Solution Manual For Chemistry: Principles and Reactions, 8th Edition
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Contents
Preface
v
Lecture Schedule
vii
Chapter 1
Matter and Measurements
1
Chapter 2
Atoms, Molecules, and Ions
Chapter 3
Mass Relations in Chemistry; Stoichiometry
Chapter 4
Reactions in Aqueous Solution
Chapter 5
Gases
Chapter 6
Electronic Structure and the Periodic Table
Chapter 7
Covalent Bonding
71
Chapter 8
Thermochemistry
83
Chapter 9
Liquids and Solids
95
Chapter 10
Solutions
Chapter 11
Rate of Reaction
Chapter 12
Gaseous Chemical Equilibrium
Chapter 13
Acids and Bases
Chapter 14
Equilibria in Acid-Base Solutions
Chapter 15
Complex Ions and Precipitation Equilibra
Chapter 16
Spontaneity of Reaction
Chapter 17
Electrochemistry
Chapter 18
Nuclear Reactions
Chapter 19
Complex Ions
Chapter 20
Chemistry of the Metals
Chapter 21
Chemistry of the Nonmetals
Chapter 22
Organic Chemistrry
Chapter 23
Organic Polymers: Natural and Synthetic
11
21
37
49
61
105
119
133
147
161
177
189
201
219
229
237
245
255
265
iii
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Preface
This manual starts off with a section entitled โLecture Schedule,โ which you may find helpful in adapting the
text to your class schedule. Beyond that, the manual is organized by text chapters. For each chapter, we
include three different features:
1. โLecture Notes,โ which suggest the amount of time that we devote to each chapter and the topics we
emphasize. Included are detailed lecture outlines (from our own lectures) that may serve as a guide
for your lectures. At a minimum, they indicate how we cover topics and how successive topics can be
integrated.
2. A list of demonstrations illustrating topics in the chapter. These are taken from three sources:
โข The manual Tested Demonstrations in Chemistry (1994), Volumes I and II, compiled and edited by
by George Gilbert by arrangement with the Journal of Chemical Education. These are coded as
โGILBโ with the experiment number (e.g., M 12)
โข Chemical Demonstrations (1983-1992), Volumes 1-4, published by Bassam Shakashiri with many
collaborators and contributors. These are listed as โSHAKโ followed by the volume and page
reference.
โข Demonstrations described in the Journal of Chemical Education with the journal reference.
3. Answers and detailed solutions to:
โข The summary problem at the end of each chapter
โข Odd numbered text problems
โข Challenge problems at the end of each problem set
Note that Appendix 6 has answers to all the even-numbered problems. Detailed solutions to many of
these problems are in the Student Solutions Manual available from Cengage Learning, Brooks/Cole.
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Lecture Schedule
Unlike other general chemistry texts, ours can be covered in its entirety in a one-year course. A reasonable
schedule appears below. Further comments on the time you should devote to each chapter are in the body
of this manual. The underlying assumption is that you are teaching 14-week semesters with two 50-minute
lectures per week. If three class periods are devoted to examinations each semester, that leaves 25 for
covering material. On that basis, you are able to complete Chapter 10 (Solutions) in the first semester. The
seond semester will then start with Chapter 11 (Rate of Reaction).
FIRST SEMESTER SCHEDULE
Week
Lecture
1
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
Topic
Chapter 1 (Matter and Measurements)
Chapter 1
Chapter 2 (Atoms, Molecules, and Ions)
Chapter 2
Chapter 3 (Mass Relations in Chemistry; Stoichiometry)
Chapter 3
Chapter 3
EXAM I
Chapter 4 (Reactions in Aqueous Solution)
Chapter 4
Chapter 4
Chapter 5 (Gases)
Chapter 5
Chapter 6 (Electronic Structure and the Periodic Table)
Chapter 6
Chapter 6
EXAM II
Chapter 7 (Covalent Bonding)
Chapter 7
Chapter 7
Chapter 8 (Themochemistry)
Chapter 8
Chapter 9 (Liquids and Solids)
Chapter 9
Chapter 9
EXAM III
Chapter 10 (Solutions)
Chapter 10
vii
viii
Lecture Schedule
SECOND SEMESTER SCHEDULE
Week
Lecture
1
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
Topic
Chapter 11 (Rate of Reaction)
Chapter 11
Chapter 11
Chapter 12 (Gaseous Chemical Equilibrium)
Chapter 12
Chapter 13 (Acids and Bases)
Chapter 13
Chapter 13
EXAM I
Chapter 14 (Equilibria in Acid-Base Solutions)
Chapter 14
Chapter 15 (Complex Ions)
Chapter 15
Chapter 16 (Precipitation Equilibria)
Chapter 17 (Spontaneity of Reaction)
Chapter 17
EXAM II
Chapter 18 (Electrochemistry)
Chapter 18
Chapter 18
Chapter 19 (Nuclear Chemistry)
Chapter 20 (Chemistry of the Metals)
Chapter 20
EXAM III
Chapter 21 (Chemistry of the Nonmetals)
Chapter 21
Chapter 22 (Organic Chemistry)
Chapter 23 (Organic Polymers: Natural and Synthetic)
Lecture Schedule
ix
If you want to use lecture time for review, for going over assigned problems, or for doing a large number of
demonstrations, you will have trouble keeping up with this schedule. As youโve almost certainly learned by
now, the solution to this problem is not to talk faster. Judicious deletions work better. Itโs been said, and
wisely, that the secret of giving a good lecture is knowing what to leave out. Possible candidates include:
โข Introductory material on matter in Chapter 1 and atomic theory in Chapter 2. The chances are your
students have been exposed to this material more than once in high school and understood it reasonably
well the first time.
โข Boyleโs and Charlesโs laws in Chapter 5. We start the chapter by writing the ideal gas law and go on
from there.
โข The First Law discussion in Chapter 8. Quite frankly, this has very little to do with chemistry. Students
will not be irreparably damaged if they are unaware of the distinction between H and E.
โข The discussion of colligative properties in Chapter 10 could be shortened. Raoultโs law could easily be
omitted.
โข Reaction mechanisms in Chapter 11. Students have a lot of trouble with this. We are not sure it is worth
the effort.
โข Polyprotic acids in Chapter 13.
โข The Second Law discussion in Chapter 17.
Beyond these selective omissions, some instructors may want to delete one or another of the descriptive
chapters at the end of the text (Chapters 20โ22). If, in that way, you can squeeze out a couple of lectures,
they can well be spent on Chapter 12 (three lectures instead of two) and Chapter 19 (two lectures instead
of one).
Textbook authors sometimes tell you that chapters can be covered in almost any order, depending on
your preference. This isnโt really true for this textbook, or any other with structural integrity. It can be done,
but only with very careful additions and deletions of material. Suppose, for example, you want to cover
Precipitation Equilibria (Chapter 16) immediately after Acid-Base Equilibria (Chapter 14). Keep in mind
that an understanding of formation constants (Complex Ions, Chapter 15) is assumed when methods of
dissolving precipitates are considered in Section 16.2 of Chapter 16.
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MATTER AND
MEASUREMENTS
LECTURE NOTES
This material ordinarily requires two lectures (100 minutes), allowing for a 10โ15 minute introduction to the
course in the first lecture. If youโre in a hurry, this can be cut to 1 12 lectures by discussing only quantitative
material (significant figures, unit conversions, density, solubility).
A few points to keep in mind:
โข Virtually all of your students will be familiar with the metric system and prefixes. It may be worth
discussing the rationale for SI, but you donโt have to dwell on it.
โข Students readily learn the rules of significant figures, but typically ignore them after Chapter 1. It may
help to emphasize that these are common-sense (albeit, approximate) rules for estimating experimental
error.
โข Many (typically, the weaker) students resist using conversion factors, preferring instead a rote method.
It may be useful to point out that conversion factors will be a recurring tool throughout the text, so are
well worth learning at this point.
โข Students often have trouble with solubility calculations. The approach in the text involves conversions
(Example 1.8). The solubility is considered to be a conversion factor relating grams of solute to grams
of solvent.
Lecture 1
I. Types of Substances
A. Elements
Cannot be broken down into simpler substances. Examples: nitrogen, lead, sodium, arsenic.
Symbols: N, Pb, Na, As.
B. Compounds
Contain two or more elements with fixed mass percents. Glucose: 40.00% C, 6.71% H, 53.29%
O. Sodium chloride: 39.34% Na, 60.66% Cl.
C. Mixtures
Homogeneous (solutions) vs. heterogeneous. Separation by filtration, distillation.
II. Measured Quantities
A. Length
Base unit is the meter. 1 km = 103 m; 1 cm = 10 2 m; 1 mm = 10 3 m; 1 nm = 10 9 m. Dimensions
of very tiny particles will be expressed in nanometers.
1
2
Chapter 1
B. Volume
1 L = 103 mL = 103 cm3 = 10 3 m3 . Buret, pipet, volumetric flask.
C. Mass
1 kg = 103 g; 1 mg = 10 3 g. Two different kinds of balances will be used in the lab. An analytical
balance (ยฑ0.001 g) should be used only for accurate, quantitative work.
D. Temperature
t F = 1.8 t C + 32 ;
Convert 68 F to C and K:
TK = t C + 273.15.
t C = (68
32 )/1.8 = 20 C
TK = 293
Lecture 2
III. Experimental Error; Significant Figures
Suppose an object is weighed on a crude balance to ยฑ0.1 g and the mass is found to be 23.6 g.
This quantity contains three significant figures, that is, three experimentally significant digits. With an
analytical balance, the mass might be 23.582 g (five significant figures).
A. Counting significant figures
1. Volume of liquid = 24.0 mL; three significant figures. Zeroes at the end of the measured
quantity are significant when they follow nonzero digits.
2. Volume = 0.0240 L; three significant figures (note that 0.0240 L = 24.0 mL). Zeroes at the
beginning of a measured quantity are not significant when they precede nonzero digits.
B. Multiplication and division
Keep only as many significant figures as there are in the least precise quantity. Density of a piece
of metal weighing 36.123 g with a volume of 13.4 mL = ?
density =
36.123 g
= 2.70 g/mL
13.4 mL
C. Addition and subtraction
Keep only as many digits after the decimal point as there are in the least precise quantity. Add
1.223 g of sugar to 154.5 g of coffee:
total mass = 1.2 g + 154.5 g = 155.7 g
Note that the rule for addition and subtraction does not apply to significant figures. The number of
significant figures may well decrease after subtraction.
mass beaker + sample = 52.169 g (five significant figures)
mass empty beaker = 52.120 g (five significant figures)
mass sample = 0.049 g (two significant figures)
D. Exact numbers
One liter means 1.000000… L.
Matter and Measurements
3
IV. Conversion Factors
A. One-step conversion
A rainbow trout is measured to be 16.2 inches long. What is its length in centimeters?
length in cm = 16.2 in โฅ
2.54 cm
= 41.1 cm
1 in
Note the cancellation of units. To convert from centimeters to inches, use the conversion factor
1 in = 2.54 cm. (Here, there are exactly 2.54 cm in one inch.)
B. Multiple conversion factors
A thrown baseball has speed 89.6 miles per hour. What is its speed in meters per second?
1 mile = 1.609 km = 1.609 โฅ 103 m; 1 h = 3600 s
โ
โ โฃ
โ
โ
mile
m โ
1h
speed = 89.6
โฅ 1.609 โฅ 103
โฅ
= 40.0 m/s
h
mile
3600 s
V. Properties of Substances
Distinguish between intensive and extensive, and between chemical and physical.
A. Density
An empty flask weighs 22.138 g. Pipet 5.00 mL of octane into the flask, producing a total mass of
25.598 g. What volume is occupied by ten grams of octane?
d = 3.460 g/5.00 mL = 0.692 g/mL
V = 10.00 g โฅ
1 mL
= 14.5 mL
0.692 g
Note that for density calculations, 1 mL = 1 cm3 .
B. Solubility
This is often expressed as grams of solute per 100 g of solvent.
Solubility of sugar at 20 C = 210 g sugar/100 g water.
A solution containing 210 g sugar/100 g water is saturated.
A solution containing less than 210 g sugar/100 g water is unsaturated.
A solution containing more than 210 g sugar/100 g water is supersaturated.
1. How much water is required to dissolve 52 g of sugar at 20 C?
52 g sugar โฅ
100 g water
= 25 g water
210 g sugar
4
Chapter 1
2. A solution at 20 C contains 25 g sugar and 125 g water. Is it unsaturated, saturated or supersaturated?
mass sugar/100 g water =
25 g sugar
โฅ 100 g water = 20 g sugar
125 g water
(unsaturated)
DEMONSTRATIONS
1. Scientific method: GILB H 29
2. Decomposition of mercury(II) oxide: GILB A 8
3. Separation of a mixture: GILB A 14
4. Reaction of sodium with chlorine: GILB A 24, A 25; SHAK 1 61; J. Chem. Educ. 73 539 (1996)
5. Chromatography: GILB Q 3, Q 13
6. Significant figures: J. Chem. Educ. 69 497 (1992)
7. Density of liquids: GILB C 13; SHAK 3 229
8. Supersaturation: GILB F 11; SHAK 1 27
SUMMARY PROBLEM
(a) K, Mn, O
(b) density, melting point, solubility, color
(c) mass = 2.703
(d) 2.703
(e) F =
g
โฅ 48.7cm3 = 132 g
cm3
g
1 lb
(2.54)3 cm3
(12)3 in3
โฅ
โฅ
โฅ
= 169 lb/ft3
3
3
3
454 g
1 ft
cm
1 in
9
9
( C) + 32 = (2.40 โฅ 102 ) + 32 = 464 F
5
5
(2.40 โฅ 102 ) + 273 = 513 K
(f) 38.5 g H2 O โฅ
6.38 g KMnO4
= 2.46 g KMnO4
100 g H2 O
(g) At 60 C: 65.0 g H2 O โฅ
25 g KMnO4
= 16 g KMnO4
100 g H2 O
The solution is unsaturated.
At 20 C: 65.0 g H2 O โฅ
6.38 g KMnO4
= 4.15 g KMnO4 can be dissolved.
100 g H2 O
The solution is supersaturated.
Matter and Measurements
(h) 55.0 g H2 O โฅ
5
25 g KMnO4
= 14 g KMnO4 can be dissolved at 60 C.
100 g H2 O
Yes, all the KMnO4 added will dissolve.
55.0 g H2 O โฅ
6.38 g KMnO4
= 3.51 g KMnO4 can be dissolved at 20 C.
100 g H2 O
No, not all the KMnO4 will dissolve.
10.0 g – 3.51 g = 6.5 g KMnO4 will remain undissolved.
PROBLEMS
1. (a) mixture
(b) element
(c) mixture
3. (a) solution
(b) solution
(c) heterogeneous mixture
5. (a) distillation
(b) filtration
(c) gas chromatography
7. (a) Ti
(b) P
(c) K
(d) Mg
9. (a) mercury
(b) silicon
(c) sodium
(d) iodine
11. (a) balance
(b) thermometer
(c) graduated cylinder
13. t F = 1.8(52 ) + 32 = 126 F;
15. t C = (85.0
32) โฅ
17. (a) 3
(d) exact
(d) compound
tK = 52 + 273.15 = 325 K
5
= 29.4 C ; solid
9
(b) ambiguous
(c) 4
(e) 5
19. (a) 7.49 g
(b) 298.69 cm
(c) 1 โฅ 101 lb
21. (a) 1.325 โฅ 102 cm
(b) 8.83 โฅ 10 4 km
(c) 6.432 โฅ 109 nm
25. 10,000: ambiguous
1.71 โฅ 105 ft2 : 3
$22.00: exact
27. (a) 80.0
(b) 0.7615
(c) 14.712
(d) 12.0 oz
23. (c)
(d) 0.03
(e) 1.5 โฅ10 22
20%: ambiguous
6
29.
Chapter 1
4โก(4.30 cm)3
= 333 cm3 ;
3
4โก(4.33 cm)3
= 3.40 โฅ 102 cm3 ; 7 cm3
3
31. (a) 303 m = 0.303 km 1.50 โฅ 103 nm3
33. (a) 22.3 mL โฅ
(c) 22.3 mL โฅ
1L
= 2.23 โฅ 10 2 L
103 mL
(b) 17.8 hands โฅ
(c) 20.5 hands โฅ
39.
1 in3
= 1.36 in3
(2.54 cm)3
1L
1.057 qt
โฅ
= 0.0236 qt
3
1L
10 mL
35. (a) 19.2 hands โฅ
37. 2.0 acre โฅ
(b) 22.3 cm3 โฅ
1
3 ft
1 hand
1
3 ft
1 hand
1
3 ft
1 hand
= 6.40 ft
โฅ
12 in
1m
โฅ
= 1.81 m
1 ft
39.37 in
+ 3.0 ft = 9.8 ft
4.356 โฅ 104 ft2
(12)2 in2
1 m2
1 hectare
โฅ
โฅ
โฅ
= 0.81 hectare
2
1 acre
1 ft
(39.37)2 in2
104 m2
5.0 mi
0.25 min
โฅ
= 1.2 min
1 mile
1 Eng lap
0.50 km โฅ
1 mi
5.0 min
โฅ
= 1.6 min
1.609 km
1 mi
41. (a) 3.0 qt plasma โฅ
1L
1000 mL 0.080 mL alcohol
โฅ
โฅ
= 2.3 mL
1.057 qt
1L
100 mL plasma
(b) 3.0 qt plasma โฅ
1L
1000 mL 0.10 mL alcohol
โฅ
โฅ
= 2.8 mL
1.057 qt
1L
100 mL plasma
(c) 2.8 mL
2.3 mL = 0.5 mL
43.
235 kJ
103 J
1 cal
1 kcal
1000 mL
1 qt
โฅ
โฅ
โฅ 3
โฅ
โฅ
= 53.2 kcal/cup
250 mL
1 kJ
4.18 J 10 cal
1.057 qt
4 cups
45.
252 g
= 1.49 g/mL
0.750 โฅ 225 mL
Matter and Measurements
47. Vmethanol = 43.7 g โฅ
Therefore, dslug =
7
1 mL
= 55.2 mL ,
0.791 g
Vslug = 59.7 mL
55.2 mL = 4.5 mL
25.17 g
= 5.6 g/mL
4.5 mL
49. (8.0 โฅ 7.0 โฅ 0.75) ft3 โฅ
(12)3 in3
(2.54)3 cm3
1.00 g
1 kg
โฅ
โฅ
โฅ
= 1.2 โฅ 103 kg
3
3
3
1000 g
1 ft
1 in
1 cm
51. Volume of air = volume of room
V = 55 kg O2 โฅ
1000 g
1L
100 L
โฅ
โฅ
= 2.0 โฅ 105 L
1 kg
1.31 g
21 L
53. At 30 C: maximum amount of MgSO4 that can be dissolved = 25.0 g H2 O โฅ
38.9 g MgSO4
= 9.72 g
100 g H2 O
The solution is unsaturated.
(9.50 + 1.00 g) – 9.72 = 0.78 g will precipitate out
55. (a) 46 g H2 O โฅ
16 g NaHCO3
= 7.4 g NaHCO3 can be dissolved
100 g H2 O
9.2 g in the mixture > 7.4 g, thus the solution is not homogeneous.
9.2 g โ 7.4 g = 1.8 g NaHCO3 are undissolved.
(b) 9.2 g NaHCO3 โฅ
96 g
57. 57.0 g
100 g H2 O
= 96 g H2 O needed to dissolve
9.6 g NaHCO3
46 g = 5.0 โฅ 101 g H2 O needs to be added.
25.0 g = 32.0 g of Pb(NO3 )2 dissolves in 64.0 g H2 O at 10 C. Solubility is
32.0 g Pb(NO3 )2 1.00 g Pb NO3 )2 50.0 g Pb(NO3 )2
=
=
64.0 g H2 O
2.00 g H2 O
100.0 g H2 O
59. (a) physical
(b) physical
61. V = 35 ft โฅ 43 ft โฅ 28 in โฅ
3.5 โฅ 103 ft3 โฅ
(c) physical
1 ft
= 3.5 โฅ 103 ft3
12 in
(12 in)3
(2.54 cm)3
โฅ
= 9.9 โฅ 107 cm3
(1 ft)3
(1 in)3
mass = 9.9 โฅ 107 cm3 โฅ
(0.35 g)
1 lb
โฅ
= 7.7 โฅ 104 lbs
3
453.6
g
(1 cm)
(d) chemical
8
Chapter 1
63. 108 carats โฅ
0.0476 lb โฅ
65. 153.2 g โฅ
0.200 g
1 lb
โฅ
= 0.0476 lb
1 carat
454 g
1 cm3
454 g
1 in3
โฅ
โฅ
= 0.376 in3
3.51 g
1 lb
(2.54)3 cm3
1 cm3
= 33.7 cm3 = V;
4.55 g
33.7 = โกr2 (7.75);
r = 1.18 cm;
d = 2.35 cm
67. (a) Chemical properties show the behavior of the species in a reaction; physical properties
are intrinsic qualities.
(b) Distillation vaporizes the liquid; filtration removes the solid.
(c) The solute is a component of the solution.
69. The bottom layer is Hg; the middle layer is Pb; the top layer is ethyl alcohol.
71. (a) โก 115 g; supersaturated
(b) โก 30 g; unsaturated
(c) Dissolve 30 g of compound in 100 g H2 O.
73. (a) See Figure in the answers to the problems in Appendix 5.
(b)
y
100 J 0 J
=
= 0.512
x 78 C ( 117.0 C)
(c) 60 J
(d) J = 0.51( C) + 60
74. 31.5 gal โฅ
area =
4 qt
1L
10 3 m3
1 km3
โฅ
โฅ
โฅ 9 3 = 1.2 โฅ 10 10 km3
1 gal 1.057 qt
1L
10 m
1.2 โฅ 10 10 km3
1 โฅ 1012 nm
โฅ
= 1.2 km2
100 nm
1 km
75. V = 12.0 g โฅ
76.
1 cm3
= โก(0.254 cm)2 `;
2.70 g
` = 21.9 cm
8.50 โฅ 103 L
1 m3
7.0 โฅ 10 6 g Pb
365 d
โฅ 3 โฅ
โฅ 0.75 โฅ 0.50 โฅ
= 8.1 โฅ 10 3 g Pb
3
1d
1 yr
10 L
1m
Matter and Measurements
9
78. mass of Hg in cylinder B = 145.20 g
mass of Hg + metal in cylinder A = 92.60 g
mass of metal = 145.20 g
92.60 g = 52.60 g
volume of cylinder A = volume of cylinder B = volume of Hg in cylinder B
= 145.2 g รท 13.6 g/mL = 10.7 mL
mass of Hg in cylinder A = 92.60 g โ 52.60 g = 40.0 g
volume of Hg in cylinder A = 40.0 g รท 13.6 g/mL = 2.94 mL
volume of metal = volume of cylinder A – volume of Hg in cylinder A = 10.7 mL
density of metal = 52.60 g/7.76 mL = 6.78 g/mL
2.94 mL = 7.76 mL
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2
ATOMS, MOLECULES
AND IONS
LECTURE NOTES
Students find this material relatively easy to assimilate; itโs almost entirely qualitative. On the other hand,
thereโs a lot of memorizing (sorry, learning) to do. This chapter is coverable in two lectures.
Some general observations:
โข Material in Sections 2.1โ2.3 is generally well covered in high-school chemistry courses; no need to
dwell on it.
โข Students need to know the molecular formulas of the elements (Figure 2.13), the charges of ions with
noble-gas structures and the names and formulas of the common polyatomic ions (Table 2.2). The
charges of transition-metal ions will be covered later, in Chapter 4.
โข Naming compounds requires students to distinguish between ionic and molecular substances. It helps to
point out that binary molecular compounds are composed of two nonmetals. Almost all ionic compounds
contain a metal cation combined with a nonmetal anion or negatively charged polyatomic ion. The flow
charts shown in Figures 2.18 and 2.19 should help visual learners.
โข The periodic table will be discussed in greater detail later in the text (Chapter 6).
Lecture 1
I. Atomic Theory
A. Elements
Postulates: Elements consist of tiny particles called atoms, which retain their identity in reactions.
In a compound, atoms of two or more elements combine in a fixed ratio of small whole numbers
(e.g., 1:1, 2:1, etc.).
B. Components
relative mass
relative charge
location
proton
1
+1
nucleus
neutron
1
0
nucleus
electron
0.0005
1
outside
C. Atomic number
It is the number of protons in the nucleus or the number of electrons in a neutral atom. This is
characteristic of a particular element: all H atoms have one proton, all He atoms have two protons,
etc.
11
12
Chapter 2
D. Mass number
1. It is the sum of the number of protons and the number of neutrons. Atoms of the same element
can differ in mass number. Those are referred to as isotopes. For example:
protons
neutrons
atomic no.
nuclear symbol
mass no.
carbon-12
6
6
6
12
6C
12
carbon-14
6
8
6
14
6C
14
2. Isotopes
Atoms of the same element (same atomic number) but differ in mass number.
II. Atomic Masses
A. Meaning of atomic masses
They give the relative masses of atoms. Based on the C-12 scale; the most common isotope of
carbon is assigned an atomic mass of exactly 12 amu.
element
B
Ca
Ni
atomic mass (amu)
10.81
40.08
58.69
A nickel atom is 58.69/40.08 times as heavy as a calcium atom. It is 58.69/10.81 = 5.429 times as
heavy as a boron atom.
B. Atomic masses from isotopic composition
atomic mass = (atomic mass of isotope 1)(%/100) + (atomic mass of isotope 2)(%/100) + ยท ยท ยท
Isotope
Atomic mass
Percent
Ne-20
20.00 amu
90.92
Ne-21
21.00 amu
0.26
Ne-22
22.00 amu
8.82
atomic mass of Ne = (20.00)(0.9092) + (21.00)(0.0026) + (22.00)(0.0882) = 20.18 amu
C. Masses of individual atoms
Since the atomic masses of H, Cl and Ni are, respectively, 1.008 amu, 35.45 amu and 58.69 amu,
it follows that
1.008 g H, 35.45 g Cl, 58.69 g Ni all contain the same number of atoms, NA .
NA = Avogadroโs number = 6.022 โฅ 1023
Atoms, Molecules and Ions
13
1. Mass of a hydrogen atom?
1 atom H โฅ
1.008 g H
= 1.674 โฅ 10 24 g
6.022 โฅ 1023 atom
2. Number of atoms in one gram of nickel?
1.000 g Ni โฅ
6.022 โฅ 1023 atoms Ni
= 1.026 โฅ 1022 atoms
58.69 g Ni
III. Periodic Table
Periods and groups; numbering system for groups. Metals appear at the lower left, nonmetals at the
upper right. Metalloids.
Lecture 2
IV. Molecules
A. Composition
Usually consist of nonmetal atoms; held together by covalent bonds.
B. Types of Formulas
Consider the compound ethyl alcohol:
Molecular formula: C2 H6 O
H H
Structural formula: HโCโCโOโH
H H
Condensed structural formula: CH3 CH2 OH
V. Ions
A. Formation of monatomic ions
Na atom 11p+ , 11e
F atom 9p+ , 9e
! Na+ ion 11p+ , 10e
+e
+ e ! F ion 9p+ , 10e
B. Charges of monatomic ions with noble-gas structures
Cations:
Group 1 (+1); Group 2 (+2); Al3+
Anions:
Group 16 ( 2); Group 17 ( 1); N3
C. Polyatomic ions
Names and formulas (Table 2.2)
14
Chapter 2
D. Formulas of compounds
Apply the principle of electroneutrality.
calcium fluoride:
Ca2+ , F ions:
CaF2
aluminum nitrate:
Al3+ , NO3 ions:
Al(NO3 )3
sodium dihydrogen phosphate:
Na+ , H2 PO4 ions:
NaH2 PO4
E. Ionic compounds
They can be distinguished from molecular substances by the conductivity of their water solutions.
Solutions of NaCl, Ca (OH)2 , … conduct electricity (electrolytes). Sugar is a nonelectrolyte.
VI. Names of Compounds
A. Ionic
Name cation, followed by anion. Note that with transition metal cations, charge is indicated by a
Roman numeral.
Na2 SO4
sodium sulfate
Fe(NO3 )3
iron(III) nitrate
Systematic names of oxoanions (-ate, -ite, per-, hypo-)
Calcium hypochlorite
Ca (ClO)2
B. Binary molecular compounds
Use of Greek prefixes:
SF6
sulfur hexafluoride
N2 O3
dinitrogen trioxide
C. Acids
Binary acids:
hydrochloric acid
Oxo acids:
-ate salt ! -ic acid
HClO4 , perchloric acid
-ite salt ! -ous acid
HClO, hypochlorous acid
Atoms, Molecules and Ions
15
DEMONSTRATIONS
1. Law of constant composition: GILB A 12
2. Law of conservation of mass: GILB A 16
3. Simulation of Rutherfordโs experiment: GILB L 7
4. Isotope effects H2 O, D2 O : GILB M 18
5. Reaction of hydrogen with chlorine: GILB H 38
6. Conductivity of water solutions: SHAK 3 140
7. Breath alcohol detection: J. Chem. Educ. 67 263 (1990); 71 158 (1994)
8. Relative masses of atoms (analogy): GILB L 2
SUMMARY PROBLEM
(a) S8
(b) 16 protons, 16 electrons
(c) no; Al2 S3 – aluminum sulfide
(d) yes
(e) yes; S2 Cl2 – disulfur dichloride
(f) 34
16 S
(g) group 16, period 3
(h) 20 neutrons
(i) (31.97207)(0.9493) + (32.97146)(0.0076) + (33.96787)(0.0429) + (35.96708)(0.0002) = 32.07 amu
(j) 12.55 g S โฅ
1 mol S
6.022 โฅ 1023 atoms
โฅ
= 2.357 โฅ 1023 atoms
32.07 g
1 mol S
(k) 1 โฅ 109 S atoms โฅ
1 mol S
32.07 g
โฅ
= 5.325 โฅ 10 14 g
1 mol S
6.022 โฅ 1023 atoms
(l) SO3 = sulfur trioxide;
H2 SO3 (aq) = sulfurous acid;
SO42 = sulfate ion;
Na2 SO3 = sodium sulfite
PROBLEMS
1. p. 29
3. (a) Conservation of mass
(b) Constant composition
(c) neither
(b) 143
(c) 92
5. J. J. Thompson; see p. 29
7.
80
34 Se
38
40
9. no. of neutrons: 36
18 Ar, 18 Ar, 18 Ar
11. (a) 92
16
Chapter 2
13. (a) 14 p+ , 16 n, 14 e ; R = Si
(b) 39 p+ , 50 n, 39 e ; T = Y
(c) 55 p+ , 78 n, 55 e ; X = Cs
15. (a) Ca-41, K-41, Ar-41 are isobars; Ca-40, Ca-41 are isotopes
(b) atomic number = number of protons = 20
(c) same mass number
17. (a)
79.90
= 3.959
20.18
(b)
79.90
= 1.994
40.08
(c)
79.90
= 19.96
4.003
19. Ce-140
21. 50%
23. 83.9134(0.0056) + 85.9094(0.0986) + 86.9089(0.0700) + 87.9056(0.8258) = 0.47 + 8.47 + 6.08 + 72.59
average atomic mass = 87.61
25. 107.9 = 106.90509(0.5184) + 0.4816 x;
x = 109 amu
27. Let x = abundance of the first isotope; abundance of second isotope = 0.9704
28.0855 = 27.9769 x + (0.9704
= 27.9769 x + 28.1188
x
x)(28.9765) + (0.0296)(29.9738)
28.9765 x + 0.887
x = 0.921; abundance of first isotope is 92.1%
0.9704
x = 0.9704
0.921 = 0.0494; abundance of second isotope is 4.94%
29. Tall peak at mass 64; peak a little over 1/2 as high at mass 66; smallest peak is at mass 67,
and the height of the peak at mass 64 is 2.5 times that of the peak at mass 68 .
31. 3 โฅ 10 7 g โฅ
1 mol
6.022 โฅ 1023 atoms
โฅ
= 9 โฅ 1014 atoms
207.2 g
1 mol
33. (a) 0.185 g Pd โฅ
6.022 โฅ 1023 atoms
= 1.05 โฅ 1021 atoms
106.4 g Pd
(b) 127 protons โฅ
1 atom
106.4 g
โฅ
= 4.88 โฅ 10 22 g
46 protons 6.022 โฅ 1023 atoms
Atoms, Molecules and Ions
35. (a) 0.35744 mol โฅ
17
6.022 โฅ 1023 atoms
= 2.152 โฅ 1023 atoms
1 mol
(b) 2.152 โฅ 1023 atoms โฅ
14 p+ + 14 n + 14 e
1 atom
= 9.039 โฅ 1024
โ
โ3
2.54 cm
37. Vcube = 1.25 in โฅ
= 32.0 cm3
1 in
32.0 cm3 โฅ
0.968 g 6.022 โฅ 1023 atoms
โฅ
= 8.12 โฅ 1023 atoms
22.99 g
1 cm3
39. (a) K
(b) Cd
(c) Al
41. (a) main-group metal
(d) Sb
(b) transition metal
(e) P
(c) main-group metal
(d) metalloid
(e) nonmetal
43. (a) 6
(b) 4 named, 1 not named
(c) 0
45. (a) 13
(b) 2
(c) 17, 18
47. (a) C2 H7 N
(b) C3 H8 O
49. (a) 14 p+ , 14e
(b) 21 p+ , 22 e
51.
(c) 35 p+ , 34e
19
9F
0
9
10
9
31
15 P
0
15
16
15
+3
27
30
24
2
16
16
18
57
3+
27 Co
32 2
16 S
53. (a) electrolyte
55. (a) CH4
(b) nonelectrolyte
(b) Cl4
57. (a) iodine trichloride
(d) carbon tetrabromide
59. KCl, K2 S, CaCl2 , CaS
(c) nonelectrolyte
(c) H2 O2
(d) NO
(b) dinitrogen pentaoxide
(e) sulfur trioxide
(d) 70 p+ , 70 e
(d) electrolyte
(e) SiO2
(c) phosphine
18
Chapter 2
61. (a) Fe(C2 H3 O2 )3
(b) Ca(NO3 )2
63. (a) potassium dichromate
(c) K2 O
(d) AuCl3
(b) copper(II) phosphate
(d) aluminum nitride
(e) Ba3 N2
(c) barium acetate
(e) cobalt(II) nitrate
65. (a) hydrochloric acid
(b) chloric acid
(d) barium nitrite
(c) iron(III) sulfite
(e) sodium hypochlorite
67. HNO2 , nickel(II) iodate, Au2 S3 , sulfurous acid, NF3
69. (a) Mn(NO2 )3 ; manganese(III) nitrite
(b) BF3 ; boron trifluoride
(c) Ca(HCO3 )2 ; calcium hydrogen carbonate
71. (a) In
(b) Pb or Sn
(c) K
(d) Sb
73. (a) … confirmed the presence of a dense nucleus with protons.
(b) … elements arranged according to increasing atomic number.
(c) … same number of protons.
(d) Be3 N2 is beryllium nitride.
75. 6.00 oz salami โฅ
โฅ
1g
0.090 g NaC7 H5 O2
6.022 โฅ 1023 molecules NaC7 H5 O2
โฅ
โฅ
0.03527 oz
100 g salami
144.1 g NaC7 H5 O2
1 atom Na
= 6.4 โฅ 1020 Na atoms
1 molecule NaC7 H5 O2
77. (b), (d), (e)
79. 8
molecules; 3
molecules left
81. A square with four circles around it (several of them in a flask with a defined volume)
83. (a) 118
(b) 120
(c) 117
(d) 120
(e) 119
Atoms, Molecules and Ions
85. first experiment:
19
%O =
second experiment:
3.87
โฅ 100 = 7.40;
52.30
% Hg = 92.60
15.68
โฅ 100 = 92.62;
16.93
% O = 7.38
% Hg =
87. (a) K, Sr
(b) O, F, Ar, S
(c) S, K, Sr
(d) S
(e) S, O or S, F or O, F
(f) Sr, S or Sr, O or K, F
(g) Sr, F
(h) K, O or K, S
(i) Ar
(j) O, F, Ar
88. A: mass C/mass H = 11.9 (โก 12)
ratio for (a) = 2.77
B: mass C/mass H = 2.99 (โก 3)
ratio for (b) = 4.67
ratio for (c) = 5.96
(c) is best choice
89. (a) ethane: 18.0 g C/4.53 g H = 3.97 g C/g H
ethylene: 43.20 g C/7.25 g H = 5.96 g C/g H
5.96/3.97 = 1.50 = 3/2
(b) CH2 and CH3 ; C2 H4 and C2 H6
90. mass = 13 1.6726 โฅ 10 4 g + 13 9.1094 โฅ 10 28 g + 14 1.6749 โฅ 10 24 g = 4.5204 โฅ 10 23 g
V = 43 โก 1.43 โฅ 10 8 cm
3
= 1.22 โฅ 10 23 cm3
d = 4.5204 g/1.22 cm3 = 3.71 g/cm3
Empty space between Al atoms.
91. 2.3440 โฅ 10 23 g + 3(9.1095 โฅ 10 28 g) = 2.3443 โฅ 10 23 g
92. (a) 200 inhalations โฅ
(b)
500 mL
2.5 โฅ 1019 molecules
โฅ
= 2.5 โฅ 1024 molecules
1 inhalation
1 mL
2.5 โฅ 1024
= 2.3 โฅ 10 20
1.1 โฅ 1044
(c) 1 inhalation โฅ
500 mL
2.5 โฅ 1019 molecules
โฅ
โฅ 2.3 โฅ 10 20 = 2.8 โฅ 102 molecules
1 inhalation
1 mL
20
Chapter 2
93. Total mass before reaction: 18.00 g + (25.00 x 1.025 g/mL) = 43.63 g
After reaction following the law of conservation of mass: 43.63 g = 12 g + 30.95 g + mass of H2
mass of H2 = 0.68 g;
volume of H2 = 0.68 g x
1L
= 8.25 L
0.0824 g
3
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MASS RELATIONS IN
CHEMISTRY; STOICHIOMETRY
LECTURE NOTES
This chapter is considerably more difficult and time-consuming than the two preceding ones. It contains
a good deal of quantitative material that is fundamental for future chapters. We suggest that you devote
three lectures to Chapter 3. The first lecture deals with the mole and the mole in solutions (molarity), the
second with the quantitative aspects of chemical formulas (Section 3.2), and the third with mass relations in
reactions (Section 3.3). Points to keep in mind include:
1. Note that mole-gram conversions and molarity calculations (Section 3.1) will be required in many later
chapters, often as the first step in a more complex problem.
2. When dealing with formulas (Section 3.2), it is important to emphasize early on that the subscripts give
not only the atom ratio but also the mole ratio. Students must realize this in order to follow the logic of
obtaining simplest formulas from mass percents.
3. Students ordinarily have little trouble calculating formulas from mass percents. They are much less
adept at obtaining formulas from analytical data such as that in Example 3.6.
4. It is important to get across the point (Section 3.3) that a chemical equation describes what happens
when a reaction is carried out in the laboratory. Including the physical states of reactants and products
in the equation helps to emphasize this point.
5. When you discuss mass relations in reactions, some students will revert to the infamous โratio and
proportionโ method. The comments of Chapter 1 about conversion factors apply here, too.
6. There are many ways to find the limiting reactant and calculate the theoretical yield. Weโve tried most
of them, and recommend the approach described in Section 3.3; students seem to grasp it readily.
Lecture 1
I. The Mole
A. Meaning
1 mol = 6.022 โฅ1023 items
1 mol H = 6.022โฅ1023 H atoms; mass = 1.008 g
1 mol Cl = 6.022 โฅ1023 Cl atoms; mass = 35.45 g
1 mol Cl2 = 6.022 โฅ 1023 Cl2 molecules; mass = 70.90 g
1 mol HCl = 6.022 โฅ1023 HCl molecules; mass = 36.46 g
B. Molar mass
Generalizing from the above examples, the molar mass, MM, is numerically equal to the sum of
the atomic masses.
21
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