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
Why ionisation energy of group 3 is lower than group 2
- the p sub shell gains its first electron
- it is at higher energy
- less energy is needed to remove the electron
Electron orbital
A region of an atom that can hold 2 electrons of opposite spin
s orbital
- one in every shell
- sphere shaped
p orbital
- three in each shell from period 2 onwards
- dumbbell shaped
How to find the amount of electrons in a shell / sub shell
Count across the periodic table
How a sub shell fills with electrons
Each orbital in the sub shell gains 1 electron, then they start pairing up
Which sub shell fills first, 3d or 4s?
4s because it at lower energy
Sub shells fill in what order?
They fill in order of increasing energy:
1s 2s 2p 3s 3p 4s 3d
Why do Cr and Cu only have one electron in 4s?
The electron is moved into 3d to ‘complete’ it, making the arrangement more stable