Atomic Structure Flashcards

1
Q

Rutherford

A

Discovered the proton by firing alpha particles through a gold sheet and recording how many passed through or bounced back. Also credited for the first suggestion that the bulk of mass is located in nucleus.

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2
Q

Thomson discovered

A

The electron

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3
Q

Chadwick

A

Discovered the neutron

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4
Q

Electron mass

A

1/1840

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5
Q

What is an isotope

A

Atoms of the same element (same number of protons) but a different number of electrons hence a different mass number

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6
Q

Relative Atomic Mass

A

Weighted mean mass if an atom compared ti 1/12th of carbon 12

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7
Q

Relative isotopic mass

A

Mass if an isotope compared to 1/12th of carbon 12

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8
Q

RFM/relative molecular mass

A

Sum of all relative atomic masses in a compound (not the stoichiometric numbers)

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9
Q

mass spectrometer function

A

Measures the masses of molecule by producing positive ions that are deflected by a magnetic field according to their mass/charge ratio
Remember the peaks also account for different combinations of weight in diatomic molecules ie 35 & 35 = 70 for chlorine

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10
Q

For polyatomic / large molecules the last proper peak on the right is the

A

Mr = relative molecular mass

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11
Q

What is the definition of the first ionisation energy?

A

The energy required to remove an electron from each atom in one mole of gaseous atoms

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12
Q

Trends in ionisation energy across a period

A

The nuclear charge (number of protons increases)
Shielding (number of inner shells) remains constant
Nuclear attraction on outermost electrons increases
Atomic radius decreases

Overall ionisation energy increases

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13
Q

Ionisation energy trends down a group

A

Nuclear charge increases
Shielding increases
Shielding outweighs nuclear charge so nuclear attraction decreases
Atomic radius increases

Overall ionisation energy decreases

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14
Q

Nuclear charge is

A

The positive charge determined by the number of protons

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15
Q

Shielding is

A

Repulsion experienced by the electron by all other present electrons

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16
Q

Nuclear attraction is

A

The stronger the attraction the closer the electrons and the protons become hence the smaller the radi of the atom

17
Q

Order of orbitals shells subshell

A

She’ll contains subshell which contains orbitals

18
Q

2p3 explain what each signifies

A

2nd shell
P subshell
3 electrons in orbital

19
Q

An orbital is

A

A region of space that can hold upto 2 electrons with opposite spins

20
Q

A subshell is

A

A collection of (s,p,f,d) orbitals

21
Q

A shell is

A

A collection of subshell

22
Q

S block p block d block f block describe location on periodic table

A
Metals = s 
D= transition metals 
P= non metals 
F= radioactive table at bottom
23
Q

Shape of a orbital

A

A sphere represented as a circle

24
Q

Shape of p orbital

A

Figure of eight represented either vertically or horizontally.

25
Q

Shorthand configuration (electronic)

A

In square brackets out the Nobel gas that appears before intended element and then write the remaining configuration.

26
Q

How many electrons (max) in each orbital?

A

S=2
P=6
D=10
F=14

27
Q

Remember to do what with 4s and 3d orbital

A

Fill 4s in before 3d because the energy of the 4s is less than that of the 3d hence it is easier to lose electrons from there. The orbitals overlap and 4s is closer to nucleus than 3d

28
Q

Exceptions when filling out electronic configuration

A

Chromium and Copper have only one electron present in 4s and 5 and 10 respectively in 3d

29
Q

Reason for two element exceptions in electronic configuration (chromium and copper)

A

Due to increased stability of filled/ half filled d subshell

30
Q

Hunds rule

A

No more than two electrons can occupy an orbital ( ie box diagram there are three boxes for p orbital)

31
Q

Pauli’s exclusion principle

A

Two electrons occupying the same orbital must have opposite spins (box must have two different direction arrows)

32
Q

Atomic Emission Spectra

A

Lines correspond energy of each shell - shells are of specific energies

33
Q

Successive ionisation energies

A

Steady increases then a big jump shows which group it belongs in ie big jumps from IE3 to IE4 then element is in group three

34
Q

Periodicity

A

Repeating pattern of trends across a period

35
Q

Two exceptions to ionisation trends across periods

A

Group two to group three: an element in group two for example magnesium loses an electron from the 3s subshell whereas aluminium in group three loses from the 3p subshell which is higher in energy hence less energy is needed to lose an electron in group two than three which is an exception

Group five to group six for example oxygen in group six has a paired set of electrons in 2p which they repel each other, hence it is easier for oxygen to lose an electron then nitrogen in group five, which is again an exception.

36
Q

Difference between covalent radi and Van Der Waals

A

Covalent is distance between nucleus when bonded hence overlap in the other one atoms are just touching (the only radius that can be determined for Neón and argon because they do not bond with other elements)

37
Q

Atomic radi changes how across period and explain

A

Decreases
Number of protons in nucleus increases hence the nuclea charge increases hence more attraction between nucleus and outermost electrons hence nuclear attraction is increased which pulls the shells closer.

38
Q

Explain the change in the first ionisation energy from hydrogen to helium

A

Increase in nuclear charge from +1 to +2 so increase in electron - electron repulsion in 1s orbital.