Title: Atoms, Molecules, and Ions
1Chapter 2
- Atoms, Molecules, and Ions
2(No Transcript)
3Matter
- What accounts for matters secrets?
- Atomists Democritus
- All things are made of Fire Herclitus
- Four Elements Aristotle
4Conservation of Mass and Law of Definite
Proportions
- Robert Boyle (16271691) Provided evidence for
the atomic nature of matter. - Element - A substance that cannot be chemically
broken down further - Joseph Priestley (17331804)
5Conservation of Mass and Law of Definite
Proportions
- Antoine Lavoisier (1743-1794)
6Conservation of Mass
- Law of Mass Conservation Mass is neither created
nor destroyed in chemical reactions. - Hg(NO3)2 2 KI ? HgI2 2KNO3
- 3.25g 3.32g ? 4.55g
2.02g - 6.57g
6.57g -
7Law of Definite Proportions
- Law of Definite Proportions In a unique compound
the elements will always be found in the exact
same ratio.
8Daltons Atomic Theory and the Law of Multiple
Proportions
- John Dalton (17661844) Proposed explanations
for the laws of mass conservation and definite
proportions. - Postulate 1 Elements are made of atoms
- Postulate 2 Atoms of the same element have the
same properties (including mass). Atoms of
different atoms have different properties - Postulate 3 Compound are comprise of elements
joined together in small whole ratios - Postulate 4 Chemical reactions only rearrange
the way the atoms are combined
9Daltons Atomic Theory and the Law of Multiple
Proportions
- Law of Multiple Proportions
- When two elements form two different compounds,
the mass ratios are related by small whole
numbers.
10The Structure of Atoms Electrons
- Elements are composed of atoms
- Compounds are composed of atoms of elements in a
given ratio - What does an atom look like?
11The Structure of Atoms
12The Structure of Atoms
- Comparison of Subatomic particles
13Atomic Number
- protons in an atom determines the element
- atomic number (Z) - Atomic number is found on the
periodic table - electrons protons in a neutral atom
14Mass Number
- mass of the atom neutrons protons
- Mass number protons neutrons
- An element may have more than one mass
- Hydrogen, Deuterium, Tritium
- Isotopes Atoms with identical atomic numbers,
but different mass numbers. - Due to different of neutrons NOT protons
15(No Transcript)
16Atomic Mass
- Atomic Mass A weighted average of the isotopic
masses of an elements naturally occurring
isotopes. - Unit atomic mass unit (amu)
17Example
- Chlorine has two naturally occurring isotopes
with an abundance of 75.77 and an isotopic mass
of 34.969 amu, and with an abundance of 24.23
and an isotopic mass of 36.966 amu. What is the
atomic mass of chlorine?
18Compounds and Mixtures
19Chemical Bonds
- 2-types of bonding are found in compounds
- Ionic bond
- Covalent bond
20Ionic Bond
21Molecules, Ions and Chemical Bonds
- Ionic Bonding (Ionic Solids) Occur between metal
and non-metal
22Ionic Bonds
23Problem
- Which of the following ions occurs commonly?Â
- A.  N3
- B.  S6
- C.  O2-
- D.  Ca
- E.  Cl
24Ionic Bonds
25Ionic Bonds
- Formula for Ionic Compounds Ions combine to
form neutral compounds
Examples Na and Cl combine to form NaCl. Ca2
and Cl combine to form CaCl2. Al3 and Cl
combine to form AlCl3. Fe2 and Cl- combine to
form FeCl2.
26Molecules, Ions, and Chemical Bonds
27Naming Chemical Compounds
- Naming Ionic Compounds - name the cation, then
name the anion. - The positive ion (the metal or ammonium)
- Single charge or ammonium write its name
- More than one possible charge
- Write the elements name
- Indicate the magnitude of charge as a roman
numeral in parenthesis - The negative ion (non-metal or polyatomic ion)
- Non-metal element - write root of element name
with suffix ide - Polyatomic write the ions name
28Problem
- Which one of the following combinations of names
and formulas of ions is incorrect? - A.  O2- oxide
- B.  Al3 aluminum
- C.  NO3- nitrate
- D.  PO43- phosphate
- E.  CrO42- chromate
29Problem
- Which one of the following combinations of names
and formulas of ions is incorrect? - A.  Ba2 barium
- B.  S2- sulfate
- C.  CN- cyanide
- D.  ClO4- perchlorate
- E.  HCO3- bicarbonate
30Problem
- Convert the names into formulas and the formulas
into names - Sodium oxide
- BaO
- CoCl2
- (NH4)2S
- Zinc Acetate
- Chromium (VI) oxide
31Covalent Bond
32Molecules, Ions and Chemical Bonds
- Covalent Bonding (Molecules) Between 2
non-metals or a non-metal and a metalloid.
33Covalent Bonds
34Naming Chemical Compounds
- Naming Binary Molecular Compounds
- Identify which element is more cationlike.
35Naming Chemical Compounds
- If cation-like element is H and anion-like
element is O, S, Se, or a halogen - Name hydrogen
- Name the anion-like element using root and ide
ending
36Naming Chemical Compounds
- All other non-metal / metalloid combinations
- Name the cation-like element
- Name the anion-like element with root and ide
- Using prefixes indicate how many of each atom is
present
37Covalent Compounds
- Formula
- Translate name of each element
- Make the prefix of the element its subscript
38Problem
- Convert formulas into names and names into
formulas - PCl3
- Diiodine pentoxide
39Naming Compounds
- Acids are a special type of covalent compound
- Acids are species that dissociate to form H
cations and an anion when added to water. - Hence you will need to be told that they are
aqueous compounds (aq) - Acids are typically indicated by writing the H
first in the formula - Elemental symbols are typically written in
alphabetical order
40Naming Compounds
- Acids cont.
- For current purposes, acids are going to be
described as aqueous compounds of H combined with
a group 17 element or a polyatomic ion. - H with group 17 elements or cyanide
- Named as hydro 17 element root ic
- H with all other polyatomic ions
- Root of polyatomic ions ending in -ate ic
- Root of polyatomic ions ending in ite ous
41Problem
- What is the name of the acid formed when HBr gas
is dissolved in water? - A.  bromic acid
- B.  bromous acid
- C.  hydrobromic acid
- D.  hydrobromous acid
- E.  hydrobromidic acid
42Optional Homework
- Text 2.26, 2.28, 2.29, 2.38, 2.46, 2.48, 2.50,
2.52, 2.54, 2.56, 2.58, 2.68, 2.78, 2.82, 2.84,
2.86, 2.88, 2.90, 2.96, 2.100, 2.104, 2.112 - Chapter 2 Homework from website