Title: Ancient Philosophy
1Ancient Philosophy
- Matter to be composed of four basic elements
- Earth, water, wind, and fire
- Two schools of thought regarding matter
- Aristotle, Pluto, and their followers regarded
matter to be continuous and infinite - Democritus, Leucippus, and their followers
considered matter to be made up of some basic
units they called atomos (or atoms)
2Combustion and the Phlogiston Theory
- A log is burned
- the mass of the ash formed is much less than the
log - What happen to the rest of the mass?
- Early 18th century chemists considered that
- materials burn because they contains a kind of
substance that they called phlogiston - combustion is a process that caused the loss of
phlogiston - thus, the mass of ash is less than the log.
3Experimental Science versus Philosophy
- Antoine Lavoisier (1743-1794) performed
quantitative experiments that - debunked the phlogiston theory
- Showed combustion is a chemical process that
involves reaction with oxygen - Showed mass is neither created nor destroyed
during chemical reactions. - Joseph Proust (1754-1826) also performed
quantitative experiments and showed that the
composition of a given compound is constant. - The composition of pure copper carbonate is
always 51 Cu, 10 C, and 39 O
4Fundamental of Chemical Laws
- Lavoisiers quantitative experiments provide the
basis for the law of conservation of mass - In chemical reactions, mass is neither created or
destroyed - Prousts work became the law of definite
proportion (or law fixed composition) - A given compound always contains the same types
of elements in a fixed composition by mass,
regardless of its origin.
5Daltons Atomic Theory
- Elements are made up of atoms
- Atoms of the same element are identical
- Atoms of different elements are different
- Compounds are formed when atoms of different
elements combined in simple whole number ratios - A given compound always contains the same number
and type of its atoms - Atoms are not created or destroyed in chemical
reactions.
6Principle of Chemical Combination
- Law of Multiple Proportion
- When two elements react to form more than one
type of compounds, there exist a simple ratio of
the masses of one of the elements that combine
with a fixed mass of the other element in these
compounds - Example Carbon reacts with oxygen to form two
compounds. In one, 1.00 g of carbon combines with
1.33 g of oxygen, and in the other, 1.00 g of
carbon combines with 2.66 g of oxygen. The mass
ratio of oxygen in the two compounds is 12.
7Principle of Chemical Combination
- Gay-Lussacs Law of Combining Volumes
- In reactions involving gaseous reactants and
products, there exist simple ratios of their
volumes measured under the same temperature and
pressure. - Examples
- 1 volume of hydrogen reacts with 1 volume of
chlorine to form 2 volumes of hydrogen chloride - 2 volumes of hydrogen reacts with 1 volume of
oxygen to form 2 volumes of water vapor.
8Interpretation of Gay-Lussacs Experiments
- Note under same temperature and pressure, equal
volumes of gases contain the same number of
molecules - 1 L of hydrogen 1 L of chlorine ? 2 L of
hydrogen chloride implies - 1 H-molecule 1 Cl-molecule ? 2 HCl molecules.
- Then, each of hydrogen and chlorine molecule
should consists of 2 atoms, and the reaction may
be written using the following equation - H2(g) Cl2(g) ? 2 HCl(g)
9Interpretation of Gay-Lussacs Experiments
- (Under same temperature and pressure, equal
volumes of gases contain the same number of
molecules.) - 2 L of hydrogen 1 L of oxygen ? 2 L of water
vapor implies - 2 H-molecules 1 O-molecule ? 2 water molecules.
- then, each hydrogen and oxygen molecule should
consists of 2 atoms (H2 and O2), while formula of
water would be H2O. - The reaction forming water can be represented by
the equation - 2H2(g) O2(g) ? 2 H2O(g)
10Atomic Structure
- Characteristics of cathode-ray
- It originates from the cathode plate
- The beam bends when it passes through an electric
or magnetic field, which implies negatively
charged particles - The charge-to-mass ratio is constant, at -1.76 x
108 C/g, regardless of the materials used - Cathode ray is actually a beam of electron.
11Atomic Model-1
- Plum-pudding model
- Atom is composed of diffused mass (like a cotton
ball) of positive charge, with electrons loosely
embedded on its surface - The number of electrons present is equal to the
magnitude of unit positive charges in the atom.
12Atomic Model-2
- The Nuclear Model
- Atom contains nucleus, which is composed of
positively charged protons and neutral neutrons - The mass of the atom is concentrated in the
nucleus - The nucleus is much, much smaller than the atom
- Electrons occupy the vast empty space
surrounding the nucleus - Proton or neutron is about 1840 times larger
(more massive) than electron
13Relative and Absolute Masses
- Proton 1.007276 amu 1.673 x 10-27 kg.
- Neutron 1.008665 amu 1.675 x 10-27 kg.
- Electron 0.000549 amu 9.109 x 10-31 kg.
14Relative and Absolute Charges
- Proton 1 1.602 x 10-19 C
- Neutron 0
- Electron -1 -1.602 x 10-19 C
15Isotopes
- Atoms from same element that have different
masses - Atoms containing the same number of protons but
different number of neutrons - Atoms that have the same atomic number (Z) but
different mass number (A) - Atomic number (Z) number of protons
- Mass number (A) of protons of neutrons
- Number of neutrons (A Z)
16Molecules and Ions
- Molecule
- A neutral species containing two or more atoms
bound together (chemically). - Ions
- electrically charged particles, either positive
(called cation) or negative (called anion) - atoms may lose electrons to form cations, or may
gain electrons to form anions.
17Periodic Table
- Table is divided into 18 columns called groups
and 7 rows called periods. - Groups are numbered 1 18 in the IUPAC
nomenclature, or 1A 8A and 1B 8B in the ACS
nomenclature. - Along each period (left to right), elements are
arranged in increasing atomic number - Within each group, elements share similar
chemical characteristics.
18Major Classifications of Elements
- Metals
- Mainly solid, except for mercury have shiny
appearance - Good conductors of heat and electricity
- Malleable and ductile
- Nonmetals
- Mainly gases, one (bromine) is a liquid, and a
few solids - Generally poor conductors of electricity
- Solids are generally brittle and not lustrous.
19Other Classifications of Elements
- Metalloids (semi-metals)
- Very hard (covalent network) solids
- physically look like metals, but chemically
behave like nonmetals - Main group elements
- Elements of Group 1 (1A alkali metals), 2 (2A
alkaline Earth metals), 13 (3A), 14 (4A), 15
(5A), 16 (6A), 17 (7A the halogens), and 18 (8A
noble gases) - Transition metals
- Elements of Group 3 (3B) 12 (2B) contains
heavy metals.
20Other Classifications of Elements
- Lanthanide series
- Elements after lanthanum (La) Ce, Pr, Nd, Pm,
Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, and Lu - Actinide series
- Elements after actinium (Ac) Th, Pa, U, Pu, Am,
Cm, Bk, Cf, Es, Fm, Md, No, and Lr - Mostly synthesized in particle accelerators and
all are radioactive
21Nomenclature
- Type-I (ionic) compounds
- contain Group 1 metals, Group 2 metals, aluminum,
or galium, combining with nonmetals - Type-II (ionic) compounds
- contain transition metals, In, Sn, Tl, Pb, or any
of the lanthanide or actinide series metals,
combining with nonmetals - Type-III (molecular) compounds
- contain only nonmetals or metalloids and
nonmetals
22Type-I (Ionic) Compounds
- Binary compounds
- NaCl sodium chloride
- MgF2 magnesium fluoride
- Al2O3 aluminum oxide
- Compounds containing polyatomic ions
- CaSO4 calcium sulfate
- NaHCO3 sodium hydrogen carbonate
- KNO3 potassium nitrate
23Type-II (Ionic) Compounds
- Binary compounds
- FeCl2 iron(II) chloride FeCl3 iron(III)
chloride - CrO chromium(II) oxide Cr2O3 chromium(III)
oxide - Compounds containing polyatomic ions
- Co(NO3)2 cobalt(II) nitrate
- Co(NO3)3 cobalt(III) nitrate
- Pb(C2H3O2)2 lead(II) acetate
- Pb(C2H3O2)4 lead(IV) acetate
24Type-II Compounds Naming System
- Formula Stock System Old System
- CrO - chromium(II) oxide chromous oxide
- Cr2O3 - chromium(III) oxide chromic oxide
- Fe(NO3)2 Iron(II) nitrate Ferrous nitrate
- Fe(NO3)3 Iron(III) nitrate Ferric nitrate
25Naming Acids
- Binary Acids (without oxygen in the formula)
- Hydro first syllable of anion ic acid
- HF hydrofluoric acid (weak)
- HCl hydrochloric acid (strong)
- HBr hydrobromic acid (strong)
- HI hydroiodic acid (very strong)
- H2S hydrosulfuric acid (weak)
- HCN hydrocyanic acid (very weak)
26Naming Acids
- Oxoacids
- HNO3 nitric acid (strong)
- HNO2 nitrous acid (weak)
- H2SO4 sulfuric acid (strong)
- H2SO3 sulfurous acid (weak)
- H3PO4 phosphoric acid (weak)
- H3PO3 phosphorous acid (very weak)
27More on Oxoacids
- HClO hypochlorous acid (very weak)
- HClO2 chlorous acid (weak)
- HClO3 chloric acid (moderate)
- HClO4 perchloric acid (very strong)
- HBrO4 perbromic acid (strong)
- HIO4 periodic acid (strong)