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Thursday January 6, 2011 (Review for Semester Final Exam – Day 1)

Thursday January 6, 2011 (Review for Semester Final Exam – Day 1)

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Page 1: Thursday January 6, 2011 (Review for Semester Final Exam – Day 1)

ThursdayJanuary 6, 2011

(Review for Semester Final Exam – Day 1)

Page 2: Thursday January 6, 2011 (Review for Semester Final Exam – Day 1)

Bell RingerThursday, 1-6-11

A. an ice cube melts into liquid water

B. a pan of water boils

C. water vapor condenses on the outside of a glass of iced tea

D. hydrogen gas and oxygen gas react to produce water

Which of the following is a chemical change?

Page 3: Thursday January 6, 2011 (Review for Semester Final Exam – Day 1)

Announcements

Please remember these two important points:

You cannot remediate your semester final exam.

After the first semester ends, you cannot go back and improve your

grade on any six-weeks of the first semester.

Page 4: Thursday January 6, 2011 (Review for Semester Final Exam – Day 1)

Assignment Currently Open Page Date of Notes on Website Date Issued Date Due

Section Review 6-1 11/15 11/16

TEKSCheck #2 11/16 11/16

Quiz – Ionic vs. Covalent Bonding 11/16 11/16

WS - Dot Notation and Lewis Structures 11/17 11/19

WS – Ionic Bonding 11/18 11/30

Chemical Bonding Review 1 11/19 12/3

WS – Building Ionic Compounds 11/30 12/7

Quiz – Building and Naming Ionic Compounds 12/2 12/2

WS – Building and Naming Molecular Compounds – Part 1 12/9 12/16

WS – Building and Naming Compounds 12/10 12/17

Page 5: Thursday January 6, 2011 (Review for Semester Final Exam – Day 1)

Review for Semester Final Exam

Day 1

Page 6: Thursday January 6, 2011 (Review for Semester Final Exam – Day 1)

1You must know the difference between a physical change

and a chemical change.When a physical change occurs, the chemical identity of

the material does not change.For example, when an ice cube melts, it’s still water.All phase changes (melting, boiling, condensation,

freezing, etc.) are physical changes.When a chemical change occurs, the chemical identity of

the material does change. For example, when sodium metal and chlorine gas react,

the product, table salt, is a completely different substance.

Page 7: Thursday January 6, 2011 (Review for Semester Final Exam – Day 1)

2The term “halide” refers to an ion that is formed from one of

the halogens.Can you find the halogens on the Periodic Table?

Name the four halogens.fluorinechlorinebromineiodine

Name three metal halide compounds.sodium chloridecalcium fluoridepotassium iodide

Page 8: Thursday January 6, 2011 (Review for Semester Final Exam – Day 1)

3Mass is an indication of how much matter is contained within a

material sample.For example, if a ring has a mass of 24.5 grams, that is the total

mass of all of the atoms in that ring.Mass is reported in units of grams, milligrams, kilograms, etc.Volume is a measure of the space that a sample of material

occupies.For example, if a cube has a volume of 8 cm3, it occupies that

volume of space in the classroom.Volume can usually be equated with size: the larger the size of

an object, the greater its volume.Volume can be reported in units of liters, milliliters, cm3, etc.

Page 9: Thursday January 6, 2011 (Review for Semester Final Exam – Day 1)

4Remember that elements in the same vertical group

on the Periodic Table share similar physical and chemical properties.

Notice also that as you go down a group on the Table, the atomic mass of the elements in that group

increases.For example which element has properties similar to chlorine and bromine but has a lower atomic mass?

fluorine

Page 10: Thursday January 6, 2011 (Review for Semester Final Exam – Day 1)

5Usually, if a group 1 alkali metal or a group 2 alkaline

earth metal bonds with a group 17 halogen, a transfer of electrons takes place and the bond will be ionic in nature.This is because the electronegativity differences between these metals and the halogens in usually greater than 1.7.

The resulting compound will have properties different from those of the elements that bonded to make it.

For example, sodium is a highly reactive metal, while chlorine is a toxic gas. When they bond to make sodium chloride, it is safe enough to sprinkle on you food (table

salt.)

Page 11: Thursday January 6, 2011 (Review for Semester Final Exam – Day 1)

6Metallic bonding occurs with metals because of the

loose nature of valence electrons within metal elements.

If two or more metals are melted, mixed together, and re-solidified, an “alloy” is created.

An alloy is a mixture of two or more metals.For example, brass is an alloy of copper and zinc, and it, of course, exhibits a metallic bonding structure.

Page 12: Thursday January 6, 2011 (Review for Semester Final Exam – Day 1)

7If a solid material is heated to a sufficient

temperature, the solid will usually melt to a liquid.

If heating continues, the liquid will evaporate into a gas when the vaporization temperature is

reached.When materials are heated, they therefore lose

a bit of mass if gas particles escape due to evaporation.

Page 13: Thursday January 6, 2011 (Review for Semester Final Exam – Day 1)

8A material is considered to be a “fluid” if it is in either

the liquid or the gas phase.Liquid particles can easily flow, or slide past one

another.Gas particles are flying around their container and

frequently collide with one other.Solids are not fluids because their particles are held

tightly in fixed positions and are not free to slide past each other or collide with each other.

Page 14: Thursday January 6, 2011 (Review for Semester Final Exam – Day 1)

9All chemistry students know that animals on the

planet Earth breathe oxygen.What some do not realize is that the oxygen we

breathe is not elemental oxygen, O.Instead, we breathe molecular oxygen, O2.

O2 is a “diatomic” molecule, which means that two oxygen atoms are bonded together to form the

compound oxygen gas.

Page 15: Thursday January 6, 2011 (Review for Semester Final Exam – Day 1)

10Thomas Rutherford discovered the small, compact region of

the atom known as the nucleus.He used his famous gold foil experiment (sometimes called the

alpha particle experiment) to make this discovery.Rutherford shot positively-charged alpha particles through a

thin sheet of gold foil.He noticed that some of the particles passed straight through

the foil, but some were deflected.This indicated that the deflected particle were passing close to, or actually striking, a small core of positive charge – remember

that like-charged repel.He concluded that there was a very tiny, positively-charged

region at the center of an atom, which he called the nucleus.