General Chemistry Chapter 2
General Chemistry Chapter 2
General Chemistry Chapter 2
I. Atomic Theory
In simple terms, this law states that matter can neither be created
nor destroyed. In other words, the total mass, that is, the sum of the
mass of reacting mixture and the products formed remains constant.
Antoine Lavoisier gave this law in the year 1789 based on the data
he obtained after carefully studying numerous combustion
reactions.
This law states that if two elements combine to form more than one
compound, the masses of these elements in the reaction are in the
ratio of small whole numbers. This law was given by Dalton in the
year 1803.
In 1808, Gay Lussac gave this law based on his observations. This
law states that when gases are produced or combine in a chemical
reaction, they do so in a simple ratio by volume given that all the
gases are at the same temperature and pressure. This law can be
considered as another form of the law of definite proportions. The
only difference between these two laws of chemical combination is
that Gay Lussac’s Law is stated with respect to volume while the
law of definite proportions is stated with respect to mass.
5. Avogadro’s Law
Avogadro proposed this law in the year 1811. It stated that under
the same conditions of temperature and pressure, an equal volume
of all the gases contains an equal number of molecules. This
implies that 2 litres of hydrogen will have the same number of
molecules as 2 litres of oxygen given that both the gases are at the
same temperature and pressure.
GENERAL CHEMISTRY: CHAPTER II
1. There are a 118 different kinds of atoms which are each the
smallest part of an element If we observe elements like gold,
carbon, and oxygen we can see that they have very different
properties that don't look or act the same.
7. Without neutrons the eletric force will cause the potrons to leave
atoms. What stops it is called the strong nuclear force between
neutron and potron. It hold the nuclues together.
Example:
The eka-aluminum which was one step away from aluminun. Later
on was discovered as Gallium
He predicted all of this things simply from where the blank spots
was and how the element behaved. A few years after this prediction,
a French guy named Paul Emile Lecoq de Boisbaudran discovered
a new element in ore samples and named it gallium after Gaul, the
historical name for France. Gallium is one step away from
aluminum on the periodic table. It's eka-aluminum. So were
Mendeleev's predictions right? Gallium's atomic weight is 69.72. A
cubic centimeter of it weighs 5.9 grams. it's a solid metal at room
temperature, but it melts at a paltry 30 degrees Celcius, 85 degrees
Fahrenheit. It melts in your mouth and in your hand. Not only did
Mendeleev completely nail gallium, he predicted other elements
that were unknown at the time: scandium, germanium, rhenium.
IV. Molecules
What is a molecule?
1.When atoms come together to form a molecule the molecule vibrates between
itsbonds in a regular pattern. You can think of the bond as a bouncing spring. This is
because the protons and the nucleus of each atom repel one another while the
shared electrons in each bond pull the atoms back together. The vibrations we find in
molecules are the result of a perpetual tug-of-war between these two forces. if you
add more energy to a molecule with heat or light. The amplitude, the length of each
vibration will increase without changing how frequently each vibration completes its
cycle. This means the bouncing spring stretches further and the atoms move faster. If
you add enough energy the bond will eventually break. These vibrations have a huge
number of potential applications in chemistry, medicine, electronics and computer
engineering.
1.
2.In April 2019 in the journal Nature, Joonhee Lee and his colleagues from The
Center For Chemistry at the Space-Time Limit have published the first images ever
taken of molecular vibrations at the atomic scale. It showed how molecule bends and
pulses between its bonds.