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The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory
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The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Dec 25, 2015

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Page 1: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory

Page 2: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

• Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals. For example: Na is a metal in elemental form. Cl forms Cl2, a diatomic gas in elemental form.– No charge (neutral state)

• Compound: is made up of a combination of two or more elements (more specifically atoms from these elements). For example: An ionic compound is made of a metal and a nonmetal (NaCl).– Charge: Na is 1+ and Cl is 1‒

Element vs. Compound

2 Hg2 HgO

chemical formula

O2 +

chemical equation

• Chemical formula: 1) Molecular: C12H22O11 (sucrose aka table sugar)

2) Empirical: NaCl (table salt)

Page 3: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.
Page 4: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Periodic Trends

Page 5: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

• Metals: shiny, silvery, soft (malleable), good conductors of heat/electricity, react violently in water, all solid (except Hg).

• Nonmetals: not silvery (some colored), brittle, poor conductors, some solid, liquid (Br) and gas.

• Semimetals (metalloids): Have properties that cross between metals and nonmetals. Partially conduct electricity (rather poor), silvery in appearance. All are solid. B (Boron), Si (Silicon), Ge (Germanium), As (Arsenic), Sb (Antimony), Te (Tellurium), At (Astatine)

Page 6: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Group 1A: known as the alkali metalsLi (Lithium), Na (Sodium), K (Potassium), Rb (Rubidium), Cs (Cesium), Fr (Francium)

When part of an ionic compound, these cations have a 1+ oxidation state (An electron configuration that is full is preferred)

Page 7: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Group 2A: known as the alkaline earth metalsBe (Beryllium), Mg (Magnesium), Ca (Calcium), Sr (Strontium), Ba (Barium), Ra (Radium)

When part of an ionic compound, these cations have a 2+ oxidation state (An electron configuration that is full is preferred)

Page 8: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Group 7A: known as the halogensF (Fluorine), Cl (Chlorine), Br (Bromine), I (Iodine), At (Astatine)

When part of an ionic compound, these anions have a 1‒ oxidation state (An electron configuration that is full is preferred)

Page 9: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Group 8A: known as the noble gasesHe (Helium), Ne (Neon), Ar (Argon), Kr (Krypton), Xe (Xenon), Rn (Radon)

Are rather inert and only under special circumstances do they form compounds.

Page 10: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Law of Conservation of Mass: Mass is neither created nor destroyed in chemical reactions.

HgI2(s) + 2 KNO3(aq)Hg(NO3)2(aq) + 2 KI(aq)

4.55 g + 2.02 g = 6.57 g

Aqueous solutions of mercury(II) nitrate and potassium iodide will react to form a precipitate of mercury(II) iodide and aqueous potassium iodide.

3.25 g + 3.32 g = 6.57 g

Page 11: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Evolution of Atomic Theory

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UDIprICe9kg

Atomic Theory Fill in the Blank Worksheet

Page 12: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

• Elements are made up of tiny particles called atoms.

• Each element is characterized by the mass of its atoms. Atoms of the same element have the same mass, but atoms of different elements have different masses.

• The chemical combination of elements to make different chemical compounds occurs when atoms bond together in small whole-number ratios.

• Chemical reactions only rearrange how atoms are combined in chemical compounds; the atoms themselves don’t change.

Dalton’s Atomic Theory

Page 13: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

The Structure of Atoms: Electrons

Cathode-Ray Tubes: J. J. Thomson (1856–1940) proposed that cathode rays must consist of tiny, negatively charged particles, which we now call electrons.

Thomson was only able to measure the charge to mass ratio of an electron

Page 14: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

The Structure of Atoms: Electrons

Robert Millikan’s Oil Drop Experiment

Was able to measure the mass of an electron and ultimately the charge (from Thomson)

Page 15: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

The Structure of Atoms: Protons and Neutrons

Rutherford’s Scattering Experiment

Page 16: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

The Structure of Atoms: Protons and Neutrons

Atomic Nucleus: When Ernest Rutherford (1871–1937) directed a beam of alpha (α) particles at a thin gold foil, he found that almost all the particles passed through the foil undeflected. A very small number, however (about 1 in every 20,000), were deflected at an angle, and a few actually bounced back toward the particle source.

Rutherford explained his results by proposing that a metal atom must be almost entirely empty space and have its mass concentrated in a tiny central core that he called the nucleus.

Page 17: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

The Structure of Atoms: Protons and Neutrons

The mass of the atom is primarily in the nucleus.

The charge of the proton is opposite in sign but equal to that of the electron.

Page 18: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.
Page 19: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Song about Atomic Theory

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=07yDiELe83Y

Can you create a song based on what you learned? Create a song using the people of atomic theory and a one liner about their contributions. One that rhymes and will help you remember the pioneers of atomic theory. You can get in groups of 2-3 to help. Be prepared to at least read what you have written. Feel free to use the fill in the blank handout.

Page 20: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Atomic Number and Mass Number

Atomic weight is also known as the average atomic mass. The Mass Number comes from this value unless given. Round to whole number.

Page 21: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Some Definitions

Atomic Number: number of protons in an atom (different elements have a different number of protons). This number defines the atom.

Mass Number: Protons + NeutronsIsotopes: atoms of the same element that have

different numbers of neutrons.Ion: atom that has gained or lost 1 or more

electrons.

Ex: Na+ has a charge of +1 because it has lost 1 electron. Ex: O-2 has a charge of -2 because it has gained 2 electrons.

Page 22: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Determining # of protons, neutrons and electrons.

Look up the element in the periodic table. Write its average atomic mass and atomic number down. Round its average atomic mass off to the nearest whole number to make it the mass number.

Protons: atomic numberNeutrons: Mass number – atomic numberElectrons: atomic number – charge (no charge written

down, the charge is zero)*if the element has a number after the symbol and a

hyphen, use this as the mass number. It is an isotope.

Page 23: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Isotope Notation (If Given)

nitrogen-15 or N-15

N15

7atomic number

mass number

nitrogen-14 or N-14

N14

7

atomic number

mass number

7 protons7 electrons8 neutrons

7 protons7 electrons7 neutrons

Page 24: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Isotope Notation (If Not Given)

Look at periodic table.

Top left is atomic number = number of protons = 7

Bottom is average atomic mass.The mass number will be 14. So, 14 = number of protons + number of neutrons

14 = 7 + number of neutronsNumber of neutrons = 7

If there is no charge, then the number of protons equals the number of electrons. So, there are 7 electrons.

If you were just given N and asked to determine the number of electrons, protons, and neutrons.

Page 25: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Isotope Notation (If Not Given)

Look at periodic table.

Top left is atomic number = number of protons = 7

Bottom is average atomic mass.The mass number will be 14. So, 14 = number of protons + number of neutrons

14 = 7 + number of neutronsNumber of neutrons = 7

A charge of -3 is given (this is an ion). Number of electrons = atomic number – chargeNumber of electrons = 7 – (-3) = 10

What if you were given N-3 and asked to determine the number of electrons, protons, and neutrons.

Page 26: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Red phosphorus is an allotrope of phosphorus that can be made by heating white phosphorus to temperatures above 240 oC. The most common isotope of phosphorus can be represented by

How many protons,electrons, and neutrons does this isotope have?

a) 16, 16, 15 b) 15, 15, 1 c) 15, 15, 16 d) 16, 16, 31

e) 16, 16, 1

Page 27: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

The most stable isotope of silver is given by

How many protons, neutrons, and electrons does it have?

a) 107, 47, 47

b) 60, 47, 60

c) 47, 47, 60

d) 47, 60, 47

e) 47, 107, 60

p, n, e

Page 28: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Example Problem #1

1. Determine the number of protons, neutrons and electrons in each.

A. BaB. P-3

C. Na+

D. U-235

Page 29: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Average Atomic Mass

The mass number on the periodic table is a reflection of the masses of each type of isotope of an element and the percent of that element present as each isotope.

Avg. At. Mass = (%1)(mass1) + (%2)(mass2) + (%3)(mass3)…..

Neutrons and protons are most of the mass. The number of protons defines the atom. Isotopes are of the same atom, just differ in number of neutrons. So, a change in mass only really reflects changes in the number of neutrons.

Page 30: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Average Atomic Mass

carbon-12: 98.89% natural abundance 12 u

carbon-13: 1.11% natural abundance 13.0034 u

Why is the average atomic mass of the element carbon 12.011 u?

= 12.011 u

Avg. At. Mass = (0.9889)(12 u) + (0.0111)(13 u)

= 11.867 u + 0.144 u

You have to convert percentages to decimal. Divide percent by 100 or move decimal two places to the left.

Page 31: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Example #2

An element (X) has two isotopes. Isotope X-6 (7.5% of 6.015u) and X-7 (92.5% of 7.016u). What is the average atomic mass of element X? What is the element?

Page 32: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Example #3

Chlorine has two isotopes. It is 75.77% of Cl-35 which has a mass of 34.969u and 24.230% of Cl-37 which has as mass of 36.966u. What is the average atomic mass of chlorine?

Page 33: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Example #4

Silicon has three isotopes shown in the table below:

IsotopeMass (u) Abundance(%)Si-28 27.98 92.21%

Si-29 28.92 4.70% Si-30 29.97 3.09%What is the average atomic mass of silicon?

Page 34: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

What the heck is a mole?

Page 35: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Nope, not a little animal.A mole is a word that means a number.

The word “dozen” means 12

The word “mole” means 6.022 x 1023

(this is called Avogadro’s number)

You can have a mole of atoms, a mole of molecules or a mole of pennies (that would be awesome!!)

Page 36: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Mole concept

The mass number on the periodic table represents the mass of one mole of each element.

1 mole C = 12.01g = 6.022 x 1023 atoms

1 mole of Fe = 55.85g = 6.022 x 1023 atomsetc.

Page 37: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Converting between grams-moles and atoms

Write down the number, the unit, and the chemical that is given.

Make a bracket with a line. Place the unit you currently have on the bottom, the unit

you need to switch to on the top. In the brackets: next the unit “mole” place a 1, next to

the unit “grams” place the number on the periodic table, next to the unit “atoms” place Avogadro’s number.

Put the number on the left in the calculator first. Multiply by the top number, divide by the bottom number.

Page 38: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Example #5A. How many moles are there in a

4,000,000atom sample of copper?B. How many grams are in a 0.037mole sample

of iron?C. How many atoms of sodium are in a 3.08g

sample of sodium?D. How many grams of aluminum will a 3 x 1020 atom same weigh?E. How many moles are in a 4g sample of

potassium?

Page 39: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Molar Mass or Molecular WeightThere are about 118 elements (so far) but there are

millions of compounds. To perform grams mole conversions with compounds we have to calculate the mass of one mole.

Subscript of the first element (atomic mass of the first element) + subscript of the second element (atomic mass of the second element)…..

If there is a poly atomic ion with parenthesis and another subscript you need to multiply the subscripts.

Page 40: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Example #6

Determine the molar mass of C6H12O6.

6(12.01) + 12(1.01) + 6(16) = 180.18g/mol

Round the atomic masses to two places past the decimal.

Page 41: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Example #7

Determine the molecular weight of Cr(NO3)3.

1 Cr, 3x1 = 3 N, 3 x 3 = 9 O

1(52) + 3(14.01) + 9(16) = 238.03g/mol

Page 42: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Example #8 (let’s try some together)

Find the molar mass (molecular weight) for:a. NaOHb. CaCO3

c. AlPO4

d. C12H22O11

e. (NH4)2SO4

f. K2C2O4

Page 43: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Gram-mole-molecule conversionsWrite down the number the unit and the chemical

that is given. Make a bracket with a line. Place the unit you

currently have on the bottom, the unit you need to switch to on the top.

Inside the Bracket: next the unit “mole” place a 1, next to the unit “grams” place the number from finding molar mass, next to the unit “molecule” place Avogadro’s number.

Put the number on the left in the calculator first. Multiply by the top number, divide by the bottom number.

Page 44: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Example #9A. How many moles of NaCl are there in a 75g sample?B. How many molecules of Al2O3 are present in a

0.0059mole sample?C. How many molecules of Fe2(CO3)3 are there in a

0.045g sample?D. What mass will 1,000,000 molecules of (NH4)2SO4

have?E. What mass will a 0.59mole sample of K2C2O4

have?

Page 45: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Percent composition

Determine the molecular weight.

Place the total mass of one element over the molecular weight x 100%.

Do this for each element. Percent composition is based on mass.

Page 46: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Example #10

Determine the percent composition of Fe2(CO3)3.

Determine the percent composition of C2H6.

Determine the percent composition of C12H22O11.

Page 47: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Empirical & Molecular Formulas

Empirical: The formula with the simplest whole number ratio of elements in the compound.

Molecular: The formula with the exact numbers of each type of atom present in the molecule.

CH2O C6H12O6

empirical molecular

Page 48: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Finding the empirical formula

If percents are given, assume you have the same number of grams.

Do a gram mole conversion for each element present in the molecule.

Identify the element with the smallest number of moles. Divide all the moles by that number.

The answer will give you the subscripts for each element.

Page 49: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

What if you don’t get a whole number when you divide?

You decide what fraction the decimal represents. Multiply all the numbers by the denominator of the fraction.

0.5 = ½ 0.2 = 1/50.33 = 1/3 0.4 = 2/50.67 = 2/3 0.6 = 3/50.25 = ¼ 0.8 = 4/50.75 = 3/4 if the decimal is <0.2 or >0.8 just

round off to a whole number.

Page 50: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Example #11

A compound is analyzed and determined to be 27.37% sodium, 1.20% hydrogen, 14.30% carbon and 57.14% oxygen. Determine the empirical formula for this compound.

Page 51: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Example #12

A compound is analyzed and determined to contain 4.864g of carbon, 0.816g of hydrogen and 4.320g of oxygen. Determine the empirical formula of this compound.

Page 52: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Example #13

A compound is analyzed and determined to contain 0.873g of phosphorus and 1.127g of oxygen. What is the empirical formula?

Page 53: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Example #14

A compound is analyzed and the percent composition is determined. The compound is 89.92% carbon and 10.08% hydrogen. What is the empirical formula of the compound?

Page 54: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

HydratesHydrates are compounds with waters attached.

You can determine the formula for a hydrate in the same way you find the empirical formula.

Convert the grams of the anhydrous compound and the grams of water to moles.

Divide both by the smaller number of moles.This will give you the number that goes in front

of water.

Example: MgSO4 • 7H2O

Page 55: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Example #15

A hydrate is found to have the following percent composition:48.8% magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) and 51.2% water (H2O).

When 11.75g of a hydrate are heated to drive all of the waters of hydration off, 9.25g of anhydrous cobalt(II)chloride (CoCl2) remain.

Page 56: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Determining Molecular Formulas

Find the Empirical formula just like before.Determine the mass of the empirical formula in

the same way you found the molar mass of a compound.

Place the molecular weight given in the problem over the empirical weight.

Multiply each subscript by the answer to the division of molecular weight by empirical weight.

Page 57: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Example #16

A compound is analyzed and determined to be 39.993% carbon, 6.727% hydrogen and 53.280% oxygen. The molecular weight of the compound is 180.18g/mol. Determine the empirical and molecular formulas for the compound.

Page 58: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Example #17

A substance is analyzed and determined to be 40.68% carbon, 5.08% hydrogen and 54.24% oxygen and has a molar mass of 118.1g/mol. Determine the empirical and molecular formulas for this substance.

Page 59: The Structure of Atoms and Mole Theory. Element: is a pure chemical substance made of one type of atom. They are classified as metals, nonmetals or semimetals.

Example #18

A compound contains 0.856g of carbon and 0.144g of hydrogen. Its molecular weight is 56.12g/mol. What are the empirical and molecular formulas for this compound?