Figure 1.01a: (a.)The surface of a single grain of table salt.
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Transcript Figure 1.01a: (a.)The surface of a single grain of table salt.
Chapter 2:
ATOMS, MOLECULES, AND IONS
The Early History of Chemistry
Before 16th Century
–Greeks: 4 fundamental substances: fire, earth, water, and air.
–Alchemy: Attempts (scientific or otherwise) to change cheap
metals into gold.
17th Century
–Robert Boyle: First “chemist” to perform quantitative
experiments to measure the relationship between pressure and
volume. Define chemical elements: substance cannot further break
down.
18th Century
–George Stahl: Phlogiston flows out of a burning material.
–Joseph Priestley: Discovers oxygen gas, “dephlogisticated air.”
“The Priestley Award” of Am. Chem. Soc.
Law of Conservation of Mass
Discovered by Antoine Lavoisier
Combustion involves oxygen, not phlogiston
Mass is neither created nor destroyed
In 1789 Lavoisier published the 1st modern chem. textbook:
“Elementary Treatise on chemistry”
Other Fundamental Chemical Laws
Law of Definite Proportion
(Joseph Proust)
A given compound always contains exactly the
same proportion of elements by mass.
Copper carbonate is always 5.3 parts Cu to 4 parts
O to 1 part C (by mass).
Other Fundamental Chemical Laws
Law of Multiple Proportions (by John Dalton)
Mass of O that contributes with 1 g of C
----------------------------------------------------------------------------Compound 1
1.33 g
Compound II
2.66 g
When two elements form a series of compounds, the ratios of the
masses of the second element that combine with 1 gram of the
first element can always be reduced to small whole numbers.
The ratio of the masses of oxygen in CO2 and CO will be a small
whole number (“2”).
Dalton’s Atomic Theory (1808)
Each element is made up of tiny particles
called atoms.
The atoms of a given element are identical;
the atoms of different elements are
different in some fundamental way or
ways.
Dalton’s Atomic Theory
(continued)
Chemical compounds are formed when
atoms combine with each other. A given
compound always has the same relative
numbers and types of atoms.
Chemical reactions involve reorganization
of the atoms - changes in the way they are
bound together. The atoms themselves are
not changed in a chemical reaction.
Figure 2.4: A representation of some of Gay-Lussac's
experimental results on combining gas volumes.
Avogadro’s Hypothesis (1811)
At the same temperature and pressure, equal
volumes of different gases contain the same
number of particles.
• 5 liters of oxygen
• 5 liters of nitrogen
• Same number of particles!
Figure 2.5: A representation of combining
gases at the molecular level. The spheres
represent atoms in the molecules.
Early Experiments to Characterize the
Atom
J. J. Thomson - postulated the existence of
electrons using cathode ray tubes.
Ernest Rutherford - explained the nuclear
atom, containing a dense nucleus with
electrons traveling around the nucleus at a
large distance.
Figure 2.7 A Cathode-Ray Tube
Figure 2.7: A cathode-ray tube. The fastmoving electrons excite the gas in the tube,
causing a glow between the electrodes.
Figure 2.8: Deflection of cathode rays by an
applied electric field.
Figure 2.9: The plum pudding model of the atom.
Figure 2.10: A schematic representation of the
apparatus Millikan used to determine the charge on
the electron.
Figure 2.12: Rutherford's experiment on
-particle bombardment of metal foil.
Figure 2.13: (a) The expected results of the
metal foil experiment if Thomson's model
were correct. (b)Actual results.
Figure 2.14:
A nuclear
atom viewed
in cross
section. Note
that this
drawing is
not to scale.
Atomic Nucleus
Figure 2.15: Two isotopes of sodium. Both have
eleven protons and eleven electrons, but they differ
in the number of neutrons in their nuclei.
Figure 2.16:
The
structural
formula for
methane.
Figure 2.17: Space-filling model of methane. This
type of model shows both the relative sizes of the
atoms in the molecule and their spatial
relationships.
Figure 2.18: Ball-and-stick model of
methane.
Figure 2.19: Sodium metal reacts with chlorine gas
to form solid sodium chloride.
Figure 2.20: Ball-and-stick models of the
ammonium ion and the nitrate ion.
Figure 2.21: The Periodic Table.
Crystals of copper(II) sulfate.
Various chromium compounds dissolved in water.
From left to right; CrCl2, K2Cr2O7, Cr(NO3)3, CrCl3,
K2CrO4.
Figure 2.22: The common cations and anions
Figure 2.23: A flowchart for naming binary
compounds.
Figure 2.24: Overall strategy for naming chemical
compounds.
Figure 2.25: A flowchart for naming acids. An acid
is best considered as one or more H+ ions
attached to an anion.
Room Temperature Ionic Liquids
室溫離子液體
(pp 520)
Pure Appl. Chem., 2000, 72, 2275–2287
RTIL Structures
• Cations
N+ N
R
R: methyl; R’: n-butyl
R`
1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium, BMIM, C4MIM
• Anions
– PF6– BF4– Cl-
1-butyl-3SbF6methylimidazolium
hexafluorophosphate
CF3SO3- (TfO)
N(CF3SO2)2- (NTf2) [BMIM][PF6]
Effect of the nature of anion on physical properties of BMIM salt
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------Anion
m.p.
d
Viscosity
Conductivity
oC
g/cm3
cP (20oC)
S/m
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------BF4-82(g) 1.17
233
0.17
PF6-8
1.36
312
0.14
Cl65
1.10
solid
solid
CF3COO~-40(g) 1.21
73
0.32
CF3SO316
1.29
90
0.37
(CF3SO2)N- -4
1.43
52
0.39
C3F7COO~-40(g) 1.33
182
0.10
C4F9SO320
1.47
373
0.045
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------(g) Glass transition
P.S. viscosity of water 1 cP.
What is a Room Temperature Ionic Liquid?
(Room Temperature Molten Salt)
• Liquid salt consisting of at least one organic
component (cation or anion)
• Room temperature ionic liquid (RTIL) with melting
point is below room temperature
• Properties:
– Negligible vapor pressure
– High thermal stability (~250-400°C)
– High viscosity
– Hydrophobic or hydrophilic
– Dissolve many organic, organometallic, and
inorganic compounds
RTILs are regarding as “Green solvents”