Step | What to Do |
1 | Arrange the atoms with the element that forms most bonds in the central position. |
2 | Add the total number of valence electrons to the central atom clockwise or counterclockwise. |
3 | Distribute the other atoms around the central atom and place one bonding pair of electrons between each atom. |
4 | Put remaining electrons as lone pairs on all atoms except the central atom, to a maximum octet of 8 electrons per atom. |
5 | If octet on central atom is incomplete, move peripheral lone pairs into bonding electrons that are shared with the central atom. |
6 | Make sure central and peripheral atoms have complete octets. Now if there are extra electrons, place these as lone pairs on the central atom (*exception to octet rule). |
Element | Electronegativity |
O | 3.44 |
H | 2.2 |
C | 2.55 |
Al | 1.61 |
Cl | 3.16 |
Li | 0.98 |
S | 2.58 |
Na | 0.93 |
F | 3.98 |
Compound | Electronegativity Difference (∆EN) |
H2O | 1.4 |
CH4 | |
AlCl3 | |
Li2S | |
NaF |
Compound | Electronegativity Difference (∆EN) |
H2O | 3.44 - 2.20 = 1.4 |
CH4 | 2.55 - 2.20 = 0.35 |
AlCl3 | 3.16 - 1.61 = 1.55 |
Li2S | 2.58 - 0.98 = 1.6 |
NaF | 3.98 - 0.93 = 3.05 |
Electronegativity Difference Range: | 0 - 0.5 | 0.5 - 1.7 | 1.7 + |
Bonding Result: | Non-polar Covalent | Polar Covalent | Ionic |
Ag+ | Cu2+ | Fe3+ | Ti4+ | |
Cl- | ||||
O2- | ||||
PO43- | ( ) | ( ) |
Ag+ | Cu2+ | Fe3+ | Ti4+ | |
Cl- | AgCl | CuCl2 | FeCl3 | TiCl4 |
O2- | Ag2O | CuO | Fe2O3 | TiO2 |
PO43- | Ag3PO4 | Cu3(PO4)2 | FePO4 | Ti3(PO4)4 |
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ClO4– | perchlorate
|
ClO3– | chlorate
|
ClO2– | chlorite
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ClO– | hypochlorite
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BrO4– | perbromate
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BrO3– | bromate
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BrO2– | bromite
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BrO– | hypobromite
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Mnemonic | Consonants, Vowels | Formula | Name (-ate's) |
Nick | 3, 1 | NO31- | Nitrate |
Camel | 3, 2 | CO32- | Carbonate |
Clam | 3, 1 | ClO31- | Chlorate |
Supper | 4, 2 | SO42- | Sulfate/Sulphate |
Pheonix | 4, 3 | PO43- | Phosphate |
How many neutrons in |
31 |
What is an energy level? |
An orbit or shell corresponding to the period number, on which electrons are located. |
What is the trend for increasing electronegativity on the periodic table? |
Up a group, and right across a period |
What is the trend for increasing electron affinity on the periodic table? |
Up a group, and right across a period |
What is the trend for increasing atomic radius on the periodic table? |
Down a group, and left across a period |
What is the trend for increasing ionization energy on the periodic table? |
Up a group, and right across a period |
How does the atomic radius of elemental fluorine (F) compare to its ion form (F-)? |
The fluorine ion has a larger radius because the extra electron causes more repulsion in the electron cloud and expands the size of the radius |
How does the atomic radius of a cation compare to its neutral elemental form? |
The atomic radius of the cation is always smaller than the neutral atom. |
How are ionization energy, electronegativity, and electron affinity related? |
Electronegativity is the attraction of the electrons by the element, which is the same trend for electron affinity. Ionization energy is the energy required to remove an electron, which is high for elements with high electronegativity and electron affinity |
What is the difference between an ionic compound and a molecular compound? |
Ionic compounds are a metal + a non-metal. Molecular compounds are two non-metals. (another name for molecular compound is covalent compound) |
What is the difference between an ionic compound and an alloy? |
An alloy is composed of two or more metals while an ionic compound is composed of a metal + a non-metal. Alloys do not form intramolecular bonds like in ionic bonds. |
What type of compounds are: SO2 or NF3? |
Covalent/Molecular |
What type of compound is Sodium Fluoride? |
Ionic compound |
What does a lewis dot diagram indicate? |
The arrangement of bonding and non-bonding (lone pair) electrons in an atom or compound. |
When drawing lewis structures, what is the next step to do if the octet on a central atom is incomplete? |
Move peripheral lone pairs on adjacent atoms into bonding electrons that are shared with the central atom. |
What are some of the main physical properties of molecular compounds? |
Molecular compounds have a low melting point and are poor conductors of electricity when dissolved in water. |
What are the three (four) intermolecular forces you have seen so far? |
London, Dipole-dipole, van der Waals (London + Dipole-Dipole), and Hydrogen bonding |
A molecule with a 0.6 electronegativity difference would be what type of polarity? |
Polar covalent. |
Name the molecule with the stock naming system: Fe2O3 |
Iron (III) Oxide |
Name the molecule with the prefix naming system: Fe2O3 |
Diiron trioxide |
Reactivity Ranking | Element |
1 (Most Reactive) | Lithium, Li |
2 | Potassium, K |
3 | Barium, Ba |
4 | Calcium, Ca |
5 | Sodium, Na |
6 | Magnesium, Mg |
7 | Aluminum, Al |
8 | Zinc, Zn |
9 | Chromium, Cr |
10 | Iron, Fe |
11 | Cadmium, Cd |
12 | Cobalt, Co |
13 | Nickel, Ni |
14 | Tin, Sn |
15 | Lead, Pb |
16 | Hydrogen, H |
17 | Copper, Cu |
18 | Mercury, Hg |
19 | Silver, Ag |
20 | Platinum, Pt |
21 (Least Reactive) | Gold, Au |
Isotope | Relative Abundance |
28Si | 92.2 % |
29Si | 4.7 % |
30Si | 3.1 % |
2 NH3 | 1 CH4 | |
Mole Ratio | 2 | 1 |
Molecules | 2 | 1 |
Molecules in 1 mole | 6.02 × 1023 |
2 NH3 | 1 CH4 | |
Mole Ratio | 2 | 1 |
Molecules | 2 | 1 |
Molecules in 1 mole | 1.2 × 1024 | 6.02 × 1023 |
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Mass | Mols | Ratio | Subscript |
1.9 g Oxygen | = 1 | ||
3.0 g Magnesium | ≈ 1 |
Mass | Mols | Ratio | Subscript |
9.7 g Water | ≈ 5 | ||
15.3 g Sodium sulfate/sulphate | = 1 |
Component | Mass (g) | Moles (mol) | Amount (#) |
Ba | 56.22 | 0.409379 | 0.409379/0.409379 = 1 |
Cl | 29.02496 | 2(0.409379) | 2(0.409379)/0.409379 ≈ 2 |
H2O | 14.755 | 0.8188 | 0.8188/0.409379 ≈ 2 |
How many moles of oxygen are represented here: 2 Al(NO3)3 |
18 (2 × 3 × 3) |
What are the units of molecular weight? |
g/mol |
What step of an equation must be complete before doing stoichiometry calculations? |
The equation must be balanced first |
What type of reaction is this? A + B → AB |
Synthesis |
What type of reaction is this? AB → A + B |
Decomposition |
What type of reaction is this? A + BC → B + AC |
Single displacement |
What type of reaction is this? AB + CD → AD + CB |
Double displacement |
What type of reaction is this? H(A) + (B)OH → AB + H2O |
Neutralization |
What type of reaction is this? CxHy + O2 → CO2 + H2O |
Combustion |
What type of reaction is this? Solid bromine reacts with sodium iodide |
Single displacement |
What type of reaction is this? Heating solid iron in the presence of oxygen. |
Synthesis |
What does a higher ranking mean on the reactivity series table? |
Elements with a higher ranking can displace elements with a lower ranking |
What is atomic mass? |
The number of protons plus neutrons |
What is an average atomic mass? |
This is an average of all the different isotopes of that element found in nature. (The atomic mass on your periodic table is a decimal number because it is an average of different percentages of all the different isotopes) |
If the percent abundance of an imaginary element is 50% 1.5g/mol and 50% 2.0g/mol, then what is the average atomic mass? |
1.75 g/mol |
What is the magnitude of Avogadro's number and what does this number represent? |
6.02 × 1023 this number represents the quantity of particles (atoms, molecules, etc) found in 1.0 mol of a substance. (this number is so large that one mole of loonies would reach the Moon). |
How is the mass calculate from the amount of moles and the molecular weight? |
mass = (moles)(molecular weight) |
How would you calculate the amount of moles given the number of particles of a substance? |
Distinguish between an empirical and molecular formula. |
An empirical formula is the lowest ratio of the elements in a compound while the molecular formula shows the ratio in its true, unreduced form. |
Can the molecular formula be the same as the empirical formula? |
Yes, if the molecular formula is the same as the empirical formula. |
What two values are required to calculate the molecular formula of a compound? |
Empirical formula and the molecular weight of the compound. |
How is the Limiting Reactant calculated? |
Divide the amount of moles present by the stoichiometric coefficient. The lowest magnitude is limiting. |
What is the Limiting Reactant and the excess reactant (reagent)? |
The Limiting Reactant is the molecule that gets consumed first. Excess reactant (reagent) are left over after the reaction is complete when the limiting is used fully. |
What is the difference between actual yield and theoretical yield? |
An actual yield is determined experimentally (in a lab) while the theoretical yield is calculated with a balanced equation and stoichiometry. |
How is percent yield calculated? |
Order (Ranking) | Cation | Anion | Solubility | Exceptions |
1 (Highest) | Li+, Na+, K+, NH4+ | NO3-, ClO3-, CH3COO- | Soluble | Insoluble: Ca(ClO3)2 |
2 | Ag+, Hg2+, Pb+ | OH-, PO43-, CO32-, O2-, S2-, | Insoluble | Soluble: BaO, Ba(OH)2, and Group 2 Sulfides |
3 | Cl-, Br-, I- | Soluble | ||
4 | Ca2+, Sr2+, Ba2+ | Insoluble | ||
5 (Lowest) | Mg2+, Al3+, Fe2+, Fe3+, Cu2+, Zn2+ | SO42- | Soluble |
Mixtures | Test Tube 2 | Test Tube 4 |
Test Tube 1: | Soluble | Soluble |
Test Tube 3: | Insoluble | Insoluble |
Mixture | Compound 1 | Compound 2 |
A | HCl | HNO3 |
B | K2SO4 | H2O |
C | OH- | H2CO3 |
D | CH3COO- | NaOH |
Sample | [H+(aq)] | pH |
A | 1.0 × 10—13 | 13 |
B | 1.0 × 10—2 | 2 |
C | 1.0 × 10—8 | 8 |
D | 1.0 × 100 | 1 |
E | 1.0 × 10—5 | 5 |
Acid | Base |
2 H3PO4 | 3 Mg(OH)2 |
1 H2SO3 | 2 NaOH |
1 HCl | 1 KOH |
1 H3O+ | 3 OH- |
2 HNO2 | 1 Ba(OH)2 |
Trial: | 1 | 2 | 3 |
Initial buret reading (mL): | 42.0 | 30.4 | 19.0 |
Final buret reading (mL): | 30.4 | 19.0 | 6.9 |
Volume of HCl added: | 11.6 | 11.4 | 12.1 |
What is the difference between a homogeneous and heterogeneous mixture? |
Homogeneous mixtures are uniform/consistent throughout and the components are indistinguishable. The components of heterogeneous mixtures can be distinguished visually. |
Explain why a metal alloy is or is not a solution |
An alloy is a uniform mixture of two or more metals. It is possible to have solid solutions, liquid solutions, and gas solutions. |
What is an electrolyte? |
An electrolyte is a solution composed of dissolved (aqueous) ions that allow the solution to conduct electricity. |
Explain how the saturation point of a solution can be changed. |
By changing the temperature of the solution. (For a solid, increasing the temperature increases the saturation point while decreasing the temperature decreases the saturation point. The opposite is true for gases.) |
Explain why sugar water is or is not an electrolyte solution. |
Sugar is not an electrolyte solution because it is not ions dissolved in a solvent — electrolytes are made only of aqueous ions. Sugar is a covalent/molecular compound and does not dissolve as ions in solution. |
What are the aqueous ions formed when sulfuric acid (H2SO4) dissolves? |
H+ and SO42- |
What is the difference between dissolving and dissociation? |
Dissociation is any chemical splitting of a molecule into its smaller parts, while dissolving is the chemical splitting of a molecule due to the presence of a liquid such as water. |
Correct the following statement: Hydrogen bonding can occur whenever there are hydrogen bonds in a molecule. |
Hydrogen bonding can occur when the hydrogen is bonded to any one of three highly electronegative atoms: nitrogen, oxygen, or fluorine. The recipient of the hydrogen bond must have a partial negative dipole (like the oxygen in OH), or a negative charge like a lone pair of electrons. |
What is parts per million (PPM)? |
This is a density, calculated in several ways as either: grams particles ÷ million grams solute grams particles ÷ million mL solute grams particles ÷ thousand L solute ... |
What is molarity (M)? |
The amount of solute per in a certain volume of solution. mole/Liter |
What is the concentration of chloride ions in a 3M solution of MgCl2? |
6M |
How is volume calculated, given concentration and moles? |
How does temperature affect the solubility of a gas in water? |
The relationship is inverse. For example, the solubility of gases decreases with increasing temperature. |
Predict the solubility of any cation bonded to nitrate (NO3-) |
Soluble (nitrate is one of the most soluble ions known: any ionic compound containing nitrate is soluble in water) |
State the net ionic equation of |
(net ionic equations only include the ions that contribute to making the solid product) |
What is a spectator ion? |
Spectator ions are ions that are present on both sides of the ion equation and do not contribute to make the solid product. |
Pressure: | 101,325 Pa |
Volume: | 18,500 mL |
Temperature: | 10 ˚C |
Gas | Percentage |
N2 | 60% |
O2 | 30% |
C3H8 | 10% |
Reactant 1 | Reactant 2 | Product | Ratio |
H2 (g) | S (g) | H2S (g) | 1:1:1 |
H2 (g) | Cl2 (g) | 2HCl (g) | 1:1:2 |
2H2 (g) | O2 (g) | 2H2O (g) | 2:2:2 |
N2 (g) | 2O2 (g) | 2NO2 (g) | 1:2:2 |
N2 (g) | 3H2 (g) | 2NH3 (g) | 1:3:2 |
Reactant 1 | Reactant 2 | Product | Ratio |
2H2 (g) | O2 (g) | 2H2O (g) | 2:1:2 |
N2 (g) | + | 3H2 (g) | → | 2NH3 (g) | |
A | 2.0 g | + | 6.0 g | → | 4.0 g |
B | 1 mol | + | 3 mol | → | 2 mol |
C | 1 L | + | 3 L | → | 2 L |
D | 1 mL | + | 3 mL | → | 2 mL |
E | 100 L | + | 300 L | → | 200 L |
What is the most compressible phase? |
Gas |
Is this SATP or STP? 100 kPa and 25˚C |
SATP |
How many Pa are in a kPa? |
1,000 |
What is the standard atmospheric pressure in kPa, atm, and mmHg |
101.3kPa, 1 atm, and 760mmHg |
How does temperature affect kinetic energy of gas molecules? |
Directly proportional |
Who's law is this? |
Charles' Law |
Who's law is this? P1V1 = P2V2 |
Boyle's Law |
Who's law is this? |
Gay-Lussac's Law |
Who's law is this? |
Avogadro's Law |
Is 0K possible? |
No |
What is an ideal gas? |
An assumption that gas particles do not have volume, except for the space between particles. There are no intermolecular forces between the gas molecules. Also that the gas is at a high temperature and low pressure. |
What does Dalton's law of partial pressure mean for the volume of different gases in air? |
The volume does not depend on the type of molecule, only on the percentage amount of the total volume. |
A gas is cooled from 300˚C to 100˚C, what is the change in temperature in Kelvin? |
200K |
What is the relationship of temperature versus volume in an ideal gas? |
Linear |
What is the volume of 1 mol at STP? |
22.4L |
Hydrocarbon | Boiling Point (˚C) |
CH4 | -164 |
C3H6 | -42 |
C4H10 | -1 |
C5H12 | 36.1 |
C8H18 | 125 |
Hydrocarbon | Boiling Point (˚C) |
C4H10 | -1 |
C5H12 | 36.1 |
C8H18 | 125 |
C10H22 | 174.1 |
C14H30 | 253 |
Heat Event | Heat (J) |
Heat ice from -8˚C to 0˚C | x Joules |
Convert ice from solid to liquid at 0˚C | y Joules |
Heat water from 0˚C to 30˚C | z Joules |
What is the polarity of hydrocarbons? |
Non-polar |
How does the boiling point of a hydrocarbon compare to molecular weight? |
As molecular weight increases, boiling point increases. (directly proportional) |
What causes incomplete combustion? |
A lack of oxygen |
What is the difference between the products of complete and incomplete combustion? |
Complete combustion produces carbon dioxide, while incomplete combustion produces a mixture of carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide. |
What is the difference between heat and temperature? |
Heat describes the moving of energy from one thing to another. Temperature is a measurement of the thermal energy of something. |
What is specific heat? |
The heat (energy) required to raise the temperature of a given material by a certain amount |
What does the symbol, q represent? |
Heat (energy) |
What are the S.I. units of heat? |
Joules (J) |
What is latent heat? |
Latent heat is the heat energy (q) required to alter the molecule proximity when changing the phase of a substance. |
Can a liquid evaporate when it is below its boiling point? |
Yes |
What is the difference between evaporation and boiling? |
Evaporation can occur below the boiling point of a liquid, while boiling occurs at or above the boiling point. |
Explain the change in temperature of the system and surroundings in an endothermic process |
In an endothermic process the system absorbs energy from the surroundings. Therefore the temperature of the system increases and the temperature of the surroundings decrease. |
Compare the kinetic energy of the products and reactants in an exothermic reaction |
The kinetic energy of the products is higher than the reactants |
Compare the potential energy of the products and reactants in an endothermic reaction |
The potential energy of the reactants is higher than the products |