Zusammenfassung der Ressource
C1.1 The Fundamental
Ideas In Chemistry
Anlagen:
- C1.1.1 Atoms
- All substances are made of
tiny particles called atoms.
- A substance made up of only one
type of atom is called an element.
- Atoms of each element are represented by a chemical
symbol; usually consisting of one or two different letters, but
sometimes three letters are used.
- The first letter in a chemical
symbol is a capital letter, and
the others lowercase.
- Atoms have a small central nucleus,
made up of protons and neutrons
surrounded by energy levels containing
electrons.
- The first level can only
hold two electrons and
the second and third,
eight electrons.
- In an atom, the number
of protons is the same
as electrons. Atoms
have no overall charge.
- The relative electrical
charges are as follows:
protons +1, neutrons 0
and electrons -1.
- The number of protons in an
atom is the atomic number.
The sum of the protons and
neutrons is the mass number.
- C1.1.2 The Periodic Table
- There are about 100 different
elements; shown in the
periodic table arranged by
atomic number.
- Metals appear on the left with
non-metals to the right.
- The horizontal rows are called periods and the
vertical columns are called groups.
- Atoms in the same period have
the same number of occupied
energy levels and atoms in a group
have the same number of electrons
in the highest occupied energy
level.
- Elements in group 0 have full
energy levels and are inert.
These elements are called
the Noble Gases.
- Elements in group 1 or 7 are
the most reactive.
- C1.1.3 Chemical Reactions
- When elements react, atoms
lose, gain or share electrons
to form ions or molecules.
- Compounds
formed from metals
and non-metals
consist of ions.
- Metal atoms lose electrons to form
positive ions and non-metals
gain electrons to form negative ions.
Oppositely charged ions are
attracted, forming ionic bonds.
- Compounds formed
from non-metals
consist of molecules.
- Atoms share pairs of
electrons in their highest
energy level to gain full outer
shells, forming covalent bonds.
- Chemical reactions are
represented by word equations
or by symbol equations.
- No atoms are lost or made during a
reaction so the mass of the products
equals the mass of the reactants.