Topic A: Atoms and the Elements

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
I. Measuring Matter Chemists need a convenient method for counting accurately the number of atoms, molecules, or formula units in a sample of a substance.
Advertisements

Deptt. Of Applied Sciences Govt. Polytechnic College For Girls Patiala Presented By- Dr. Raman Rani Mittal M.Sc., M.Phil, Ph.D. (Chemistry) 1.
Copyright©2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 1 Chemical Stoichiometry Stoichiometry - The study of quantities of materials consumed.
Section Percent Composition and Chemical Formulas
Chapter 6 Chemical Quantities. Homework Assigned Problems (odd numbers only) Assigned Problems (odd numbers only) “Questions and Problems” 6.1 to 6.53.
Copyright©2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 1 Chemical Stoichiometry Stoichiometry - The study of quantities of materials consumed.
Section 10.1 Measuring Matter
Lecture #7 - (a) The Mole Concept, (b) Formula of an Unknown Chemistry 142 B James B. Callis, Instructor Autumn Quarter, 2004.
Percentage Composition
Chapter 8.  The number of particles in a mole is called as Avogadro’s constant or number. This unit called the mole, is defined as the number of atoms.
Unit 6 The Mole: % Composition and Emperical Formula
Mathematics of Chemical Formulas. Formula Weights.
Mass Conservation in Chemical Reactions Mass and atoms are conserved in every chemical reaction. Molecules, formula units, moles and volumes are not always.
Chapter 6 Chemical Quantities.
1. What is a mass spectrometer and how does it work? 2. What kind of ion is produced to create a mass spectrum? 3. What is a mass spectrum? End.
Percent Composition and Empirical Formulas What is 73% of 150? 110 The relative amounts of each element in a compound are expressed as the percent composition.
Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education. Permission required for reproduction or display. 4-1 Chapter 4: Chemical Composition.
Chemical Formulas and Molar Masses A few old ideas revisited and a few new.
Chemical Formulas and Molar Masses A few old ideas revisited and a few new.
The Mole: A measurement of Matter
Stoichiometry Quantitative nature of chemical formulas and chemical reactions Chapter 3 (Sections )
Why is Knowledge of Composition Important? Because everything in nature is either chemically or physically combined with other substances it is necessary.
The Mole and Chemical Composition
SURVEY OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1151 CHAPTER 2 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state university.
Chapter 7 – The Mole and Chemical Composition
The Mole and Chemical Composition
Chapter 7 Section 2 Relative Atomic Mass and Chemical Formulas
Chapter 11. Mole SI base unit for measuring the amount of substance The number of representative particles in exactly 12 grams of pure carbon-12 1 mole.
Unit 5: The Mole.
Unit 6 Moles Conversions Formulas. Mole SI base unit for measuring the amount of substance The number of representative particles in exactly 12 grams.
Copyright©2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 1 Chemical Stoichiometry Stoichiometry - The study of quantities of materials consumed.
Mole Concept. Counting Units  A pair refers to how many shoes?  A dozen refers to how many doughnuts or eggs?  How many pencils are in a gross?  How.
Counting Large Quantities Many chemical calculations require counting atoms and molecules Many chemical calculations require counting atoms and molecules.
Moles. Definition A mole is the mass of a substance which contains the same number of particles as 12 grams of the isotope carbon 12. These particles.
8 | 1 CHAPTER 8 CHEMICAL COMPOSITION. 8 | 2 Atomic Masses Balanced equations tell us the relative numbers of molecules of reactants and products. C +
THE MOLE. Atomic and molecular mass Masses of atoms, molecules, and formula units are given in amu (atomic mass units). Example: Sodium chloride: (22.99.
The mole (abbreviation: mol) is the amount of substance equal to 6.02 x particles These particles can be atoms, ions, formula units,molecules, electrons,
Mole Calculations. The Mole Mole – measurement of the amount of a substance. –We know the amount of different substances in one mole of that substance.
How is the mole concept related to chemical formulas?
Empirical & Molecular Formulas
Unit Empirical and Molecular Formulas. Empirical Formulas Consists of the symbols for the elements combined in a compound, with subscripts showing.
Chemical Stoichiometry: The Mole Concept Mr. Forte Atascadero High School.
Ch. 11 The Mole The Mol House The Mol House Atoms in a molecule molecules molgrams Molar Mass Avogadro’s number Chemical formula.
Chapter 3 A whole lotta stuff. Parts of an atom Nucleus: Almost all of the mass, almost none of the volume. Protons: Positive charge. Mass of 1 amu. Atomic.
Empirical & Molecular Formulas. Percent Composition Determine the elements present in a compound and their percent by mass. A 100g sample of a new compound.
CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 7 SECTIONS 3-4 SECTION 3. USING CHEMICAL FORMULAS Introduction A chemical formula indicates: the elements present in a compound the relative.
The Mole Honors Chem. -How do we measure chemical quantities? -What units of measure do we use?
ATOMIC MASS – The mass of an individual atom ATOMIC MASS UNIT (amu or u) – One twelfth the mass of a carbon-12 atom, equal to 1.66 x g Atomic masses.
THE MOLE. STANDARDS Use the mole concept to determine the number of particles and mass in a chemical compound. (includes gram to mole to atom conversions)
Chemical Composition Mrs. Chang Chapter 7 6/14/20161.
IIIIII II. % Composition and Formula Calculations Ch. 3 – The Mole.
Chemists need a convenient method for counting accurately the number of atoms, molecules, or formula units in a sample of a substance. Measuring Matter.
Remember This? In your notebook, complete the following problems: 1. Give the name and formula for the following ionic combinations: a) Cu 2+ & Cl b) Aluminum.
Ch. 9 – Moles Law of definite proportions – for a pure substance, each element is always present in the same proportion by mass. Also, for a pure substance,
Chapter 7 Table of Contents
Ch 7 Mole & chemical composition
The Mole Formula Calculations.
III. Formula Calculations
Molecular formulas.
Percent Composition Empirical Formula Molecular Formula
Unit 6 Mole Calculations
II. Percent composition
Introduction to Chemical Principles
Unit 3: Stoichiometry The Mole, Molar Mass, % Composition, Balancing Chemical Equations, Limiting Reagent, Percent Yield.
II. Percent composition
UNIT 8: THE MOLE (Counting Atoms)
Chemical Quantities.
Empirical & Molecular Formulas
III. Formula Calculations (p )
Presentation transcript:

Topic A: Atoms and the Elements Elements, atoms, mixtures and compounds

Elements An element is defined as a substance that cannot be broken down into other substances by chemical means.   Any single  element  is  comprised  of  only  one  type  of  atom.   The  elements  are displayed  on  the  periodic  table.

Compounds & Mixtures A compound is formed when a number of these elements bond together. Compounds always have a fixed composition of atoms, i.e., they always contain the same, definite amount of each elements atoms. (H2O, CO2) Mixtures have varying composition and are made up of pure substances. Homogeneous – uniform composition throughout (salt water) Heterogeneous – properties that vary from one part of the mixture to another (chocolate chip cookie)

Chemical Formulas Percent Composition – express the mass of each element as a percentage of the total mass of the compound. Empirical Formula – the simplest whole number ratio of the atoms of each element in that compound. Molecular Formula – tells us exactly how many atoms of each element are present in the compound rather than just the simplest whole number ratio.

Method to Determine Empirical Formula a. Take the percentage of each element present in the compound and assume a sample mass of 100 g, thus converting the %’s to a mass in g of each element. b. Find the atomic mass of each element on the periodic table. c. Divide the mass in grams by the atomic mass number. This gives a quantity known as moles. (carry out values three decimal places) d. Find the smallest number of moles calculated in c., and divide all the results of the calculations in c. by that number, i.e., find the ratio of the moles. e. The results from d. should be in a whole number ratio and gives the empirical formula, i.e., the empirical formula is a ratio of the moles of the elements present. [ It possible that the ratio includes a recognizable decimal (a fraction) such as .500, .333 or .250 etc. If so, then multiply all numbers by 2, 3 or 4 as appropriate, in order to produce the necessary whole number. ]

Practice 1A: 1. Calculate the empirical formulas of the three oxides of iron shown below. (a) 77.78% Fe, 22.22% O (b) 70.00% Fe, 30.00% O (c) 72.40% Fe, 27.60% O 2. Which of the following are possible empirical formulae? Explain your answer. CH, CH2, C4H4, CH3O, C3H6O2 3. Three samples of sodium chloride are analyzed and found to contain differing %’s by mass of chlorine. What does this information alone, tell us about the three samples?

Molecular Formula The molecular formula is a simple multiple of the empirical formula. On the previous slide, an empirical formula of CH2O has a total mass of 30 gmol-1 (12.011 + 1.0079 +1.0079 + 16.00), but could have the molecular formula: CH2O, C2H4O2, C3H6O3 etc. To find the molecular formula it is necessary to know the molar mass and empirical formula of the compound.

Practice 2A: 1. A hydrocarbon (a compound containing only hydrogen & carbon) is found to be 7.690% H and 92.31% C by mass. Calculate its empirical formula. 2. The same hydrocarbon as in question 1, has a molar mass of 78.00 gmol-1. What is the molecular formula of the compound? 3. An impure sample of the same hydrocarbon is found to have a % by mass of carbon of 80.00 %. Is this observation consistent with an impurity that contains no carbon? Explain your answer.

Avogadro’s number and the mole concept Amounts of substances are measured in a quantity called moles (mols). The mole is a standard number of particles (atoms, ions, formula units or molecules) defined as the amount of any substance that contains the same number of particles as there are C-12 atoms in 12 g of the C-12 isotope. The actual number of particles in a mole, (Avogadro constant or number), 6.022 x 1023 particles per mole, and has the unit mol-1.

Atomic Mass Units (AMU) Atomic mass unit (AMU) is used to express the mass of an individual atom. One amu has a mass of 1.66 x 10-24 g. (That’s 1/6.022 x 1023) One C-12 atom has a mass of 12 amu and one atom of Cl-35 has a mass of 35 amu. Converting the chlorine atom mass to grams we get, (35) (1.66 x 10-24 g) = 5.81 x 10-23 g. Since 1 mole contains 6.022 x 1023 particles, if we take 1 mole of Cl-35 atoms they will have a mass of (5.81 x 10-23 g) (6.022 x 1023) = 35.0 g.

Relative Atomic Mass (RAM) (or Atomic Mass) defined as the weighted average of the masses of all the isotopes in a normal sample of the element Isotopes - atoms with the same number of protons and electrons, but different numbers of neutrons Practice 3A: 1. Consider the following pairs. Does either pair represent a pair of isotopes? (a) 40K19 and 40Ar18 (b) 90Sr38 and 94Sr38

For Chlorine, the 35.5 atomic mass on the periodic table reflects a weighted average of the Cl-35 isotope and the Cl-37 isotope. The atomic mass is adjusted for the percentage of the isotopes present (75% Cl-35 and 25% Cl-37). Average atomic mass = ((75)(35)) + ((25)(37)) = 35.5 100

Practice 4A: 1. Neon has three isotopes of masses 22, 21 and 20 amu. If the isotopes have the abundance 8.01 %, 1.99 % and 90.00 % respectively, what is the average atomic mass of neon atoms? 2. A naturally occurring sample of an element consists of two isotopes, one of mass 85 amu and one of mass 87 amu. The abundance of these isotopes is 71 % and 29 % respectively. Calculate the average atomic mass of an atom of this element. 3. If the two isotopes of gallium, Ga-69 and Ga-71 occur in the respective percentages of 62.1 and 37.9, calculate the average atomic mass of gallium atoms.

Molar Mass and Moles Molar Mass – found by adding all of the individual masses together in one molecule (or formula unit). Expressed in grams per mole (g/mol). Since molar mass = g/mol we can find moles by rearranging the equation: Moles = mass (g) / molar mass

Practice 5A: 1. What is the mass of one mole of sodium chloride, NaCI? 2. How many moles of Ca atoms are there in 140. g of calcium? 3. How many moles of CuBr2 are there in 0.522 g of copper (II) bromide? 4. How many moles of CO2 molecules are there in 23.0 g of carbon dioxide? 5. How many ‘particles’ are present in each of the chemicals in questions 1-4 above?