Atoms always be making stuff up! (atomic structure)
Where is the finest place to dine...the periodic table of course!
Lets give some big props for all the beautiful properties around here!
Who says you don't Matter ?!?!?
A picture is worth a thousand words! (Models)
100

What are the two sections of the atom, and what subatomic particles does each section house?


*** Which provides the mass, and which provides the volume?***

The nucleus (protons and neutrons) 

Electron cloud (electrons)


Nucleus = mass, electron cloud = volume

100
How many groups and periods does the periodic table contain?

Groups (verticle columns) = 18 and 7 periods (horizontal rows)

100

Name the 3 main types of elements and their general locations on the periodic table.

Metals to the left, metalloids along the steps, and non-metals to the right (plus hydrogen) on the periodic table.

100

All matter has to have what?

Mass and volume.

100

What will always have to be equal in a neutral atom?

Protons and electrons.

200

Provide the symbol, charge, and mass for each of the subatomic particles in an atom.

Proton = p+ and 1 amu

Neutron = no and 1 amu

Electron = e- and 0 amu

200

What element is found in period 1, group 18, next is period 3, group 16,  and last is period 4, group 8?

Helium, Sulfur, Iron

200

Which group, metals or non-metals, wants to gain electrons and which wants to lose electrons?

Non-metals want to gain electrons, and metals want to lose electrons.

200

What is an atom?

The basic building block of all matter, (the smallest unit an element can be broken down to and retain its properties)

200

How many valence electrons would alkaline earth metals, halogens, and most noble gases contain?

Alkaline earth metals = 2

Halogends = 7

Noble gases = 8 (Helium is the exception with 2)

300

An atom has an atomic number of 20 and a mass of 51 AMU. How many protons and neutrons does it have?

20 Protons and 31 Neutrons.

Atomic mass = atomic number (#p+) and n0's

*** Do not use average atomic mass unless told to***

300

What is the trend for atomic radius? Name the largest and smallest atoms.

It increases as you go down and to the left.

Francium is the largest atom; helium would be the smallest.

300

List 3 properties of metalloids.

semi-lustrous, brittle, semi-conductive (a mix of properties between metals and non-metals).

300

What is the difference between a molecule and a compound?


A molecule is any two or more atoms bonded together. A compound is 2 or more different atoms bonded together.

A compound is always a molecule, but a molecule is not always a compound.

300

How are the periods on the periodic table related to the rings on the Bohr model?


*** How can you tell how many valence electrons a ring can hold up to?***

The period the element is in equals the number of energy levels the atom contains.


*** The number of elements on the period = up to how many electrons the ring can hold.***

400

How do electrons always add to an atom?

In the same pattern/order from the lowest energy level to the highest energy level.


Near the nucleus and outwards to the outer rings.

400

What is the general trend for electronegativity and ionization energy?


*** What does each term mean?***

They increase upward and to the right (fluorine is the most electronegative and has the highest ionization energy; francium would have the lowest for both). (exception: Noble gases have low electronegativity)

Electronegativity, how much an atom wants to take another electron, and ionization energy, how hard it is to remove the ones it has.

400

Metals tend to be solid at room temperature, dense, hard, lustrous, malleable, and silvery or greyish.

Define lusterous, malleable, and conductive.

Shiny, able to be molded, and able to transfer heat or electricity.

400

What is a mixture?

2 or more particles (atoms, elements, molecules, etc.) combined together but not bonded together.

400

Draw a Bohr model of fluorine (atomic number 9) and a mass of 19 amu (draw the picture and simply list the protons and neutrons)

500

(list all 3) What is it called when a neutral atom gains/loses a neutron, an electron, and a proton?


Double points: how would you tell if an atom had gained a neutron?

Isotope (two atoms of the same p+ and different n0)

Ions (+ = cation and (-) = anion)

A new element (protons identify the element)

*** It will have a different mass (mass = a# +n0)

500

Name and identify where on the periodic table 7 of the 10 common families/groups are that we covered.

Group 1 is alkali metals, group 2 is alkaline earth metals, group 3 through 12 are transition metals, to the right of that are post-transition metals, metalloids are along the steps, non-metals to the right of that, halogens in group 17, noble gases in group 18, and actinoids and lanthanoids are along the bottom.

500

Non-metals can be solid, liquid, or gas at room temperature, tend to be less shiny, less hard, less dense, break apart, are unable to transfer heat/electricity, and are colorful.

What term is used for less shiny, break apart, and unable to transfer heat/electricity?

Dull, brittle, and non-conductive (insulative)

500

Give an example of an element, a molecule, and a mixture.


*** What is the term for a molecule with 2 of the same types of atoms bonded together?***

An element (anything on period table) 

Molecule: a pure substance with more than 1 atom (02, h20, CO2, sugar, ammonia, etc.

Mixture: answers will vary

*** diatomic molecule***

500

Draw a Lewis structure for lithium,  Boron, Nitrogen, and Neon.

Li with 1 dot

B with 2 dots

N with 5 dots

Ne with 8 dots