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law of conservation of energy (first law of thermodynamics)
states that energy can be neither created nor destroyed--the total energy of the universe is constant
Hess's Law
if two or more chemical equations can be combined to give another equation, then enthalpy change for that equation will be the sum of the enthalpy changes for the equations that were combined.
thermodynamics
the science of heat, work, and the transformations of each into into the other
Cal
kilocalorie
cal
calorie
1 Cal(kilocal)=
4184 Joules
1 cal=
4.184 joules
open system
exchange mass and energy
closed system
exchange energy--not mass
isolated system
does not exchange energy or mass
heat capacity
accounts for transfer of energy between sameples of matter as a result of temperature differences - quantity of energy required to increase the temp of an OBJECT by one degree
energy transfers
accompant physical and chemical changes, even though there may be no change in temperature
work
transfering energy to an object
total internal energy
sum of individual energies, depends on temperature, type of particles and NUMBER of particles in sample ex: hot tub has more energy than boiling water
law of conservation of energy equation
delta E= q (quantitiy of energy) + w (work on system)
specific heat capacity
amount of energy needed to raise 1 g of sample by 1 degree celcius
specific heat capacity equation
c= q/(m*delta T)
molar heat capacity
quantity of energy that must be transferred to increase the temp of one mole by one degree celcius
liquid to gas
endothermic becuase energy must be transfered in to maintain constant temp
gas to liquid
opposite of boiling-- condensation exothermic energy must be transfered out to maintain temp
burn from steam of water worse? why?
steam becuase of condensation.. steam hurts skin a lot more becuase there is a heat transfer due to condensation as well as the differece in temp between the water and your skin
work
when a force moves something through some distance
enthalpy change
amount of thermal energy transferred into a system at constant pressure
phase change
temperature remains constant, but energy must be continually transfered into (melting boiling) or out of the system (condensing, freezing)
enthalpy of vaporization
amount of energy needed to be transfered at constant pressure to convert liquid to vapor (gas) LARGER THAN ENTHALPY OF FUSION
state functions
properties that define a state but do not rely on the path taken to arrive at that state.
if there is one mole of H2O(l) --> H20 (g) what is delta H? if there are two moles of H20(l)-->H2O(g) what is delta H? if there is one mole of H20 (g) --> H20(l)?
44 kJ 88 kJ -44 kJ
chemical reactions involve much larger...
energy transfers **significant temp change is a sign of chemical reaction
standard molar enthalpy formation (delta H sub f)
standard enthalpy change for formation of one mole of compound from its elements in their standard states
chemical fuel
any substance that will react exothermically with atmospheric oxygen
if bonds formed are stronger than bonds broken
exothermic reaction
hydrogen as fuel
not good becuase it is rare naturally as an element, it is almost always in a compound so it it expensive to manufacture. Its also hard to store because it is not easily condensed into water for denser storage
cellulose formula
CH2O
fuel value
amount of energy released when 1g of fuel is burned to form carbon dioxide and water
energy density
amount of energy released per unit volume of fuel
generation and distribution of electricity is only ____ efficient
33%
food consists of mainly
carbs, proteins, and fats
glucose formula
C6 H12 O6
carbs
metabolize quickly. powers muscles, transmits nerve impulses, repair tissue, maintains body temp--all extra stored in fats
fats
not water soluble stores more than twice the energy as proteins of same mass
protein
release energy. metabolic rate same as carbs
ethanol
contributes calories becuase it can be metabolized exothermically
Basal metabolic rate (BMR)
minimum energy intake required to maintain a body that is awake and at rest, excluding energy needed to digest, absorb and metabolize that food (which is about 10% of caloric intake)
excited state
when an electron in an atom has gained energy from electricity, heating, etc. extra energy released as light
electromagnetic radiation
consists of oscillating, perpendicular electric and magnetic fields that travel through space at the same rate
spectrum
distribution of intensities of wavelengths of frequencies of electromagnetic radiation emitted or absorbed by an object.
wavelength
distance between adjacent crests or troughs in wave
frequency
number of complete waves passing a point in a given period of time. waves per second-- # x 10^x S^-1
sound wave intensity=
loudness--amplitude--height of wave
green light
495 nm
planks quantum theory
packets of energy released E=hv
to find energy with planks constant formula:
E=hc/wavelength
when energy gets higher, wavelength gets:
smaller
photoelectric effect
such metals emit electrons when illuminated by light of certain wavelengths
dual nature
light has wave and particle characteristics
wave theory fails and succeeds at explaining what about light?
fails: photoelectric effect succeeds: refraction of light by a prism
Bohr model
used plancks quantum theory to explain the behavior of an electron in a hydrogen atom
continuous spectrum
light of all wavelegths in visible region
line emission spectrum
only a few wavelengths (lines) are seen
simplest line emission spectrum:
hydrogen
visible light in nm
400-700
principle quantum number=
n= number of orbits or energy levels
energy is emitted when:
electron returns from excited state to ground state--this emitted energy is called a photon
uncertainty principle
it is impossible to simultaneously determine the exact position and the exact momentum of an electron
electron density
gives the probability that an electron will be found in a particular region of an atom
boundary surface
1 in 10 chance that the electron would have no definent boundry
M sub l
can have any integer number between l and -l
l value for any s subshell
zero
the total number of atomic orbitals in a shell=
n^2 ex: n=3: 3s+3p+3d=9
n relates to the atomic orbitals:
size
l relates to the atomic orbitals
shape
m sub l relates to the atomic orbitals
orientation
s shape is
spherical
p shape is
dumbbell shaped, at right angles with each other. two lobes--electron density on either side of nucleus
each electron in an atom can exist in one of two possible spin states
clockwise and counterclockwise
spins opposite in direction produce
oppositely directed magnetic fields--resulting in slightly different energies
slight difference in energy created between electrons spins results in
splitting the spectral lines into closely spaced pairs
parallel spins
same m sub s quantum number (both -1/2 or +1/2)
paired spins
same atomic orbital with opposite spins (on with +1/2 and other with -1/2)
pauli exclusion principle:
no more can two electrons can occupy the same atomic orbital in an atom, and these electrons must have opposite spins (no two electrons in the same atom can have the same set of four quantum numbers, n, l, m sub l and m sub s
atomic orbital can hold a maximum of how many electrons?
2 pairs
each principle energy level, n, can accommodate a max number of
2(n^2) electrons
within a principal energy level n, there are ___atoomic orbitals
n^2
within a principle energy level n, there is a maximum of ____ electrons
2n^2
radial distribution plot
graph of the electron density (probability 90-10)
3s orbital boundary has greater volume and radius than
2s
d shape
4 lobes that lie on a plane (x, y, or z)
the atomic numbers of elements increase in numerical order from
left to right
atoms of a particular element contain one more electron and proton than the atom ____ that element
preceding
parallel spins minimize
electron-electron repulsion, making total energy of the set of electrons as low as possible
hunds rule
the most stable subshell has the maximum number of unpaired electrons, all with the same spin
when two subshells have the same n+l value...
electrons are first assigned to the subshell with the lower n value
half-filled subshells minimize
electron repulsion
elements in the same group in the periodic table have similar
chemical behavior and valence electron configurations
the dots in a lewis dot structure are
the valence electrons given by A-group
s block elements
1A and 2A
p block elements
3A - 8A
Group 1a -3a form
positive ions (cations) with charges = to their group numbers
nonmetals in 5A-7A form
ions by adding electrons to form negative ions (anions) with charges = to 8 minus their A group number
atoms in group 1A, 2A and 3A
lose an electron to form 1+ 2+ and 3+
atoms in groups 7A 6A and some in 5A gain 1 2 or 3 electrons to form
1- 2- and 3-
negative ions have the same electron configuration as the____noble gas
next
isoelectric
atoms and ions that have the same electron configuration
when forming cations in the d section, always take from the
n+1 s
diamagnetic
all electrons are paired (shells are full) and spin oppositely so their magnetic field cancels out--very weakly repelling
paramagnetic
unpaired electrons are attacked to magnetic field, the more unpaired electrons, the stronger the attraction.
ferromagnetic
permanent magnets. spins of unpaired electrons in a cluster of atoms in a solid are all aligned in the same direction
only metals that are ferromagnetic
nickel, cobalt, iron
for main group elements, atomic radii increases going ____ a group
down
for main group elements, atomic radii _____ going across the period
decrease
transition elements in neighboring groups tend to be more alike in their properties than elements in their____
groups
screening effect
the inner electrons shield or screen the valence electrons from the + charge or the protons in the nucleous
effective nuclear charge
Z*= positive charge on nucleous - the repulsion between electrons on each other
effective nuclear charge increases from___ to ___.
left to right
ionization energy increases from ____ to ___
left to right
when an electron is removed...
atom shrinks because there are fewer electrons to repel each other in comparison to the protons that pull them in
electron affinity
energy change when an electron is added to a gaseous atom to form a 1- atom it measures the attraction an atom has for an additional electron
fluorine and the rest of the halogens have large negative Electron affinity because
by acquiring an electron the halogen atoms achieve stable octet
electron affinities become more ____ across the periodic table
negative
metals tend to
lose electrons
nonmetals tend to
gain an electron
heated solid objects emit
continuous spectra
excited atomic gasses emit
line spectra
photon always carries
positive energy
De Broglie Wavelength
all moving objects act as waves at a node, amplitude of wave = 0
order of wavelength lowest to highest wavelength
gamma ray, x ray, UV, blue, green ,red, IR, Microwave, Radiowaves
blue
400
red
700
black body spectra
--light emitted by heated objects --wavelength spectrum depends primarily on temp --intensity and color depends on temp
in blackbody radiation higher temp=
shorter wavelength
in enthalpy, reversing an equation changes the ___ but not the ___ of delta H
sign, magnitude
state defined by:
volume, temp, pressure, composition, mass
Delta E = q sub v
only true if staying at constant volume
only true if staying at constant volume
0
specific heat capacity of water is higher or lower than most common elements?
higher

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