Term
|
Definition
Material Safety Data Sheet, tells one basic information about the chemical |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Lethal Dose- 50. The amount of the substance it takes to kill 50/100 rats. The higher the LD-50, the safer the chemical |
|
|
Term
H, He, N, O, F, Ne, CL, Ar, Kr, Xe and Rn are all at what state at room temperature? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Hg and Br are at what state at room temperature? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
B, Si, Ge, As, Sb, Te and Po are metals, metalloids or non-metals? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
H, He, C, N, O, F, Ne, P, S, Cl, Ar, Se, Br, Kr, I, Xe, At and Rn are metals, metalloids or non-metals? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Workplace Hazardous Material Information System |
|
|
Term
The number of protons is equal to the number of (1)______. The nucleus is made up of neutrons and (2)________. The atomic number is equal to the number of (3)________. |
|
Definition
(1)Electrons (2)Protons (3)Protons |
|
|
Term
Democritus discovered the theory of (1)______. Empedocles thought there to be four elements which were (2)___,___,___,___. Aristotle agreed with (3)________ |
|
Definition
(1)Atomism (2)Earth, Air, Water, Fire (3)Empedocles |
|
|
Term
Dalton figured atoms were of this shape (1)_______. Faraday discovered (2)________. Mendeleev was the first person to make something remotely similar to a (3)_________ ________. |
|
Definition
(1)Spherical (2)Electromagnetism (3)Periodic Table |
|
|
Term
Thomson developed the (1)________ ____ _____ which showed evidence of protons. Rutherford worked on the idea of (2)____, ____ and ____ decay/radiation. Marie Curie founded the term (3)__________ with her husband and discovered the elements (4)_______ and _______ |
|
Definition
(1)Raisin Bun Model (2)Alpha, Beta and Gamma (3)Radioactivity (4)Polonium and Radium |
|
|
Term
Rutherford used gold foil to determine that gamma decay is greater than beta decay which is greater than alpha decay. This also proved that there is a (1)_________ charged nucleus and that there are (2)________ outside of the nucleus. Bohr discovered that an atom is made of (3)______. |
|
Definition
(1)Positively (2)Electrons (3)Orbital Shells |
|
|
Term
Full name of: Ti, Co, Br, I, W, Pb, U, Cr, Ni, Kr, Xe, Pt, Po, Pu, Mn, Cu, Ag, Rn, Au, Fe, Zn, Sn, Ba, Ra |
|
Definition
Titanium, Cobalt, Bromine, Iodine, Lead, Uranium, Chromium, Nickel, Krypton, Xenon, Platinum, Polonium, Plutonium, Manganese, Copper, Silver, Radon, Gold, Iron, Zinc, Tin, Barium, Radium |
|
|
Term
A Line Spectrum is created and emits light that we can see when... |
|
Definition
The electrons are excited (due to heat or electricity) and jump to a higher shell. It then gets cooled to the second level which then emits the light that we can see. |
|
|
Term
What is a cation vs an anion? |
|
Definition
Cation is what forms when a particle is more positive, aka has lost an electron. An anion is what forms when a particle is more negative, aka has gained an electron. |
|
|
Term
What is the equation to determine Average Atomic Mass? |
|
Definition
the sigma (total sum of) the abundances (in decimal form) times the atomic mass of the isotope |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
An element that spontaneously emits radiation resulting from changes in the nuclei of an atom |
|
|
Term
Half-Life (definition and eq'n) |
|
Definition
The time it takes the # of original radioactive atoms to decay. Total amount equals the original amount times 1/2 to the power of time it takes for the decay to occur over the half-life |
|
|
Term
Every shell around the nucleus can hold ___ electrons. |
|
Definition
Two n to the power of two |
|
|
Term
S looks like a (1)______. P looks like a (2)_________. D looks like a (3)________. and F is referred to as a (4)"____ _____" |
|
Definition
(1)Sphere (2)Dumbbells (3)Clover (4)Big Mess |
|
|
Term
The Paulie Exclusion Principle |
|
Definition
Only two electrons of opposite spin can occupy a single orbital. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Each individual orbital gets an electron before any get two. |
|
|
Term
How do you form a Condensed Electron Configuration? |
|
Definition
Use the closest Noble Gas that is seen BEFORE the element. Even if there is a Noble Gas one element away after the elements, you must still use the one before it. |
|
|
Term
Trends in the periodic table for (1)Atomic Radius and (2)Ionization Energy/Electronegativity |
|
Definition
(1)up, and across; decrease. (2)up, and across; increase. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Valence Shell Electron Pairs Repulsion |
|
|
Term
How do you write a Net Ionic Eq'n? |
|
Definition
1) Make sure the eq'n is balanced properly, verify with a periodic table. 2) Any "aqueous" element should be broken apart into separate elements. (ie. Cu(NO3)2(aq) becomes Cu2+ and (NO3)2 -) *always write the charges after the compound has been broken up* *never break up or rewrite a solid, liquid or gas. ONLY aqueous/dissolved in alcohol* 3)The spectator ion(s) will be whatever is aqueous and is identical before and after the arrow 4)Re-write the eq'n without the spectator ion(s) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
When electrons are not shared evenly by two atoms. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Shows flow of electrons (where electrons want to sit on an atom). Points towards atom with higher EN, and is more partially negative. Only used in polar covalent bonds. |
|
|
Term
To determine if its a Polar Moelcule, find the resultant vector of the _____. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
If EN is 0 it is a(n) (1)____ _______ ___. If EN is greater than 0 but less than 0.5 it is a(n) (2)___-_______ ____. If EN is greater than/equal to 0.5 but less than 1.7 it is a(n) (3)______ ______ ____. If EN is greater than 1.7 is is a(n) (4)______ ____. |
|
Definition
(1)Pure Covalent Bond (2)Non-Polar Bond (3)Polar Covalent Bond (4)Ionic Bond |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
2 Nonmetals. Use mono/di/tri/tetra/penta/hexa/hepta/octa/nona/deca prefixes. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Metal Cation and Non-Metal Anion |
|
|
Term
Law of Conservation of Mass |
|
Definition
Mass of reactants = mass of products |
|
|
Term
The product of a Combustion reaction is always.... |
|
Definition
Water (H2O) and Carbon Dioxide (CO2) |
|
|
Term
Using the addition of A, B, C and D explain (1)Synthesis (2)Decomposition (3)Single Displacement (4)Double Displacement |
|
Definition
(1) A + B --> AB (2) AB --> A + B (3) A + BC --> AC + B (4) AB + CD --> AD + BC |
|
|
Term
Neutralization Rxn vs Precipitation |
|
Definition
Both are Double Displacement Reactions. A Neutralization Reaction occurs when an acid and a base produce a salt and water. A precipitation occurs when a precipitate is formed. |
|
|
Term
For a single displacement reaction to occur in A + BC, A must be _______ B on the reactivity series. If not, there is no reaction. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
In order for AB + CD --> AD + CB, either A or C must be a (1)______ and the other must be a (2)_______. They cannot both be one, otherwise there will be no reaction. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
To separate the products of a double displacement reaction..... |
|
Definition
Use a funnel with a filter in it and separate the solid from the liquid. Use a retort stand, ring clamp and beaker. |
|
|
Term
What is Avagadro's constant and what does it represent? |
|
Definition
6.022x10^23; a constant for a 'mole'. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
The quantitative study of reactants and products in a chemical reaction. |
|
|
Term
A mole is defined as the number of atoms in 12 g of _______-__. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
(1)Mass--->Mole--->Atoms (2)Atoms--->Mole--->Mass |
|
Definition
(1)Divide by molar mass--->multiply by Avagadro's Constant. (2)Divide by Avagadro's Constant--->Multiply by Molar Mass |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Simplest Ratio of a Compound |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Actual Formula of a compound |
|
|
Term
To find the empirical formula of a compound use this rhyme! |
|
Definition
percent to mass mass to mole divide by small multiply til whole! |
|
|
Term
How does one determine the percent composition of (for example) water? |
|
Definition
Since there are 2 H's in H2O, multiply the molar mass of hydrogen by 2 and divide that number by the molar mass of H2O. multiply this number by 100%. For oxygen, do the same thing except do not multiply the molar mass by two. these are your percent compositions! |
|
|
Term
In a Carbon-Hydrogen Combustion Analyzer, what are the three main components? What is coating each absorber? Why is the CO2 absorber second? |
|
Definition
Oven/Furnace, Water Absorber (coated in magnesium perchlorate) and CO2 Absorber (coated in sodium hydroxide). The CO2 absorber is second because the whole purpose of this analyzer is to determine the amount of H2O and CO2 in terms of mass. When one reacts CO2 with NaOH, H2O is formed. It is second so that there is without a doubt, a value for the mass of H2O |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Saturated: A solution having a relatively large quantity of solute per unit volume of solution Unsaturated: A solution having a relatively small quantity of solute per unit volume of solution |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Intermolecular (attraction within a molecule) |
|
|