1.1- Atomic Structure Flashcards
What are the relative charges and the relative masses of the three fundamental particles?
Protons have a 1 relative mass and a 1+ relative charge
Neutrons have a 1 relative mass and a 0 nuclear charge
Electrons have a 1/1840 relative mass and a -1 nuclear charge
Explain what the mass number and atomic number is of an element
Mass number is the total number of protons and neutrons in the atom, presented by A
Atomic number is the number of protons in the nucleus, presented by a Z
Explain what an isotope is and why they have similar chemical properties
Isotopes are atoms with the same number of protons and different numbers of neutrons.
Isotopes have similar chemical properties because they have the same electronic structure, they may have slightly different physical properties due to a different mass.
Explain Electron impact ionisation in a TOF spectrometer, and what would it be used for?
A vaporised sample is injected at low pressure
An electron gun fires high energy electrons at the sample
This knocks out an outer electron
Forming positive ions with different charges
Electron impact is usd for elements that have a low formula mass and not larger organic molecules as they can fragment
Explain electron spray ionisation in a TOF spectrometer, and what is it used for?
The sample would first be dissolved in a volatile polar solvent, then injected through a fine needled giving a fine mist or aerosol
The tip of the needle must have a high voltage, and at the tip of the needle the sample molecule M gains a proton, H+ from the solvent forming MH+
The solvent evaporates away while the MH+ ions move towards the negative plate.
Electro spary ionsation is used for larger organic molecules, the softer conditions of this mean the fragmentation does not occur
Go through all the four steps in a TOF mass spectrometer and give the conditions it the spectrometer
- Ionisation- A sample is ionised by either electron impact or electro spray ionisation. This is done to give the sample a positive charge so that it can be accelerated
- Acceleration- Positive ions are accelerated by an electric field, to a constant kinetic energy, velocity of each particle depends on it’s mass, the lighter particles have a quicker velocity compared to larger particles
- Flight tube/Ion drift- Large ions and smaller ions have same kinetic energy, heavier particles take longer to travel, the ions are distinguished by different flight times
- Detection- The ions reach detector and gain an electron to generate a small current, the size of the current is proportional to the abundance of the species
The Mass spectrometer has to be done under a vaccum otherwise air particles would then ionsise and register under the detector
Why do some peaks show up at half the m/z raio
Because sometimes 2 electrons may be removed forming an ion with a 2+ charge
What is avogadros constant
6.022x10^23
What is the formula for RAM
(Isotopic mass x %abundance)/100
(isotopic mass x relative abundance)/total relative abundance
Give the different isotopes for chlorine and bromine, also give their percentage abundance
Chlorine- Cl has two isotopes, Cl35(75%) Cl37(25%)
Bromine- Br has two isotopes Br79(50%), Br81(50%)
Explain the m/z graph for a molecule that has gone through electron impact ionisation
If a molecule has been put through electron impact then it will often break up and give different fragments, the peak that has the largest m/z is actually the complete molecule and will be equal to the relative molecular mass of the molecule, this is called the molecular ion or the parent ion
Explain the m/z graph for a molecule that has gone through electro spray ionisation
There will be one peak that is equal to the mass of the MH+ ion, it will therfore be necessary to subtract 1 to get the Mr of the molecule.
Give the 4 different sub energy levels and how many electrons that they can hold
s holds up to 2 electrons
p holds up to 6 electrons
d holds up to 10 electrons
f holds up to 14 electrons
Explain the 2 different exceptions in terms of electronic structure in the d block elements.
. d block elements lose their electrons from the 4s orbital first
.d block elements have two exceptions, chromium and copper
. With chromium instead of filling out the 4s orbital fully, an electon is instead put into the 3d orbital to half fill it, which makes it more stable
. With copper the same thing occurs but the 3d orbital if fully filled
Give the definition of first ionisation energies and second ionisation energies
First ionisation energies is the enthalphy change when one mole of gaseous atoms forms one mole of gasesous ions with a single postiive charge
Second ionisation energies is the enthalpy change when one mole of gaseous ions with a single positive charge forms when one mole of gasesous ions with a double positive charge