Atoms Molecules and Ions
Atoms Molecules and Ions
Atoms Molecules and Ions
Chapter 2
Matter
Since the atom is too small to be seen even with the most powerful microscopes, it or not this is a scientists rely upon Believe microscope. Even with the models to help us to worlds best microscopes we cannot clearly see the structure or behavior of the understand the atom. atom.
Niels Bohr is one of many scientists that have given us a better understanding of Atoms.
Atomic Structure
Nucleus - the central portion of the atom. Contains the protons and neutrons. Electron Cloud - area around the nucleus where electrons are found. Electrons are arranged within the electron cloud in energy levels (Energy levels are sometimes called shells or orbits).
Subatomic Particles
Proton - positive charged particle found in the nucleus. Mass = 1 amu. (a.m.u Atomic Mass Unit) Neutron - particle with no charge. Found in the nucleus. Mass = 1 amu. Electron - negative charged particle found within the electron cloud . Mass = 1/1836 amu.
ION.
IMPORTANT
In all ATOMS the number of positively charged protons is always equal to the number of negatively charged electrons.
electrically neutral.
3. Chemical reactions only involve the rearrangement of atoms. Atoms are not created or destroyed in chemical reactions.
2.1
Counting Atoms
Chemistry is a quantitative science - we need a "counting unit."
The MOLE 1 mole is the amount of substance that contains as many particles (atoms or molecules) as there are in 12.0 g of C-12.
Hydrogen Atoms
Number Mass (amu)
Mass Ratio
Mass carbon / Mass hydrogen
1 2 [2 x 1] 10 [10 x 1]
12 1 12 1 12 1
12 1
Avogadros number
(6.02 x
1023)
x (12)
12 1
Particles in a Mole
Amadeo Avogadro
Amedeo Avogadro (1766-1856) never knew his own number; it was named in his honor by a French scientist in 1909. its value was first estimated by Josef Loschmidt, an Austrian
(1776 1856)
Counting to 1 Mole
Is that right? A computer counting 10 million atoms every second would need to count for 2 billion years to count just a single mole. Lets look at the mathematics. x sec = 1 year 365 days 24 hours 60 min 60 sec = 31,536,000 sec 1 year 1 day 1 hour 1 min
Therefore 1 year has 31,536,000 seconds or 3.1536 x 107 sec. A computer counting 10,000,000 atoms every second could count 3.153 x 1014 atoms every year.
Finally, 6.02 x 1023 atoms divided by 3.1536 x 1014 atoms every year equals 1,908,929,477 years or approximately 2 billion years!
One mole of $100 bills stacked one on top of another would reach from the Sun to Pluto and back 7.5 million times.
It would take light 9500 years to travel from the bottom to the top of a stack of 1 mole of $1 bills.
Avogadros Number
A MOLE of any substance contains as many elementary units (atoms and molecules) as the number of atoms in 12 g of the isotope of carbon-12. This number is called AVOGADROs number NA = 6.02 x 1023 particles/mol The mass of one mole of a substance is called MOLAR MASS symbolized by MM Units of MM are g/mol Examples H2 hydrogen 2.02 g/mol He helium 4.0 g/mol N2 nitrogen 28.0 g/mol O2 oxygen 32.0 g/mol CO2 carbon dioxide 44.0 g/mol
1 Mole of Particles
Moles
Defined as the number of carbon atoms in exactly 12 grams of carbon-12. 1 mole contains 6.02 x 1023 particles. Treat it like a very large dozen 6.02 x 1023 is called Avogadros number.
Avogadros Number
It is the number of atoms, molecules and ins in one gram atom of an element, one gram molecule and one gram ion of a substance. 6.02 x 1023 is called Avogadros number. it is represented by NA
1. List what you know. (What was given in the problem?) 2. Setup the problem. Dont forget your units and show every step. 3. NOW, and only now, use your calculator to verify the answer.
3. 8 x
12eggs 1
= 96 eggs
Looks easy right Now you try one: How many pencils are in 9 gross?
1. List what you know. 1. # of gross = 9 gross (What was given in # of pencils = ?pencils the problem?) 2. 2. Setup the problem. 9 gross X 144 pencils= ?pencils Dont forget your 1gross units and show every 144 pencils 9 gross X =?pencils step. 1gross 3. NOW, and only 144 pencils now, use your 3. 9 x = 1 calculator to verify the 1296pencils answer.
= 2.1x 1024
1023
1 mole Na atoms x = ? mol Na 23 6.022x10 atoms Na 1 mole Na atoms x = ? mol Na 23 6.022x10 atoms Na
1023 1023
1 mole Na x 6.022x1023
= 0.500 mol Na
1 mol Ar
23 6 . 022 x 10 atoms Ar = ? atoms Ar 7.5 mol Ar x 1 mol Ar
3. 7.5 x
Mole Concept
When a substance at our disposal is an element then the atomic mass of that element exprssed in grams is called one gram atom it is also called one gram mole or simply a mole of an element. no of gram atoms or moles of an element= mass of element in grams/molar mass of an element
1 gram atom of hydrogen= 1.008g 1 gram atom of carbon=12.00g gram atom of uranium=238.0g
Electron
-1
Atomic number (Z) = number of protons in nucleus Mass number (A) = number of protons + number of neutrons = atomic number (Z) + number of neutrons Isotopes are atoms of the same element (X) with different numbers of neutrons in the nucleus
Mass Number Atomic Number
A ZX 2 1H
Element Symbol
1 1H
(D)
238 92
3 1H
(T)
235 92
U
2.3
Atomic mass
RELATIVE ATOMIC MASS, Ar (Mass number) = number of protons + number of neutrons SYMBOL
PROTON NUMBER = number of protons (obviously)
08/12/2013
Isotopes
All atoms of an element have the same number of protons but the number of neutrons can vary. Atoms with the same number of protons and differing numbers of neutrons are called ISOTOPES. Some Isotopes are unstable. The nucleus of unstable atoms do not hold together well. Radioactive decay is the process whereby the nucleus of unstable isotopes release fast moving particles and energy.
Isotopes
An isotope is an atom with a different number of neutrons:
Notice that the mass number is different. How many neutrons does each isotope have?
H.T
C12
The Ar of an element compares the mass of atoms with the isotope. It is an average value of the isotopes of the element.
2) NaOH
3) MgCl2 4) H2SO4 5) K2CO3
More examples
CaCO3 HNO3 2MgO 3H2O 4NH3 2KMnO4 3C2H5OH 4Ca(OH)2 40 + 12 + 3x16 1 + 14 + 3x16 2 x (24 + 16) 3 x ((2x1) + 16) 80 100
Moles The relative formula mass of a substance, in grams, is known as 1 mole of that substance. E.g. 18g of H2O = 1 mole of H2O
Calculate the percentage mass of magnesium in magnesium oxide, MgO: Ar for magnesium = 24 Ar for oxygen = 16 Mr for magnesium oxide = 24 + 16 = 40 Therefore percentage mass = 24/40 x 100% = 60%
Chlorine has two isotopes: chlorine-35 (75%) and chlorine-37 (25%). = (35 x 75%) + (37 x 25%) average r.a.m. of chlorine = (35 x 0.75) + (37 x 0.25) = 26.25 + 9.25 = 35.5
Naturally-occurring bromine is composed of two isotope bromine-79 (50.5%) and bromine-81 (49.5%).
RELATIVE ISOTOPIC MASS 1.008 2.014 3.016 12 exactly 13.003 14.003 15.995 16.999 17.999 106.9 108.9
ABUNDANCE (%) 99.986 0.014 0.001 98.888 1.112 Approx 10-10 99.76 0.04 0.20 51.8 48.2
Carbon
Oxygen
Silver
107Ag 108Ag
C?
C?
2.3
A molecule is an aggregate of two or more atoms in a definite arrangement held together by chemical bonds
H2
H2O
NH3
CH4
An ion is an atom, or group of atoms, that has a net positive or negative charge. cation ion with a positive charge If a neutral atom loses one or more electrons it becomes a cation. Na
11 protons 11 electrons
Na+
11 protons 10 electrons
anion ion with a negative charge If a neutral atom gains one or more electrons it becomes an anion. Cl
17 protons 17 electrons
Cl-
A monatomic ion contains only one atom Na+, Cl-, Ca2+, O2-, Al3+, N3-
A polyatomic ion contains more than one atom OH-, CN-, NH4+, NO3-
2.5
2.5
2.5
2.6
A molecular formula shows the exact number of atoms of each element in the smallest unit of a substance An empirical formula shows the simplest whole-number ratio of the atoms in a substance molecular
H2O
empirical
H2O CH2O O NH2
2.6
C6H12O6
O3 N2H4
Molecular formula
The chemical formula identifies each constituent element by its chemical symbol and indicates the number of atoms of each element found in each discrete molecule of that compound. If a molecule contains more than one atom of a particular element, this quantity is indicated using a subscript after the chemical symbol (although 18th-century books often used superscripts) and also can be combined by more chemical elements.
Empirical Formula
Empirical Formula A formula that gives the simplest whole-number ratio of the atoms of each element in a compound.
For example, the chemical compound nhexane has the structural formula CH3CH2CH2CH2CH2CH3, which shows that it has 6 carbon atoms arranged in a chain, and 14 hydrogen atoms. Hexane's molecular formula is C6H14, and its empirical formula is C3H7, showing a C:H ratio of 3:7. Different compounds can have the same empirical formula.
For example, formaldehyde, acetic acid and glucose have the same empirical formula, CH2O. This is the actual molecular formula for formaldehyde, but acetic acid has double the number of atoms and glucose has six times the number of atoms.
Determine the empirical formula for a compound containing 2.128 g Cl and 1.203 g Ca.
Steps 1. Find mole amounts. 2. Divide each mole by the smallest mole.
A compound weighing 298.12 g consists of 72.2% magnesium and 27.8% nitrogen by mass. What is the empirical formula?
Hint Percent to mass Mass to mole Divide by small Multiply til whole
A compound weighing 298.12 g consists of 72.2% magnesium and 27.8% nitrogen by mass. What is the empirical formula? Percent to mass:Mg (72.2%/100)*298.12 g =215.24 g N (27.8%/100)*298.12 g = 82.88 g Mass to mole: Mg 215.24 g * ( 1 mole ) = 8.86mol 24.3 N 82.88 g * ( 1 mole ) = 5.92mol 14.01g Divide by small: Mg - 8.86 mole/5.92 mole = 1.50 N - 5.92 mole/5.92 mole = 1.00 Multiply til whole: Mg 1.50 x 2 = 3.00 Mg3N2 N 1.00 x 2 = 2.00
Molecular Formula
The molecular formula gives the actual number of atoms of each element in a molecular compound.
1. 2. 3. 4.
Steps Find the empirical formula. Calculate the Empirical Formula Mass. Divide the molar mass by the EFM. Multiply empirical formula by factor.
Find the molecular formula for a compound whose molar mass is ~124.06 and empirical formula is CH2O3.
2. 3. 4. EFM = 62.03 g 124.06/62.03 = 2 2(CH2O3) = C2H4O6
Find the molecular formula for a compound that contains 4.90 g N and 11.2 g O. The molar mass of the compound is 92.0 g/mol.
Steps 1. Find the empirical formula. 2. Calculate the Empirical Formula Mass. 3. Divide the molar mass by the EFM. 4. Multiply empirical formula by factor.
Empirical formula.
A. Find mole amounts. 4.90 g N x 1 mol N = 0.350 mol N 14.01 g N
B.Divide each mole by the smallest mole. N = 0.350 = 1.00 mol N 0.350 O = 0.700 = 2.00 mol O 0.350 Empirical Formula = NO2 Empirical Formula Mass = 46.01 g/mol n=92/46=2 2(NO2)=N2O4
2. Calculate the number of moles of each element. 71.65 g Cl x 1 mol Cl = 2.02 mol Cl 35.5 g Cl 24.27 g C x 1 mol C 12.0 g C = 2.02 mol C
4.07 g H x
1 mol H 1.01 g H
= 4.04 mol H
69
Timberlake LecturePLUS
Why moles?
Why do you need the number of moles of each element in the compound?
Timberlake LecturePLUS
70
3. Find the smallest whole number ratio by dividing each mole value by the smallest mole values: Cl: 2.02 = 1 Cl 2.02 C: H: 2.02 2.02 = 1C
4.04 = 2H 2.02 4. Write the simplest or empirical formula Timberlake LecturePLUS CH2Cl
71
5. EM (empirical mass)
= 1(C) + 2(H) + 1(Cl) = 49.5 6. n = molar mass/empirical mass Molar mass EM = 99.0 g/mol = n = 2 49.5 g/EM
Timberlake LecturePLUS
73
Solution EF-5
60.0 g C x ___________= ______ mol C
4.5 g H
x ___________ = _______mol H
Solution EF-5
60.0 g C x 1 mol C =
12.0 g C
5.00 mol C
4.5 g H
1 mol H
1.01 g H
4.5 mol H
35.5 g O x
1mol O =
16.0 g O
2.22 mol O
75
Timberlake LecturePLUS
Divide by the smallest # of moles. 5.00 mol C = ________________ ______ mol O 4.5 mol H = ______ mol O ________________
2.22 mol O = ________________ ______ mol O Are are the results whole numbers?_____
Timberlake LecturePLUS 76
Divide by the smallest # of moles. 5.00 mol C = ___2.25__ 2.22 mol O 4.5 mol H 2.22 mol O = ___2.00__
2.22 mol O = ___1.00__ 2.22 mol O Are are the results whole numbers?_____
Timberlake LecturePLUS 77
Finding Subscripts
A fraction between 0.1 and 0.9 must not be
rounded. Multiply all results by an integer to give whole numbers for subscripts.
(1/2) (1/3) (1/4) (3/4) 0.5 0.333 0.25 0.75 x 4 x2 x3 x4 = = = = 3 1 1 1
Timberlake LecturePLUS
78
Multiply everything x 4
C: 2.25 mol C H: 2.0 mol H O: 1.00 mol O x 4 = 9 mol C x 4 = 8 mol H x 4 = 4 mol O
Use the whole numbers of mols as the subscripts in the simplest formula
C9H8O4
Timberlake LecturePLUS 79