Frage | Antworten |
Relative Atomic Mass | The weighed mean mass of an atom of an element compared to the mass of 1/12th of an atom of carbon-12. |
Relative Isotopic Mass | The mass of an atom of an isotope of an element compared to the mass of 1/12th of an atom of carbon-12. |
Covalent Bond | The bonding between non-metals when a pair of electrons is shared between atoms. |
Ionic Bond | The electrostatic attraction between oppositely charged ions. |
Lone Pair | An electron pair that is not involved in a covalent bond. |
Dative Covalent Bond | A covalent bond in which one of the atoms supplies both the shared electrons to the bond. |
Relative Molecular Mass | The total sum of the relative atomic masses of the atoms in the molecule. |
Mole | The amount of any substance containing as many particles as there are carbon atoms in exactly 12g of the carbon-12 isotope. |
Avogadro Constant | The number of atoms per mole of the carbon-12 isotope n= 6.02x10²³ molˉˡ |
Molar Mass | The mass per mole of a substance. |
Empirical Formula | The simplest whole number ratio of atoms of each element present in a compound. |
Avogadro's Hypothesis | Equal volumes of gases at the same temperature and pressure contain equal numbers of molecules. |
Molar Volume | The volume per mole of a gas. At RTP the molar volume is dm³ molˉˡ. |
Standard Solution | A solution of known concentration, that are usually used in titrations to determine unknown information about another substance. |
Concentrated Solution | A solution with a large amount of solute per dm³. |
Dilute Solution | A solution with a small amount of solute per dm³. |
Acid | A proton donor that gives a solution with a pH of less than 7. |
Base | A species that is a proton acceptor. |
Alkali | A special type of base that dissolves in water forming aqueous OHˉ ions and a solution with a pH greater than 7. |
Salt | An ionic compound where the H+ ion from the parent acid has been replaced by a metal or ammonium ion. |
Oxidation Number | A measure of the number of electrons that an atom uses to bond with atoms of another element. |
First Ionisation Energy | The energy required to remove one outermost electron from each atom in one mole of gaseous atoms to form one mole of gaseous ions. |
π Bond | The sideways overlap of two p-orbitals. |
Quantum Number | Numbers used to describe the electrons in atoms. The Principle Quantum Number indicates the shell an electron occupies. |
Atomic Orbital | A region within an atom that can hold up to two electrons with opposite spins. |
Region | A space within an atom that electrons could be found. |
Non-Polar Bond | A bond where the electrons in the bond are evenly distributed. |
Polar Bond | A bond in which the electrons are attracted to one of the atoms in the bond more than the other. |
Electronegativity | A measure of the attraction of a bonded atom for the pair of electrons in a covalent bond. |
Intermolecular Forces | Forces that act between different molecules and are much weaker than ionic or covalent bonds. |
Permanent Dipole | A weak attractive force between permanent dipoles (polar bonds) in neighbouring polar molecules. |
Van der Waals Forces | Attractive forces between induced dipoles in neighbouring molecules, caused by random movement of electrons. |
Hydrogen Bond |
Image:
hbonds.gif (image/gif)
|
Metallic Bond | The electrostatic attraction between positive metal ions and delocalised negative electrons. |
Delocalised Electrons | Electrons that are shared between more than two atoms. |
Giant Covalent Structure | A structure in which atoms are held in a lattice in all directions by strong covalent bonds. |
Giant Ionic Lattice | A structure held together by ionic bonds, because each ion attracts oppositely charged ions from all directions. |
Disproportionation | A reaction in which the same element is both reduced and oxidised. |
Precipitation Reaction | A reaction that takes place in aqueous solutions when aqueous ions react together to form a solid precipitate. |
Möchten Sie mit GoConqr kostenlos Ihre eigenen Karteikarten erstellen? Mehr erfahren.