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Title: CHEMICAL REACTIONS
Description: Yearly year 9 notes on chemical reactions- 12 pages long with diagrams and images to help understand
Description: Yearly year 9 notes on chemical reactions- 12 pages long with diagrams and images to help understand
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CHEMICAL REACTIONS:
1
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Substances can always be broken down into smaller pieces of the
same substance
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J
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Each dynamide is made up of a positively charged particle and a negatively
charged particle
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-‐ Ernest Rutherford
Planetary Model-‐ Atoms are made up of a solid, positively charged nucleus
surrounded by electrons orbiting the nucleus like planets orbiting the sun
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The nucleus is surrounded by electrons orbiting it
like planets orbit the sun
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The electrons form shells around the nucleus
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Recall that all matter is composed of atoms and has mass
Matter is everything around you
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Matter is anything that has mass and takes up space
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3
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] surrounding a
nucleus [nucleus: The central part of an atom
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] that contains protons
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and neutrons
,neutrons: Uncharged sub-‐atomic particles, with a mass of 1 relative to a proton
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Protons have a relative charge of +1, while electrons have a relative charge
of -‐1
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In the
periodic table atoms are arranged in atomic number order
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The electronic structure of
an atom is a description of how the electrons are arranged, which can be
shown in a diagram or by numbers
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The structure of an atom
Although the word 'atom' comes from the Greek for indivisible, we now know
that atoms are not the smallest particles of matter
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At the centre of an atom is a nucleus containing protons and neutrons
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Both protons and electrons have an electrical charge
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The
neutron is neutral
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This means atoms have no overall electrical charge
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Also called the proton number
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Energy levels and shells
Electrons are arranged in different shells around the nucleus
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Each succeeding shell can only hold a
certain number of electrons before it becomes full
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The table gives the maximum capacity of the first three shells
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Two are in the first energy
level, and one in the second
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Two are in the first energy level, and four in the
second energy level
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For your exam, you need to be able to describe the electronic structure
of the first 20 elements in the periodic table
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Their
electronic structures can be shown either as diagrams or numbers
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Take lithium, for example
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The numerical
method is to write the chemical symbol (Li ) followed by the number of electrons
in each energy level, innermost first, Li 2,1
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Group 1
Two of these fit into the first energy
level, with the third in the second
energy level
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Remember -‐ you need to learn the
electronic structures of the first 20 elements
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Electronic structures of elements
Element
Numeric
Electrons
Periodic
format
F 2,7
Ne 2,8
Na 2,8,1
table group
Fluorine atoms have nine electrons
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The remaining seven fit into the
second energy level
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Two Group 0 -‐
of these fit into the first energy level
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Because its
highest occupied energy level is full,
neon is stablestable: Atoms are stable
if their outer shell contains its
maximum number of electrons
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Sodium atoms have 11 electrons
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The last one fits into the third energy
level
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Two of these fit into the first energy
level, eight into the second energy
level, another eight into the third
energy level
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Electronic structure and the periodic table
As you have seen, there is a link between an atom's electronic structure and its
position in the periodic table
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Group 2
Periodic table related to electronic structure
The diagram shows a section of the periodic table, with the elements arranged as
usual in the order of their atomic number, from 2 to 20
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Moving across each period, you can see that the number of occupied energy
levels is the same as the period number
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The highest occupied energy level contains just
one electron on the left-‐hand side of the table
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Moving down each group, you can see that the number of electrons in the
highest occupied energy level is the same as the group number
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Group 0 is a partial exception to this rule
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Working out an element's electronic structure
Here is how to use the periodic table to work out an electronic structure:
1 Find the element in the periodic table
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2 Work out which group the element is in and draw that number of
electrons in the outer circle -‐ with eight for Group 0 elements -‐ except
helium
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Remember -‐ two in the first, eight in
the second and third, and 18 in the fourth
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4
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Material used
Hazard/risk
How to minimize the risk
5
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They are
arranged into columns and rows
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Atomic number-‐ Represents the number of protons found in the nucleus, which
in an atom is equal to the number of electrons outside the nucleus
Mass number-‐ Represents the total number of protons and neutrons found in
the nucleus
Number of electrons = Number of protons in an atom
Number of neutrons = Mass-‐ atomic number
Key things to remember about the subatomic particles:
• The atomic number of an atom is the number of positive protons in the
nucleus; it determines the element of the atom
• Neutrons are also found in the nucleus but have no charge
• The mass number of an atom is the combined number of protons and
neutrons
• Electrons are negatively charged
• An atom has the same number of electrons as protons
• Protons-‐ Particles with a positive charge and about the same mass as a
neutron
• Neutrons-‐ Particles with no charge and about the same mass as a proton
• Electrons-‐ Particles with a negative charge and a mass of 1/1840 that of
a proton or neutron
6
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Some signs that a chemical reaction has occurred could include:
1) Formation of gas
2) Formation of precipitate
3) Liberation or absorption of heat, light, or some form of energy
4) Distinct change in colour
7
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g
Silver nitrate and potassium iodide = Silver nitrate (aq) + potassium iodide (aq)
> silver iodide (s) + potassium nitrate (aq)
e
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Copper sulphate + sodium hydroxide = Copper sulphate (aq) + sodium
hydroxide (aq) > copper hydroxide (s) + sodium sulphate (aq)
8
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"
Law of Conservation of Mass -‐ No detectable gain or loss in mass occurs in
chemical reactions
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For example, substances involving in a chemical reaction can change
from solid states to gaseous states but the total mass will not change
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4 What is the Law of Conservation of Mass?
5 When elements and compounds react to form new products, mass cannot
be lost or gained
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7 So, in a chemical change, the total mass of reactants must equal the
total mass of products
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Describe decomposition reactions as the breaking down of
compounds into 2 or more substances
Decomposition reactions-‐ These are reactions in which a substance is broken
down into smaller products
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g
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Define a precipitation reaction as one in which an insoluble solid is
produced
-
In a precipitation reaction a product of the reaction is only slightly
soluble, or insoluble
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-
Precipitation reactions occur when cations and anions in aqueous
solution combine to form an insoluble ionic solid called a precipitate
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11
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Describe corrosion as a chemical reaction between a metal and
oxygen in its environment to form a metal oxide
- Corrosion is a natural process, which converts refined metal to their more
stable oxide
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In the most common use of the
word, this means electrochemical oxidation of metal in reaction with an
oxidant such as oxygen
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Water + oxygen
must be present for rusting to occur
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Identify that chemical reactions involve energy transfer and can be
exothermic or endothermic
Exothermic-‐ Energy can be released from the reaction into the outside
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• In an exothermic reaction the temperature of the outside goes up
(increases)
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This is
an endothermic reaction
Exothermic-‐ An exothermic reaction is a chemical reaction that releases energy
by light or heat
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Endothermic-‐ In thermodynamics, the term endothermic process describes a
process or reaction in which the system absorbs energy from its surroundings;
usually, but not always, in the form of heat
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Identify the products and reactions of combustion reactions
-‐Combustion is a chemical process in which a substance reacts rapidly with
oxygen and gives off heat
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The fuel can be a solid, liquid, or gas,
although for airplane propulsion the fuel is usually a liquid
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Describe how to test for oxygen using a glowing splint and hydrogen
using a lit splint and the results obtained if a gas is present
Hydrogen
To test for hydrogen a small sample can be ignited
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Hydrogen reacts very quickly with oxygen to form water
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This is a simple but effective test for oxygen
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A hydrogen pop is much more violent, sometimes
enough to completely extinguish the splint
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Compare combustion and respiration as types of chemical reactions
that release energy but occur at different rates
Respiration and combustion are 2 reactions that are the same but different:
COMBUSTION :
-‐ Combustion-‐ Reaction of an element or a compound with oxygen and
produce heat
...
-‐Combustion is a chemical process in which a substance reacts rapidly with
oxygen and gives off heat
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The fuel can be a solid, liquid, or gas,
although for airplane propulsion the fuel is usually a liquid
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-‐ Cellular respiration is the process of oxidizing food molecules, like
glucose, to carbon dioxide and water
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-‐Energy is released very slowly
INSIDE YOUR CELL
Glucose + Oxygen > carbon dioxide + water + energy
-‐If you burn energy in the outside (in the lab), it is called combustion
17
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• The nitrogen cycle-‐ the series of processes by which nitrogen and its
compounds are interconverted in the environment and in living
organisms, including nitrogen fixation and decomposition
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• The Carbon cycle-‐ the series of processes by which carbon compounds
are interconverted in the environment, involving the incorporation of
carbon dioxide into living tissue by photosynthesis and its return to the
atmosphere through respiration, the decay of dead organisms, and the
burning of fossil fuels
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The compounds change into different ones by
exergonic reactions
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18
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Chemical engineer
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Forensic scientist
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Research scientist (physical sciences)
Toxicologist
Chemistry improves almost all aspects of people's lives either directly or
indirectly; advances in chemistry have led to life-saving medicine,
improvements to the way humans treat their environment, sources of green
energy and other useful technologies
...
Title: CHEMICAL REACTIONS
Description: Yearly year 9 notes on chemical reactions- 12 pages long with diagrams and images to help understand
Description: Yearly year 9 notes on chemical reactions- 12 pages long with diagrams and images to help understand