C1. Atomic Structure Flashcards
What do compounds contain?
More than one element
What is the structure of an atom?
Tiny nucleus in the centre and electrons surrounding it
What do chemical equations show?
The reactants and products in a reaction, these should always be balanced
What is the law of conservation of mass?
No atoms are lost or made during a chemical reaction, so mass of products equals mass of reactants.
Why does the law of conservation of mass sometimes seem to be broken?
When gases are reactants or products. For example gas may escape into the air or substance increases in mass when heated in air this is because oxygen gas from air is a reactant
What is a mixture?
Made up of two or more substances that are not chemically combined
How can a mixture be separated?
- a physical process (no new substances are made as its not a chemical reaction)
- filtration ~ separate insoluble in a solvent from soluble in a solvent
- crystallisation ~ separate a soluble solid from a solvent
- distillation ~ separate a solvent from soluble solids dissolved in solvent
- fractional distillation ~ separate miscible liquids (have different boiling points)
Dalton:
- early 1800s
- linked his ideas to strong experimental evidence
- suggested atoms were tiny, hard spheres which could not be divided
Thompson:
- end of 1800s
- discovered tiny negative particles called electrons
- “plum pudding” model
- negative electrons were embedded in a ball of positive charged
Geiger and marsden:
- experimented with alpha particles by firing them at very thin gold foil
- few of them repelled showing that there must be a tiny spot of positive charge in centre of atom
Rutherford:
- proposed nuclear model based on Geiger and marsden
- electrons orbit around nucleus which contains protons
Bohr:
- suggested that electrons were orbiting nucleus in energy levels (shells)
- electrons were set distance from nucleus
- bohrs theoretical calculations matched the experimental observations
Chadwick:
- 1932
- provided experimental evidence that showed the existence of uncharged particles called neutrons in the nucleus
Atomic number =
Number of protons which is the same number of electrons
Mass number =
Number of protons + neutrons