Atomic structure Flashcards
Atomic number
Number of protons in a nucleus
Mass number
Number of protons + number of neutrons in a nucleus
Proton
- relative mass of 1
- charge of +1
Neutron
- relative mass of 1
- charge of 0
Electron
- relative mass of 1/1840
- charge of -1
Isotopes
Atoms of the same element with different numbers of neutrons (so different mass numbers)
Relative isotopic mass
Relative mass of an atom of an isotope compared to 1/12th the mass of a carbon 12 atom
Relative atomic mass
Weighted average mass of an atom of an element compared to 1/12th the mass of a carbon 12 atom
Mass spectrometry
Sample of molecules are turned into positive ions and each ion’s mass/charge ratio and abundance are recorded
Molecular ion peak
The largest peak on the mass spectrum, which has a m/z ratio equal to the relative molecular mass
Relative formula mass
Mass (in grams) per mole of a chemical
First ionisation energy
Energy taken to remove 1 mole of electrons from of 1 mole of of gaseous atoms of an element to form 1 mole of gaseous + ions
Why ionisation energy increases across a period
- higher nuclear charge
- smaller atomic radius
- more attraction between nucleus and outer shell
Why ionisation energy decreases down a group
- more electron shielding
- larger atomic radius
- less attraction between nucleus and outer shell
Why ionisation energy of group 6 is lower than group 5
- the first p orbital gains a second electron
- the electrons in the orbital repel each other
- this makes it easier to remove one of them