Top Banner
CHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles
38

CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Jan 21, 2016

Download

Documents

Thomas Cooper
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

CHEMISTRY

Maybe I should be wearing goggles

Page 2: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Chemistry Pre-Test

1. What is matter?

2. Name the particles of the atom

3. List the CHARGES of each particle

4. How do we determine the Atomic Number of an element?

5. How do we determine the Atomic Mass of an element?

6. Name at least five (5) elements and their symbols

Page 3: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

What is Matter?

• Anything that can be smelled, tasted, touched…

• Has mass and volume (takes up space)

• Matter exists in a state or phase

• Phases of matter include solid, liquid, gas, non-Newtonian, & plasma

Page 4: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Common Phases of Matter: Solid, Liquid, Gas

Page 5: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Non-Newtonian substances

sometimes behave like a solid and

sometimes like a liquid

Page 6: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Plasmas consist of freely moving charged particles, (electrons & ions)

It is perhaps the most common

phase of matter in the universe

Page 7: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.
Page 8: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Matter is made up of atoms… What’s an Atom?

• The word ATOM (átomos) was first used by the Greek philosopher Democritus

• Atom translates to “Indivisible”• It is the smallest particle characterizing an element• We can’t see the parts of atoms, even with modern

technology, so we have an Atomic Theory• A theory is a good, logical idea about something

but it hasn’t been proven to be true

Page 9: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Democritus460-370 BCE

Page 10: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.
Page 11: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Atomic TheoryIt’s thought that atoms are made of

these common particles:

• PROTON- has a positive Charge (P+)

• NEUTRON- has a neutral charge; has both positive and negative attributes (N=)

• ELECTRON- has a negative charge (e-)

Page 12: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Atomic Structure

Proton

Neutron

electron

Nucleus

Electron Clouds

Page 13: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Benfey’s Periodic Table 1960

Page 14: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Stowe Periodic Table 1988

Page 15: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Mayan Periodic Table 2001

Page 16: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Spiral Periodic Table 2005

Page 17: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Dufour Periodic Table

Page 18: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.
Page 19: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

There is no single periodic table…

Page 20: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Most Common Periodic Table

• First organized using the known properties from other chemists like Stanislao Cannizzaro

• Dmitri Mendeleev created the most

commonly used table of elements in 1869

Page 21: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Mendeleev’s table 1869

Page 22: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Most Commonly Used Table

Page 23: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Period of elements

•Organized horizontally

•Indicates # of electron levels

Page 24: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Family of elements

•Organized vertically

•Indicates # of electrons in outer cloud

Page 25: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Nitrogen

2 75 N

14.0067

Atomic Number (# of P+)

# of e- in each electron cloud Atomic Mass (# of P+

& N=)

Elemental Name

Elemental Symbol (Often from Latin or Greek)

(1st letter is upper case, 2nd is lower case)

Page 26: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Q: How can I calculate the number of neutrons in an

element??

Page 27: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Elemental Names & Symbols

• Fe

• Iron; Latin Ferrum meaning “firm”

• Cu

• Copper; Greek for island of Cypress/ Cuprius

• Na

• Sodium; Natrium (Latin) meaning “soda”/ “salt”

• Ag

• Silver; from Latin Argentum meaning “bright”

Page 28: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.
Page 29: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

More Elemental Names & Symbols

• Au

• Gold; (Latin) Aurum- Roman Goddess of dawn

• Hg

• Mercury; Greek Hydragyrium meaning ‘liquid silver’

• Pb

• Lead; Latin for Plumbum; origin of ‘plumber’

Page 30: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.
Page 31: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.
Page 32: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Element song?

http://www.privatehand.com/flash/elements.html

Page 33: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

John DaltonSeptember 6, 1766 – July 27, 1844

• All matter is made of atoms

• Atoms of an element are identical

• Atoms are rearranged in reactions

Page 34: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Elements are individual atoms…

• When elements join together a compound forms

• Elements join forming molecules of a compound

• There several ways for molecules to form…

Page 35: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Covalent Bonding

•Atoms join together to form molecules of a compound through bonding

•Atoms “prefer” to have 8 e- in the outer cloud

•In order to become more stable, elements will share e-

•Water (H2O) is an example of covalent bonding

Page 36: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

H H

O

Page 37: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Ionic Bonding

• Occurs with salts

• One element gives up an electron while another gains an electron

• In the case of Sodium Chloride, Na gives up an electron and Cl gains one

• This creates ions: the Na atom has a positive charge & the Cl atom has a negative charge

• Opposite charges attract and a compound is formed

Page 38: CHEMISTRYCHEMISTRY Maybe I should be wearing goggles.

Na Cl