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Difference between the mass of an atom and the mass of its individual particles. 4.00260 amu4.03298 amu Mass Defect Nuclear Forces.

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Presentation on theme: "Difference between the mass of an atom and the mass of its individual particles. 4.00260 amu4.03298 amu Mass Defect Nuclear Forces."— Presentation transcript:

1 Difference between the mass of an atom and the mass of its individual particles. 4.00260 amu4.03298 amu Mass Defect Nuclear Forces

2 Nuclear Binding Energy Energy released when a nucleus is formed from nucleons. High binding energy = stable nucleus. E = mc 2 E:energy (J) m:mass defect (kg) c:speed of light (3.00×10 8 m/s)

3 Nuclear Binding Energy Unstable nuclides are radioactive and undergo radioactive decay. The seven most widely recognized magic numbers as of 2007 are 2, 8, 20, 28, 50, 82, 126

4 Types of Radiation Alpha particle (  ) – helium nucleus paper 2+ Beta particle (  -) –electron 1- lead Positron (  +) –positron 1+ Gamma (  ) –high-energy photon 0 concrete ChargeShielding

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6 Penetrating Ability of Radiation

7 Nuclear Decay Transmutation- One element becomes another. More than 83 protons means that the nuclei is unstable (radioactive)

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10 Ethan Hawke

11 11 I. Classes of Organic Compounds Hydrocarbons (C & H only)Heteroatomic compounds aliphaticaromatic alkanes alkenes alkynes cyclic compounds alcohols ethers aldehydes ketones carboxylic acids esters amines amides

12 12 III. IUPAC Nomenclature A. Parent chains: normal alkanes Parent names: CH 4 methane n-C 11 H 24 undecane CH 3 CH 3 ethane n-C 12 H 26 dodecane CH 3 CH 2 CH 3 propane n-C 13 H 28 tridecane CH 3 (CH 2 ) 2 CH 3 butane n-C 14 H 30 tetradecane CH 3 (CH 2 ) 3 CH 3 pentane¦ CH 3 (CH 2 ) 4 CH 3 hexane n-C 20 H 42 icosane n-C 7 H 16 heptane n-C 30 H 62 triacontane n-C 8 H 18 octane n-C 40 H 82 tetracontane n-C 9 H 20 nonane ¦ n-C 10 H 22 decaneetc. systematic name: {side groups}parent chain{suffix} know to here (teens)

13 13 II. Alkanes B. Isomers: normal and branched alkanes n-butane “straight chain” branched chain isobutane constitutional isomers C 4 H 10 “butane” lighters: 5% n-butane 95% isobutane

14 14 II. Alkanes B. Isomers: normal and branched alkanes C 5 H 12 n-pentane isopentane neopentane C 6 H 14 5 isomers C 10 H 22 75 isomers C 20 H 42 366,319 isomers obviously need system of nomenclature


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