Term
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Definition
1867- A scientist who arranged the elements in order of increasing atomic mass. The "father" of the modern periodic table |
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Term
Atmosphere
List the major components |
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Definition
A shell of gases surrounding the earth.
COMPOSED OF- mostly N2, and O2. Also contains Ar, CO2, H2, and H2O vapor |
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Nitrogen |
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Definition
Major component of air (78%). Obtained by fractional distillation of liquid air. Inert and stable.
Compounds- NH3, HNO3, NO |
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Term
List some facts about:
Oxygen |
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Definition
Most abundant element on earth (20% of air, 89% of H2O) obtained by fraction distillation of liquid air or electrolysis of water. Reactive at high temperatures |
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Term
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Definition
- A horizontal row of elements in the periodic table. All the same number of shells of e-. Across the period, the elements' properties change
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Hydrogen |
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Definition
Free hydrogen is rare commercially obtained from H2O. Reactive at high temperatures
compounds- H2O, acids and bases, organic compunds, H2O2 |
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Noble gases |
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Definition
Non-reactive gases:
He, Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe, Rn
Uses: in neon signs, Rn- cure cancer, He- fill balloons, Kr- flourescent lamps |
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Flourine |
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Definition
Elemental gas is poisonous.
Component of freon (refrigerator gas), plastic, toothpaste, insecticides |
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Chlorine |
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Definition
- Kills bacteria in H2O.
- Component of gastric juice in stomach (HCl)
- Table salt (NaCl)
- Produced by electrolysis of seawater
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Bromine |
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Definition
Liquid at room temperature. Prepared from seawater. Used in the petroleum, drug and photographic industries. |
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Iodine |
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Definition
Obtained from nitrate and seawater deposits. Used in the drug industry (iodine solution, iodoform) and in table salt. |
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Sulfur |
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Definition
Not active at room temperature. Large amounts occur in nature. Occurs in 3 alotropic forms.
Compounds: H2SO4, SO2, Sulfa drugs, gunpowder, matches |
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Phosphorus |
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Definition
- 2 allotropes: white and red
- Can combine with oxygen and hydrogen
- Used in: matched, rat poison, grenades
- Compounds: H3PO4, "Phospahates"
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Term
- Nitrogen fixation
- Haber process
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Definition
1.The process of including nitrogen to combine chemically with other elements.
(Example: 3Mg + N2 ↔ Mg3N2)
2. The fixation of nitrigen to hydrogen in the presence of metal catalyst at high temperature and pressure to form ammonia
(N2 + 3H2 ↔ 2NH3)
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Term
Combustion
Write the equation for the combustion of methane. |
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Definition
A reaction where O2 combines with another substance so rapidly that heat and light are released.
CH4+2O → CO2 + 2H2O |
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Term
Allotrope
List an example |
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Definition
The same elemental subtance in different molecualer forms and possessing different properties.
(Oxygen- O2, O3; carbon diamond, graphite) |
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Term
Ionic Hydride
Give examples |
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Definition
Hydrogen combines with active metals to form ionic compounds where the valence of hydrogen is -1
(NaH, CaH2, LiH) |
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Term
List some facts about:
Carbon |
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Definition
- allotropic: diamond, graphite, fullerene
- "backbone" of molecules in plants and animals
- Compounds: fats, sugars, gasoline
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Silicon |
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Definition
Second to oygen in abundance.
(25% Of earth's crust)
found in silicate rocks - clay, mica, SiO2, quartz, sand
Hard and brittle; SiO2 forms glass |
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Term
- Deionization
- Distillation
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Definition
- A process used to separate water from its solutes. Water flows through resins which absorb the ions.
- A process used to separate a miture based on different boiling points of the components. Componensts are separately vaporized the condensed
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Term
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Definition
A family of elements with 7 electrons in their outer shell. They are abundant and chemically active.
(F, Cl, Br, I, At) |
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Term
Metalloid
List 5 examples |
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Definition
An element with the properties of both metals and non-metals.
Example: Si, As, Ge, Sb, Te |
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Term
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Definition
The few metals which occur uncombined in nature.
(Gold, silver, platinum, copper) |
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Term
- Ore
- Alloy
(List 2 examples) |
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Definition
- A natural mineral deposit from which a metal can be extracted profitably
- Alloys are composed of a solution of 2 or more metals and have metallic properties. (Steel, bronze)
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Term
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Definition
- An alloy of iron and carbon containing less than 2% carbon. use: building material
- By combining a transition metal with steel an endless varirty of "alloy steels" can be produced. common metals used: Cr, Co, Ni, W, Sn, Ti, V
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Chromium |
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Definition
bluish-white, brittle transition metal, hard, corrosion - resistant.
Chief ore: chromite
use: chromium plating, paint pigment |
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Term
Metals
List 6 characteristics |
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Definition
- Solid (except Hg)
- Malleable and ductile
- Conduct heat and electricity
- Shiny, relective and lustrous
- Lose e- to form cations
- good reducing agents
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Term
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Definition
The ability of an atom to attract the e- in a covalent bond to itself.
VAlues range from 0.7 (Cs) to 4.0 (F) |
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Term
- Describe the change in electronegativity across the periodic table.
- Describe the change in metallic activity across the periodic table
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Definition
- Electronegativity tends to increase across the table left ot the right and decrease down colums
- Metallic activity decreases across the table (left to right) and increases down the columns.
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Nickel |
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Definition
A hard, white metal which resists tarnish. Ferromagnetic
Use: catalyst for hydrogenation of fats. Coins, the magnetic alloy is called alnico. |
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Term
Non-metals
List 7 characteristics |
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Definition
- 1/2 are gases
- solids are brittles
- poor conducters of heat and electricity
- dull and non-flective
- gain e- to form anions good oxidizing agents
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Copper |
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Definition
principal ores:
chalcocite, cuprite chalcopyrite
soft, red-brown, ductile, malleable
use: wires, brass, bronze |
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Zinc |
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Definition
principal ores: sphalerite, smithsonite, zincite
use: galvanized iron, dry cells, electrical connectors, die casting
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Mercury |
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Definition
The only liquid metal at room temperature.
Uses: thermometers, Hg vapor lamps, alloys- amalgams |
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Tin |
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Definition
soft white low-melting metal
use: tinplates- to protect steel and in alloys |
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Alkali metals |
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Definition
- form +1 cations
- soft metals
- react to light and air
- found in seawater and rocks
- displace hydrogen from water
- found in group IA of the periodic table
use: sodium vapor lamps, salt, lye, postash (Li, Na, K, Rb, Cs) |
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Lead |
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Definition
soft, non-elastic, low-melting, blue-white metal. Becomes dark grey in air.
uses: piping, telephone cables, alloys |
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Silver |
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Definition
Found uncombined or as Ag2S, bright, lustrous, soft, malleable
uses: silver plating, jewelry, photographic film and paper |
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Gold |
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Definition
Found uncombined as nuggets or grains.
uses: coins, jewelry, alloys |
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Platinum metals |
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Definition
They are: Ru, Rh, Pd, Os, Ir, Pt
Inert and occur free in nature, rare, and expensive
uses of Pt: dentistry, jewelry, industrial catalyst |
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Term
Lanthanide and actinide series |
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Definition
Transition elements #57-71 and #89-103 which have partially filled f orbitals. Only the first four elements occur naturally. |
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Term
Describe the change in Atomic Radius across the periodic table |
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Definition
The atomic radius tends to decrease from left to right across the table and increase down the columns |
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Ammonium Ion |
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Definition
The ammonium ion (NH4+1) behaves chemically like an alkali metal
use: fertilizers, baking powder, soldering flu, explosives
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Term
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Definition
- a family of metals which form +2 cations
- chemically active
- their oxides form mildy basic solutions
(Be, Mg, Ca, Sr, Ba) |
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Magnesium |
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Definition
- abundant (2% of earth's crust)
- found in seawater, salt beds and silicates
uses: structural metal, flashbulbs, milk of magnesia |
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Calcium |
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Definition
- abundant (3% of eath's crust)
- found in limestone marble, chalk and seashells
uses: essential to bones and teeth, concrete, mortar |
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Aluminum |
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Definition
- most abundant metal (7% of earth's crust)
- found in mica, feldspar
- bauxite(principal ore)
use: structure (wheels, building) foil, paint, electrical wires |
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Term
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Definition
- A physical property of metals; can be asily made into sheets (example: aluminum foil)
- A physical property of metals; can be drawn into a wire. (example: copper electrical wires)
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Term
List some basic facts about:
Iron |
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Definition
- abundant (5% of earth's crust)
- principal ores: hematite, pyrite, magnetite
- seperated from ore in a blast furnace
uses: structural, magnetic, dyes |
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Term
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Definition
- A metal having two incomplete shells of electrons
- Many have multiple oxidation states.
- Less active than family IA and IIA
examples: Fe, Ag, Au, Cr, W |
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Term
Describe the change in Nonmetallic activity across the periodic table |
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Definition
Non-metallic activity increases across the table (left to right) and decreases down the colums. |
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Term
Compare the ionic radii of
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Cl, S, P
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Na, Mg, Al
What is the reason for the different sizes? |
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Definition
- Cl-1 is smallest; P-3 is the largest, the P atom gained the most e- and has rhe most shells.
- Na+1 is the largest; Al+3 is smallest, the Al atom lost the most e- and has the fewest shells.
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Term
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Definition
The energy change required for the removal of the outermost electron from the gaseous atom to form a +1 ion. |
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