Key Terms for Mid Unit Test Flashcards

1
Q

Pure Substances

A

substances that are made of only one type of atom or only one type of molecule

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2
Q

mixtures

A

A mixture is a combination of two or more pure substances in which each pure substance retains its individual chemical properties. Mixtures can be composed of solids, liquids, or gases.

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3
Q

Elements

A

cannot be separated by chemical means. Only 1 type of ATOM.

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4
Q

homogenous mixture/ solution

A

looks like one substance but it can be separated using physical means. Solution is common name for this.

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5
Q

heterogeneous mixture

A

is a mixture that does not blend smoothly throughout and in which the individual substances remain distinct

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6
Q

distillation

A
  • mixture is heated until most volatile component vaporizes
  • as vapour passes through a cooled tube, it condenses back into its liquid state
  • depends on differences in volatility of components
  • idea for separating a liquid from a soild in a HOMOGENEOUS mixture as long as their boiling points are not close (if they are, it will be hard because they will both start boiling and evaporating at the same time mixing them again)
  • what is left is called distillate. usually one with lower boiling point (the one that boiled first)
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7
Q

filtration

A
  • mixture is poured into a funnel (or filter paper)
  • liquid passes through, solid is left behind
  • good for HETEROGENEOUS mixtures
  • this process works because of gravity
  • can be accelerated by vacuum filtration
  • filtrate is the liquid that passes through the funnel paper
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8
Q

centrifugation

A
  • works for very small, solid particle separation
  • the process of separation of insoluble materials from a liquid where normal filtration does not work well
  • fill rotors (balanced) which then rotate really fast causing centrifugeal tubes to rotate horizontally and, due to force, the particles separate.
  • solid ends up at bottom and lightest molecules on top
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9
Q

chromatography

A
  • there are many different kinds but they all have a mobile phase and a stationary phase
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10
Q

Paper chromatography

A
  • stationary phase is paper
  • mobile phase is the liquid
  • draw a line with some kind of marker and put it in beaker
  • you will see the water travel up the paper causing the ink to separate
  • this is due to the size of the molecules. some components have smaller atoms that travel easier through the paper while others stick to the bottom because they are bigger??
  • this is used to separate colours in solutions like dyes,
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11
Q

mass #

A

number of protons plus neutrons

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12
Q

atomic mass

A

actual mass of that particular atom

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13
Q

average atomic mass

A

all isotopes added up

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14
Q

radioisotope

A
  • unstable because the attractive nucleur forces among the neutrons and protons are too small to balance the repulsive forces among the protons
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15
Q

carbon dating

A
  • carbon 14 is radioisotope that decays once animal has died while carbon 12 amount remains the same
  • carbon 14 decays and by looking at the ratio of carbon 12 to carbon 14, you can find the age
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16
Q

relationship between isotopes of element and relative atomic mass

A

more isotope of certain mass, closer the relative atomic mass is to that number

17
Q

periodic law

A
  • when elements are arranged by atomic number, their chemical and physical properties recur periodically
18
Q

how did periodic table change?

A
  • mendeleev had to reverse order of elements to make their chemical properties match because he ordered them based on mass not atomic number
  • some elements have higher mass but lower protons so they don’t follow the trend. he had to reorder them because they didn’t follow the trend but he didn’t know why
19
Q

What is excitation

A

When atoms or ions in the ground state are heated to high temperatures, some electrons may absorb enough energy to allow them to “jump” to higher energy levels. These excited state electrons are unstable and they will “fall” back to their normal positions of lower energy. As the electrons return to the ground state, the energy that was absorbed is emitted in the form of electromagnetic radiation. Some of this energy may be in the form of visible light (See the spectrum of electromagnetic radiation below).

20
Q

Distillation is idea for

A

liquid and solid

21
Q

why is flame test bad?

A

Flame test only tells you about metal ion, not about non-metal.

22
Q

Hydrogen must be what in order for hydrogen bonding to work

A

hydrogen MUST be positive for bonding to work

23
Q

dipole moment

A

center of positive charge and center of negative charge exist.

24
Q

ionic bond

A

electrostatic force of attraction between oppositely charged ions

25
Q

co-ordinate covalent bond

A

when elements that bonded and have deficient octets when brought in contact with atom/molecule with one or more lone pairs, they form more bonds to complete the octet. Both electrons are contributed by one of two atoms

26
Q

expanded octet

A

more than 8 electrons after third row (sulphur + beyond)

27
Q

resonance structure:

A

compounds have more than 1 lewis structure. Least formal charge means most time spend in that structure since it is the most stable.

28
Q

why does it need to be in gaseous, ground state.

A

because then attraction to other molecules would effect measurement. Gas= very loosely attracted to other atoms, ground state= not excited