The Atom and Redox Flashcards
Structure of an atom
Proton- nucleus- 1 - +1
Neutron- nucleus- 1- 0
Electron- Electron shells- 1/2000, -1
Define relative isotopic mass
The mass of one atom of a specific isotope of an element compared the 1/12 of the mass of one atom of carbon-12
How to calculate relative atomic mass
- multiply the relative isotopic mass by the % abundance
- Add these together
- Divide by 100
Relative atomic mass
The weighted mean mass of an atom of an element compared with 1/12 of the mass of an atom of carbon-12
What does a mass spectrometer measure
The relative abundance of an isotope.
Atoms are deflected by a magnetic field if they are first converted into a positive ion .
Electrically charged particles are affected by the magnetic field neutral ones aren’t.
The deflected ions are detected and displayed on a mass spectrum as a mass-to-charge ratio m/z
Mass spectrometer graph
on x axis m/z (mass to charge ratio)
On y axis relative abundance
To work out relative abundance of each isotope add up all the heights of the peaks, then divide one peak by the total heights and multiply by 100.
Define relative molecular mass
The weighted mean mass of a molecule of a compound compared with 1/12 of the mass of an atom of carbon-12
Define relative formula mass
The weighted mean mass of a formula unit of a compound compared with 1/12 of the mass of one atom of carbon-12
Define 1st ionisation energy
The energy required to remove one electron from each atom in one mole of gaseous atoms of an element to form one mole of gaseous 1+ ions.
K (g) –> K+ (g) + e-
3 Factors that affect ionisation energy
- Atomic radius- further the distance, the weaker the electrostatic attraction, lower IE
- Nuclear charge- the higher the nuclear charge, stronger the electrostatic attraction, the higher the IE
- E- shielding- The more inner shells of e-, the greater the shielding effect, the weaker the electrostatic attraction , the lower the IE
Why is the second ionisation energy always greater than the first
Every time an electron is removed, the electrons are pulled closer to the nucleus, so more energy is needed to overcome this.
Succesive ionisation energies graphs
Help you to know how many electrons there are in each shell.
So you can predict the group an element is in.
e.g. if the biggest gap in energies is between 4th and 5th electron is suggests they are in group 4
Photoelectron spectrum graphs
IE on x axis increasing from right to left
Relative number of electron on y axis
The amount of energy needed to remover one electron from a particular energy level determines where along the horizontal axis the peak is positioned.
the number of electrons within an energy level determines the height of each peak.
General trend of IE across a period
It increases
- number of electrons shielding stay relatively similar- no new shells
- nuclear charge increases- increases attraction between nucleus and electrons- more IE needed
- Atomic radius decreases - increases attraction- higher IE
Different orbitals
S-orbital - is spherical, contains 2 electrons in orbital
P-orbital - is dumbbell shape, p sub-shell contains 3 orbitals each can contain 2 electrons.
d-orbital