Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Chemistry c1
- Atoms
- substances
Anmerkungen:
- All substances are made of atoms. A substance that
is made of only one sort of atom is called an element.
There are about 100 different elements. Elements are
shown in the periodic table. The groups contain
elements with similar properties.
- symbols
Anmerkungen:
- Atoms of each element are represented by a chemical
symbol, eg O represents an atom of oxygen, and Na
represents an atom of sodium.
- structure
Anmerkungen:
- Atoms have a small central nucleus, which is made
up of protons and neutrons and around which there
are electrons.
- charges
Anmerkungen:
- The relative electrical charges are as shown:
Name of particle Charge
Proton +1
Neutron 0
Electron –1
- electrons
Anmerkungen:
- In an atom, the number of electrons is equal to the
number of protons in the nucleus. Atoms have no
overall electrical charge.
- protons
Anmerkungen:
- All atoms of a particular element have the same
number of protons. Atoms of different elements
have different numbers of protons.
- atomic number
Anmerkungen:
- The number of protons in an atom of an element is
its atomic number. The sum of the protons and
neutrons in an atom is its mass number.
- energy levels
Anmerkungen:
- Electrons occupy particular energy levels. Each
electron in an atom is at a particular energy level
(in a particular shell). The electrons in an atom
occupy the lowest available energy levels
(innermost available shells).
- The periodic table
- groups and properties
Anmerkungen:
- Elements in the same group in the periodic table
have the same number of electrons in their highest
energy level (outer electrons) and this gives them
similar chemical properties.
- Nobel gases
Anmerkungen:
- The elements in Group 0 of the periodic table are
called the noble gases. They are unreactive because
their atoms have stable arrangements of electrons.
- Chemical reactions
- Compounds
Anmerkungen:
- When elements react, their atoms join with other
atoms to form compounds. This involves giving,
taking or sharing electrons to form ions or molecules.
Compounds formed from metals and non-metals
consist of ions. Compounds formed from non-metals
consist of molecules. In molecules the atoms are
held together by covalent bonds.
- Equations
Anmerkungen:
- Chemical reactions can be represented by
word equations or by symbol equations.
- Balancing equations
Anmerkungen:
- No atoms are lost or made during a chemical
reaction so the mass of the products equals the
mass of the reactants.
- Calcium carbonate
- Limestone
Anmerkungen:
- Limestone, mainly composed of the compound
calcium carbonate (CaCO3 ), is quarried and can be
used as a building material.
- Decomposition
Anmerkungen:
- Calcium carbonate can be decomposed by
heating (thermal decomposition) to make calcium
oxide and carbon dioxide.
- carbonates
Anmerkungen:
- The carbonates of magnesium, copper, zinc,
calcium and sodium decompose on heating in
a similar way
- Calcium Oxide
Anmerkungen:
- Calcium oxide reacts with water to produce calcium
hydroxide, which is an alkali that can be used in the
neutralisation of acids.
- Solutions
Anmerkungen:
- A solution of calcium hydroxide in water (limewater)
reacts with carbon dioxide to produce calcium
carbonate. Limewater is used as a test for carbon
dioxide. Carbon dioxide turns limewater cloudy
- Acid Rain
Anmerkungen:
- Carbonates react with acids to produce carbon
dioxide, a salt and water. Limestone is damaged
by acid rain.
- Cement
Anmerkungen:
- Limestone is heated with clay to make cement.
Cement is mixed with sand to make mortar and
with sand and aggregate to make concrete.
- Extracting metals
- Economical
Anmerkungen:
- Ores contain enough metal to make it economical
to extract the metal. The economics of extraction
may change over time
- purification
Anmerkungen:
- Ores are mined and may be concentrated before
the metal is extracted and purified
- Unreactive metals
Anmerkungen:
- Unreactive metals such as gold are found in the Earth
as the metal itself but most metals are found as
compounds that require chemical reactions to
extract the metal.
- Metals that are less reactive than carbon
Anmerkungen:
- Metals that are less reactive than carbon can be
extracted from their oxides by reduction with
carbon, for example iron oxide is reduced in the
blast furnace to make iron.
- Metals that are more reactive than carbon
Anmerkungen:
- Metals that are more reactive than carbon, such as
aluminium, are extracted by electrolysis of molten
compounds. The use of large amounts of energy in
the extraction of these metals makes them expensive.
- Copper
Anmerkungen:
- Copper can be extracted from copper-rich ores by
heating the ores in a furnace (smelting). The copper
can be purified by electrolysis. The supply of
copper-rich ores is limited.
- low grade copper extraction
Anmerkungen:
- New ways of extracting copper from low-grade
ores are being researched to limit the environmental
impact of traditional mining.
Copper can be extracted by phytomining, or by
bioleaching.
- electrolysis/ displacement
Anmerkungen:
- Copper can be obtained from solutions of copper
salts by electrolysis or by displacement using
scrap iron.
- Aluminium & titanium
Anmerkungen:
- Aluminium and titanium cannot be extracted from
their oxides by reduction with carbon. Current
methods of extraction are expensive because:
■ there are many stages in the processes
■ large amounts of energy are needed.
- Recycling
Anmerkungen:
- We should recycle metals because extracting them
uses limited resources and is expensive in terms
of energy and effects on the environment.
- Alloys
- Iron
- uses
Anmerkungen:
- Iron from the blast furnace contains about 96%
iron. The impurities make it brittle and so it has
limited uses
- Steels
Anmerkungen:
- Most iron is converted into steels. Steels are alloys
since they are mixtures of iron with carbon. Some
steels contain other metals. Alloys can be designed
to have properties for specific uses. Low-carbon
steels are easily shaped, high-carbon steels are
hard, and stainless steels are resistant to corrosion.
- Most metals
Anmerkungen:
- Most metals in everyday use are alloys. Pure copper,
gold, iron and aluminium are too soft for many uses
and so are mixed with small amounts of similar metals
to make them harder for everyday use
- Properties and uses of metals
- Transition Metals
Anmerkungen:
- The elements in the central block of the periodic
table are known as transition metals. Like other
metals they are good conductors of heat and
electricity and can be bent or hammered into
shape. They are useful as structural materials
and for making things that must allow heat or
electricity to pass through them easily.
- Copper
Anmerkungen:
- Copper has properties that make it useful for
electrical wiring and plumbing.
- aluminium and Titanium
Anmerkungen:
- Low density and resistance to corrosion make
aluminium and titanium useful metals.
- Crude Oil
Anmerkungen:
- Crude oil is a mixture of a very large number
of compounds.
- Mixture
Anmerkungen:
- A mixture consists of two or more elements or
compounds not chemically combined together.
The chemical properties of each substance in
the mixture are unchanged. It is possible to
separate the substances in a mixture by
physical methods including distillation.
- Compounds in crude oil
Anmerkungen:
- Most of the compounds in crude oil consist of
molecules made up of hydrogen and carbon atoms
only (hydrocarbons). Most of these are saturated
hydrocarbons called alkanes,
- General formula
Anmerkungen:
- Hydrocarbons
- Alkanes
Anmerkungen:
- Alkane molecules can be represented in the
following forms:
■ C2H6
H H
I I■ H –– C –– C –– H
I I
H H
- Fractional distillation
Anmerkungen:
- The many hydrocarbons in crude oil may be
separated into fractions, each of which contains
molecules with a similar number of carbon atoms,
by evaporating the oil and allowing it to condense
at a number of different temperatures. This process
is fractional distillation
- Properties
Anmerkungen:
- Some properties of hydrocarbons depend on the
size of their molecules. These properties influence
how hydrocarbons are used as fuels.
- Hydrocarbon fuels
- Releases
Anmerkungen:
- Most fuels, including coal, contain carbon and/or
hydrogen and may also contain some sulfur. The
gases released into the atmosphere when a fuel
burns may include carbon dioxide, water (vapour),
carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide and oxides of
nitrogen. Solid particles (particulates) may also
be released
- Oxidation
- Sulphur dioxide
- Global dimmming
Anmerkungen:
- Sulfur dioxide and oxides of nitrogen cause acid rain,
carbon dioxide causes global warming, and solid
particles cause global dimming
- removal of sulphur
Anmerkungen:
- Sulfur can be removed from fuels before they are
burned, for example in vehicles. Sulfur dioxide can
be removed from the waste gases after combustion,
for example in power stations.
- Biofuel
Anmerkungen:
- Biofuels, including biodiesel and ethanol, are
produced from plant material. There are economic,
ethical and environmental issues surrounding
their use.