Notes on Primrose Kitten Chemistry

Memorize these:

carbon dioxideCO2
waterH2O
oxygen gasO2
hydrogen gasH2
nitrogen gasN2
ammoniaNH3
hydrochloric acidHCl
sulfuric acidH2SO4

Equations

nitrogen gas + hydrogen gas → ammonia
H2 + N2 → NH3
balanced equation: N2 + 3H2 → 2NH3

methods of separating mixtures

1908-1913: Working under Rutherford, Geiger and Marsden executed the Gold Foil experiments at the University of Manchester. Before this, we had plum pudding model of an atom. Positive and negative charge was distributed uniformly throughout a substance. Fired an alpha particle at a gold foil. Most particles went right through. Some were deflected. Some bounced back. From this, they deduced that each atom has a nucleus where all positive charge and most mass is clustered.

1932: Chadwick discovered the existence of neutrons, also working under Rutherford.

Periodic Table
Groups give us number of electrons in the outer shell
Periods give us number of shells

Na, sodium has 11 electrons, 2,8,1
The single electron has a tendency to wander off, leaving an ion with 10 electrons.

F, florine, has 9 electrons, 2,7
The outer shell is short one electron, so it tends to gain one.

Sodium floride

Elements in group 1 tend to form +1 ions
group 2: +2 ions
group 6: -2 ions
group 7: -1 ions
group 8: stable

metals on the left-hand side form positive ions
non-metals, right-hand side, from negative ions

1863, 56 known elements, new elements discovered at one per year

1868: Mendeleev developed the first proper periodic table. He saw it in a dream. published in textbook <i>Principles of Chemistry</i> (two volumes, 1868–1870)

group 8 or 0noble gassesunreactivefull outer shellincreased boiling point as you move down the group
group 1alkali metalsvery reactiveonly 1 electron on outer shellreactivity increases as you move down the group
group 7halogensvery reactive7 electrons on outer shellgenerally found in diatomic molecules (F2, Cl2, Br2) Florine gas, Chlorine gas, Bromine gas; reactivity decreases as you move down the table, melting points and boiling points increase; more reactive halogens will displace less reactive halogens in a reaction

transition metals
typical
properties: hard, shiny, conductive of heat and electricity
can be used in building bridges, saucepans, wires
copper: blue
iron (ii): green
iron (iii): red/brown