Chemistry Notes Semester 2
Chemistry Notes Semester 2
Chemistry Notes Semester 2
The mole is a conversion to count a substance by weighing it. 1 mole is equal to 6.02 x 1023
representative particles of a substance. Depending on the substance the representative particles
may be atoms, molecules, formula unit.
Molar mass
The molar mass of a substance is the mass of one mole of that substance. To calculate the
molar mass of a substance you must add the individual atomic mass of all the elements that make
up that compound. The unit for a molar mass is in grams/mole.
Example:
C6H12O6
Carbon: 6 x 12 = 72
Hydrogen: 12 x 1 = 12
Oxygen: 6 x 16 = 86
72+12+96= 180 grams/mole
Fe3(PO4)2
Iron: 3 x 55.85 = 167.55
Phosphorus: 2 x 31 = 62
Oxygen: 8 x 16 = 128
167.55 + 62 + 128 = 357.55 grams/ mole
Heat Notes
Heat- the transfer of thermal energy. Dependent on the speed of particles and the amount of
particles. Measured in Joules (J)
Temperature (T)- the measure of the average kinetic energy of the particles of matter. Measured
with a thermometer in degrees Celsius, Kelvin, or Fahrenheit (°C, °F, K)
Heating Curve
Temp C
Energy
A- Solid heating up
B- Melting Point- Temperature at which solid changes to liquid
C- Liquid heating up
D- Boiling Point- Temperature at which liquid changes to gas
E- Gas/Vapor heating up
ΔT=0! During a change of state
Temperature and Atmospheric Pressure affect changes of state.
Phase Diagram
B X
A
Pressure
Y
Temperature
Y- Triple Point- the specific pressure and temperature for a substance where all three states exist
at once. Solid, liquid, and gas in equilibrium.
X- Critical Point-above this temperature the substance is only a gas.
Changes of State
1. Melting- Solid to a liquid
2. Freezing- Liquid to solid
3. Vaporization- Liquid to gas
-Boiling – gas bubbles all over happens throughout
-Evaporation- happens at the surface
4. Condensation- Gas to Liquid
5. Sublimation- Solid to Gas
6. Deposition- Gas to Solid
Specific heat capacity (C or CP)-the amount of energy required to raise the temperature of 1 gram
of a substance 1 degree Celsius. The rate of heat transfer. (J/g˚C)
The lower the value of the specific heat capacity the faster heat is transferred
The higher the value of the specific heat capacity the slower heat is transferred
At changes of state other equations must be used to determine the amount of energy is used.
At Melting Point-
ΔH = Hfm
Heat of Fusion-(Hf)- The amount of energy required to melt 1 gram of a solid (Joules/Cal).
At Boiling Point-
ΔH = Hvm
Heat of Vaporization-(Hv)- The amount of energy required to boil 1 gram of a solid. (Joules/Cal)
Energy Profiles
reactants products
↑ ↑
E E
reactants
-ΔH +ΔH
Exothermic Endothermic
Heat Stoichiometry-
Given an amount of A and the balanced equation with a ΔH value.
#A + B C ΔH
Gas Variables
V = Volume- space occupied by a sample of gas (mL or L)
P = Pressure- force exerted over an area (kPa, atm, mm Hg, torr)
T = Temperature- measure of average kinetic energy of the particles of a gas sample (˚C, K)
n = Moles- the number of moles of a sample (moles)
Conversions
Temperature Units Pressure Units
TKelvin = TCelsius + 273 1 atm = 760 torr = 760 mm Hg = 101.325 kPa
TCelsius = TKelvin – 273
Boyle’s Law
When T & n are held constant
P & V are inversely proportional
P1V1=P2V2
Charles’ Law
n & P are held constant
V & T are directly proportional
V1 = V2 or V1T2 = V2T1
T1 T2
P1 = P2 or P1T2 = P2T1
T1 T2
PV = nRT
M.M. = mRT
PV
Dalton’s Law of Partial Pressure- total pressure is equal to the sum of the pressure of each
individual gas
PTotal= P1 + P2 + P3 …
Bonding Notes
Valence Electrons- an electron in the outer most energy levels of an atom, where it can
participate in bonding
Octet Rule- the tendency for main group elements to gain, lose, or share electrons so that their s
and p orbitals are full with 8 electrons
Main Group Group Group Group Group Group Group Group Group18
Elements 1 2 13 14 15 16 17
Electron s1 s2 s 2 p1 s2p2 s2p3 s2p4 s2p5 s2p6
Ending
Valence 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Electrons
Ionic Compounds (salts)- compounds that form due to the transfer of electrons, usually bonding
a metal to a non-metal, smallest unit is called a formula unit.
Covalent (Molecular) Compounds- compounds that form due to the sharing of electrons between
elements, usually bonding non-metals to non-metals, smallest unit is called a molecule.
Polar Bond- a polar covalent bond arises from the uneven sharing of electrons (bonded atoms
that have different electronegativities)
Non-Polar- a non-polar bond has even sharing of electrons in a covalent bond (bonded atoms are
the same element or have the same electronegativities)
Polar Molecule- molecules with a slightly positive end and a slightly negative end.
All of the symmetrical molecular shapes (linear, trigonal planar, tetrahedral) yield non-polar
molecules as long as all of the outer atoms are identical.
If the outer atoms are different the molecules are usually polar.
The presence of non-bonding electron pairs on the central atom usually lowers the symmetry
enough so that a polar molecule results.
Polar molecules mixes with Polar molecules and Non-Polar molecules mixes with Non-Polar
molecules.
Intermolecular Forces- the attraction between molecules. The strength of a molecules’
intermolecular forces can affect melting point and boiling point.
Dipole-Dipole attractions- The attraction of polar molecules to each other due to partial opposite
charges.
Hydrogen Bonds- not a true intramolecular “bond”. A very strong dipole-dipole attraction that
occurs between hydrogen of one molecule and a very electronegative atom (ex. N, O, F) of
another molecule.
Polar Molecules
If molecule has:
-two types of atoms and no unshared pairs of electrons around the central atom, it is non polar.
-two types of atoms and has unshared pairs of electrons around the central atom , it is polar.