrons
orbiting
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Relative masses:
proton 1
, neutron
1
, electron very
small
; Relative charges:
proton 1
, neutron
0
, electron
-1
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Atoms are
electrically neutral
because they have the same number of electrons and
protons
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Radius of an atom is
0.1
nm
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Radius of a nucleus is 1 x 10-14 m, which is
1/10000
of the atom radius
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Atomic
number
The number of
protons
in the
nucleus
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Atoms are
electrically neutral
They have the same number of
electrons
and
protons
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Radius of an atom
0.1
nm
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Radius of a nucleus
1 x 10-14 m
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Number of protons in the nucleus
Atomic number
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Atoms of the same element have the same number of
protons
in the
nucleus
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Majority of mass of an atom
The
nucleus
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Mass
number
The total number of
protons
and
neutrons
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Calculating number of
neutrons
Subtract the
atomic
number from the
mass
number
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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.
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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.
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Electronic configurations
He (2), Be (
4
), F (9), Na (11), Ca (
20
)
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Ion
Charged particles formed when atoms
lose
electrons (positive ions) or
gain
electrons (negative ions)
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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.
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Product of metal + non-metal reaction
Ionic
compound
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See all 146 cards