Elements, Compounds & Mixtures

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2.1.

1 Elements, Compounds & Mixtures


Elements, Compounds & Mixtures
Elements, compounds and mixtures

 All substances can be classified into one of these three types

Element

 A substance made of atoms that all contain the same number of protons and cannot be split into
anything simpler
 There are 118 elements found in the Periodic Table

Compound

 A pure substance made up of two or more elements chemically combined


 There is an unlimited number of compounds
 Compounds cannot be separated into their elements by physical means
 E.g. copper(II) sulfate (CuSO4), calcium carbonate (CaCO3), carbon dioxide (CO2)

Mixture

 A combination of two or more substances (elements and/or compounds) that are not chemically


combined
 Mixtures can be separated by physical methods such as filtration or evaporation
 E.g. sand and water, oil and water, sulfur powder and iron filings 

Particle
diagram showing elements, compounds and mixtures 
2.1.2 Atomic Structure
Atomic Structure

 All substances are made of tiny particles of matter called atoms which are the building blocks of all
matter
 Each atom is made of subatomic particles called protons, neutrons, and electrons
 The protons and neutrons are located at the centre of the atom, which is called the nucleus
 The electrons move very fast around the nucleus in orbital paths called shells
 The mass of the electron is negligible, hence the mass of an atom is contained within the nucleus
where the protons and neutrons are located

The structure of the carbon atom

Protons, Neutrons & Electrons

 The size of atoms is so tiny that we can't really compare their masses in conventional units such as
kilograms or grams, so a unit called the relative atomic mass is used
 One relative atomic mass unit is equal to 1/12th the mass of a carbon-12 atom.
 All other elements are measured relative to the mass of a carbon-12 atom, so relative atomic mass
has no units 
 Hydrogen for example has a relative atomic mass of 1, meaning that 12 atoms of hydrogen would
have exactly the same mass as 1 atom of carbon
 The relative mass and charge of the sub-atomic particles are shown below:

  Table of Subatomic Particles


Exam Tip
Knowing the exact mass of an electron is not in the specification and saying it is almost nothing or
negligible will be sufficient. It does, however, sometimes appear in particle identification questions,
but you can usually deduce that it is the electrons from other information in the question.

Defining Proton Number

 The atomic number (or proton number) is the number of protons in the nucleus of an atom


 The symbol for atomic number is Z
 It is also the number of electrons present in a neutral atom and determines the position of the
element on the Periodic Table

Defining Mass Number

 The Nucleon number (or mass number) is the total number of protons and neutrons in the


nucleus of an atom
 The symbol for nucleon number is A
 The nucleon number minus the proton number gives you the number of neutrons of an atom
 Note that protons and neutrons can collectively be called nucleons.
 The atomic number and mass number of an element can be shown using atomic notation
 The Periodic Table shows the elements together with their atomic (proton) number at the top and
relative atomic mass at the bottom - there is a difference between relative atomic mass and mass
number, but for your exam, you can use the relative atomic mass as the mass number (with the
exception of chlorine)
Diagram showing atomic notation

Atomic notation for carbon

Exam Tip
Both the atomic number and the relative atomic number (which you can use as the mass number)
are given on the Periodic Table but it can be easy to confuse them.  Think MASS = MASSIVE, as
the mass number is always the bigger of the two numbers, the other smaller one is thus the
atomic / proton number. Beware that some Periodic Tables show the numbers the other way
round with the atomic number at the bottom!

Deducing protons, neutrons & electrons


Finding the protons

 The atomic number of an atom and ion determines which element it is


 Therefore, all atoms and ions of the same element have the same number of protons (atomic
number) in the nucleus
o E.g. lithium has an atomic number of 3 (three protons) whereas beryllium has atomic number
of 4 (4 protons)
 The number of protons equals the atomic (proton) number
 The number of protons of an unknown element can be calculated by using its mass number and
number of neutrons:

Mass number = number of protons + number of neutrons

Number of protons = mass number – number of neutrons

Finding the electrons

 An atom is neutral and therefore has the same number of protons and electrons

Finding the neutrons

 The mass and atomic numbers can be used to find the number of neutrons in ions and atoms:

Number of neutrons = mass number – number of protons

Worked Example
Determine the number of protons, electrons and neutrons in an atom of element X with atomic
number 29 and mass number 63

Answer:

 The number of protons of element X is the same as the atomic number

Number of protons = 29

 The neutral atom of element X  therefore also has 29 electrons


 The atomic number of an element X atom is 29 and its mass number is 63

Number of neutrons = mass number – number of protons 

Number of neutrons = 63 – 29

Number of neutrons = 34
2.1.3 Electronic Configuration
Electronic Configuration
Electronic configuration

 We can represent the structure of the atom in two ways: using diagrams
called electron shell diagrams or by writing out a special notation called
the electronic configuration (or electronic structure or electron distribution)

Electron shell diagrams

 Electrons orbit the nucleus in shells (or energy levels) and each shell has a different amount of
energy associated with it
 The further away from the nucleus, the more energy a shell has
 Electrons fill the shell closest to the nucleus 
 When a shell becomes full of electrons, additional electrons have to be added to the next shell
 The first shell can hold 2 electrons
 The second shell can hold 8 electrons 
 For this course, a simplified model is used that suggests that the third shell can hold 8 electrons
o For the first 20 elements, once the third shell has 8 electrons, the fourth shell begins to fill
 The outermost shell of an atom is called the valence shell and an atom is much more stable if it can
manage to completely fill this shell with electrons 

A simplified model showing the electron shells

 The arrangement of electrons in shells can also be explained using numbers


 Instead of drawing electron shell diagrams, the number of electrons in each electron shell can be
written down, separated by commas
 This notation is called the electronic configuration (or electronic structure)
o E.g. Carbon has 6 electrons, 2 in the 1st shell and 4 in the 2nd shell
 Its electronic configuration is 2,4
 Electronic configurations can also be written for ions
o E.g. A sodium atom has 11 electrons, a sodium ion has lost one electron, therefore has 10
electrons; 2 in the first shell and 8 in the 2nd shell
 Its electronic configuration is 2,8

The Electronic Configuration of the First Twenty Elements


Note: although the third shell can hold up to 18 electrons, the filling of the shells follows a more
complicated pattern after potassium and calcium. For these two elements, the third shell holds 8
and the remaining electrons (for reasons of stability) occupy the fourth shell first before filling the
third shell.

Exam Tip
You need to be able to write the electronic configuration of the first twenty elements and their
ions. You may see electronic configurations using full stops or '+' signs instead of commas. You
would not be penalised for using full stops.

Electron Shells & The Periodic Table

 There is a clear relationship between the electronic configuration and how the Periodic Table is
designed
 The number of notations in the electronic configuration will show the number of occupied shells of
electrons the atom has, showing the period in which that element is in
 The last notation shows the number of outer electrons the atom has, showing the group that
element is in (for elements in Groups I to VII)
 Elements in the same group have the same number of outer shell electrons 

The electronic configuration for chlorine

Period: The red numbers at the bottom show the number of notations which is 3, showing that a
chlorine atom has 3 occupied shells of electrons and is in Period 3
Group: The final notation, which is 7 in the example, shows that a chlorine atom has 7 outer
electrons and is in Group VII

The position of chlorine on the Periodic Table

 In most atoms, the outermost shell is not full and therefore these atoms react with other atoms in
order to achieve a full outer shell of electrons (which would make them more stable)
 In some cases, atoms lose electrons to entirely empty this shell so that the next shell below becomes
a (full) outer shell
 All elements wish to fill their outer shells with electrons as this is a much more stable configuration

The noble gases

 The atoms of the Group VIII elements (the noble gases) all have a full outer shell of electrons
 All of the noble gases are unreactive as they have full outer shells and are thus very stable
The noble gases are on the Periodic Table in Group 8/0

2.1.4 Isotopes
Defining Isotopes

 Isotopes are different atoms of the same element that contain the same number of protons but a
different number of neutrons
 The symbol for an isotope is the chemical symbol (or word) followed by a dash and then the mass
number
 So C-14 ( or carbon-14) is the isotope of carbon which contains 6 protons, 6 electrons and 14 - 6 = 8
neutrons

o It can also be written as 14C or 

The Atomic Structure and Symbols of the Three Isotopes of Hydrogen


 
Why Isotopes Share Properties
EXTENDED

 Isotopes of the same element display the same chemical characteristics


 This is because they have the same number of electrons in their outer shells and, therefore, the same
electronic configuration and this is what determines an atom's chemistry
 The difference between isotopes is the number of neutrons which are neutral particles within the
nucleus and add mass only
 The difference in mass affects the physical properties, such as density, boiling point and melting
point
 Isotopes are identical in appearance, so a sample of C-14 would look no different from C-12
 Water made from deuterium oxide is known as 'heavy' water, and has a relative formula of mass 20,
compared to 18 for water, so it is 20% heavier, but it would look, taste and feel just like normal
water
o However, it wouldn't be a good idea to drink it because it is toxic as it interferes with
biochemical reactions in your cells!

Calculating Relative Atomic Mass


EXTENDED
Relative Atomic Mass

 The symbol for the relative atomic mass is Ar


 The relative atomic mass for each element can be found in the Periodic Table along with the atomic
number
 The atomic number is shown above the atomic symbol and the relative atomic mass is shown below
the atomic symbol
 Atoms are too small to accurately weigh but scientists needed a way to compare the masses of
atoms 
 The carbon-12 is used as the standard atom and has a fixed mass of 12 units 
 It is against this atom which the masses of all other atoms are compared 
 Relative atomic mass (Ar)  can therefore be defined as:
o the average mass of the isotopes of an element compared to 1/12th of the mass of an
atom of 12C 

 The relative atomic mass of carbon is 12


o The relative atomic mass of magnesium is 24 which means that magnesium is twice as heavy
as carbon 
o The relative atomic mass of hydrogen is 1 which means it has one-twelfth the mass of one
carbon-12 atom 
 The relative atomic mass of an element can be calculated from the mass number and relative
abundances of all the isotopes of a particular element using the following equation:

 The top line of the equation can be extended to include the number of different isotopes of a
particular element present.

Example

The table shows information about the isotopes in a sample of rubidium


   

Is mass number and relative atomic mass the same thing?

 On the Periodic Table provided in your exam you will see that lithium has a relative atomic mass of 7
 Although it seems that this is the same as the mass number, they are not the same thing because
the relative atomic mass is a rounded number
 Relative atomic mass takes into account the existence of isotopes when calculating the mass
 Relative atomic mass is an average mass of all the isotopes of that element
 For simplicity relative atomic masses are often shown to the nearest whole number

The relative atomic mass of lithium to two decimal places is 6.94 when rounded to the
nearest whole number, the RAM is 7, which is the same as the mass number shown on this
isotope of lithium
2.2.1 Ions & Ionic Bonds
The Formation of Ions

 An ion is an electrically charged atom or group of atoms formed by the loss or gain of electrons


 An atom will lose or gain electrons to become more stable
 The loss or gain of electrons takes place to gain a full outer shell of electrons which is a more
stable arrangement of electrons
 The electronic configuration of an ion will be the same as that of a noble gas – such as helium, neon
and argon

Formation of positively charged sodium ion

  
Formation of negatively charged chloride ion

 Ionisation of metals and non-metals

 Metals: all metals can lose electrons to other atoms to become positively charged ions, known
as cations
 Non-metals: all non-metals can gain electrons from other atoms to become negatively charged
ions, known as anions

The Formation of Ionic Bonds

 Ionic compounds are formed when metal atoms react with non-metal atoms
 Metal atoms lose their outer electrons which the non-metal atoms gain to form positive and
negative ions
 The positive and negative ions are held together by strong electrostatic forces
of attraction between opposite charges
 This force of attraction is known as an ionic bond and they hold ionic compounds together

 
Dot-and-cross diagrams

 Dot and cross diagrams are diagrams that show the arrangement of the outer-shell electrons in
an ionic or covalent compound or element
o The electrons are shown as dots and crosses
 In a dot and cross diagram:
o Only the outer electrons are shown
o The charge of the ion is spread evenly which is shown by using brackets
o The charge on each ion is written at the top right-hand corner

Electrostatic forces between the positive Na ion and negative Cl ion

Ionic Bonds between Group I & Group VII Elements


Example:  Sodium Chloride, NaCl
Sodium chloride ionic bonding

 Explanation

 Sodium is a Group I metal so will lose one outer electron to another atom to gain a full outer shell of
electrons
 A positive sodium ion with the charge 1+ is formed
 Chlorine is a Group VII non-metal so will need to gain an electron to have a full outer shell of
electrons
 One electron will be transferred from the outer shell of the sodium atom to the outer shell of the
chlorine atom
 A chlorine atom will gain an electron to form a negatively charged chloride ion with a charge of 1-
 The oppositely charged ions are held together by strong electrostatic forces of attraction
 The ionic compound has no overall charge

Formula of ionic compound:    NaCl

2.2.2 Ionic Bonds & Lattice Structure


The Lattice Structure of Ionic Compounds
EXTENDED
Lattice structure

 Ionic compounds have a giant lattice structure


 Lattice structure refers to the arrangement of the atoms of a substance in 3D space
 In lattice structures, the atoms are arranged in an ordered and repeating fashion
 The lattices formed by ionic compounds consist of a regular arrangement of alternating positive
and negative ions

 The lattice structure of NaCl


Ionic Bonds between Metallic & Non-Metallic Elements
EXTENDED
Ionic compounds

 Ionic compounds are formed when metal atoms and non-metal atoms react
 The ionic compound has no overall charge

Example:  Magnesium Oxide, MgO

Diagram showing the dot-and-cross diagram of magnesium oxide

 Explanation

 Magnesium is a Group II metal so will lose two outer electrons to another atom to have a full outer
shell of electrons
 A positive ion with the charge 2+ is formed
 Oxygen is a Group VI non-metal so will need to gain two electrons to have a full outer shell of
electrons
 Two electrons will be transferred from the outer shell of the magnesium atom to the outer shell of
the oxygen atom
 Oxygen atom will gain two electrons to form a negative ion with charge 2-
 Magnesium oxide has no overall charge

Formula of ionic compound:    MgO

Exam Tip
When drawing dot and cross diagrams, you only need to show the outer shell of electrons.
Remember to draw square brackets and include a charge for each ion. Make sure the overall
charge is 0; you may need to include more than one positive or negative ion to ensure the positive
and negative charges cancel each other out.
2.2.3 Properties of Ionic Compounds
Properties of Ionic Compounds

 Ionic compounds are usually solid at room temperature 


 They have high melting and boiling points
 Ionic compounds are good conductors of electricity in the molten state or in solution 
 They are poor conductors in the solid state

Explaining the Properties of Ionic Compounds


EXTENDED

 Ionic substances have high melting and boiling points due to the presence of strong electrostatic
forces acting between the oppositely charged ions
 These forces act in all directions and a lot of energy is required to overcome them
 The greater the charge on the ions, the stronger the electrostatic forces and the higher the melting
point will be
o For example, magnesium oxide consists of Mg2+ and O2- so will have a higher melting point
than sodium chloride which contains the ions, Na+ and Cl-

 For electrical current to flow there must be freely moving charged particles such as electrons or ions
present 
 Ionic compounds are good conductors of electricity in the molten state or in solution as they have
ions that can move and carry a charge
 They are poor conductors in the solid state as the ions are in fixed positions within the lattice and
are unable to move

Molten or aqueous ions move freely but cannot in solid form


2.3.1 Covalent Bonds
The Formation of Covalent Bonds
Covalent compounds

 Covalent compounds are formed when pairs of electrons are shared between atoms


 Only non-metal elements participate in covalent bonding
 As in ionic bonding, each atom gains a full outer shell of electrons, giving them a noble gas
electronic configuration
 When two or more atoms are covalently bonded together, we describe them as ‘molecules’
 Dot-and-cross diagrams can be used to show the electric configurations in simple molecules
 Electrons from one atom are represented by a dot, and the electrons of the other atom are
represented by a cross
 The electron shells of each atom in the molecule overlap and the shared electrons are shown in the
area of overlap
 The dot-and-cross diagram of the molecule shows clearly which atom each electron originated from
 

Diagram showing how a covalent bond forms between two chlorine atoms

Exam Tip
When drawing dot-and-cross diagrams for covalent compounds, make sure that the electron shell
for each atom is full (remember that the 1st shell can only hold 2 electrons).

Single Covalent Bonds

 Many simple molecules exist in which two adjacent atoms share one pair of electrons, also known as
a single covalent bond (or single bond)
Common Examples of Simple Molecules
Hydrogen:

  Chlorine:

 Water:

Methane:
Ammonia:

Hydrogen chloride:
2.3.2 Molecules & Compounds
Covalent Bonds in Complex Covalent Molecules
EXTENDED

 Some atoms need to share more than one pair of electrons to gain a full outer shell of electrons
 If two adjacent atoms share two pairs of electrons, two covalent bonds are formed, also known as
a double bond
 If two adjacent atoms share three pairs of electrons, three covalent bonds are formed, also known as
a triple bond

Nitrogen:

 When 2 nitrogen atoms react they share 3 pairs of electrons to form a triple bond

Ethene:

 In ethene, the 2 carbon atoms share 2 pairs of electrons


 This is known as a double bond
Methanol:

Carbon Dioxide:
Exam Tip
Be careful when drawing dot-and-cross diagrams, it is a common mistake for students to draw the
wrong type of diagram. Remember, if the compound contains metal and non-metal, it is
an ionic compound and you need to draw the ions separated, with square brackets around each
ion, together with a charge. If the compound contains non-metal atoms only, it is
a covalent compound, the shells should overlap and contain one or more pairs of electrons.

2.3.3 Properties of Simple Molecular Compounds


Properties of Simple Molecular Compounds

 Small molecules are compounds made up of molecules that contain just a few atoms covalently
bonded together
 They have low melting and boiling points so covalent compounds are usually liquids or gases at
room temperature
 As the molecules increase in size, the melting and boiling points generally increase
 Small molecules have poor electrical conductivity

Explaining the Properties of Simple Molecular Compounds


EXTENDED

 Small molecules have covalent bonds joining the atoms together, but intermolecular forces that act
between neighbouring molecules
 They have low melting and boiling points as there are only weak intermolecular forces
acting between the molecules
 These forces are very weak when compared to the covalent bonds and so most small molecules are
either gases or liquids at room temperature
 As the molecules increase in size the intermolecular forces also increase as there are more electrons
available
 This causes the melting and boiling points to increase
The bonds between hydrogen and oxygen in water are COVALENT, and the attractions
between the molecules are INTERMOLECULAR FORCES which are about one tenth as strong
as covalent bonds

Exam Tip
The atoms within covalent molecules are held together by covalent bonds while the molecules in a
covalent substance are attracted to each other by intermolecular forces.

Electrical Conductivity
Molecular compounds are poor conductors of electricity as there are no free ions or electrons to
carry the charge.

 Most covalent compounds do not conduct at all in the solid state and are thus insulators
 Common insulators include the plastic coating around household electrical wiring, rubber and wood
The plastic coating around electrical wires is made from covalent molecules that do not
allow a flow of charge

2.4.1 Diamond & Graphite


Structure of Graphite & Diamond

 Diamond and graphite are allotropes of carbon which have giant covalent structures


 Both substances contain only carbon atoms but due to the differences in bonding arrangements
they are physically completely different
 Giant covalent structures contain billions of non-metal atoms, each joined to adjacent atoms by
covalent bonds forming a giant lattice structure

Diamond

 In diamond, each carbon atom bonds with four other carbons, forming a tetrahedron
 All the covalent bonds are identical, very strong and there are no intermolecular forces

Diagram showing the structure and bonding arrangement in diamond


Graphite

 Each carbon atom in graphite is bonded to three others forming layers of hexagons, leaving one


free electron per carbon atom which becomes delocalised
 The covalent bonds within the layers are very strong, but the layers are attracted to each other by
weak intermolecular forces

The structure and bonding in graphite

Uses of Graphite & Diamond


Properties of Diamond

 Diamond has the following physical properties:


o It does not conduct electricity
o It has a very high melting point
o It is extremely hard and dense
 All the outer shell electrons in carbon are held in the four covalent bonds around each carbon atom,
so there are no freely moving charged particles to carry the current thus it cannot conduct electricity
 The four covalent bonds are very strong and extend in a giant lattice, so a very large amount of heat
energy is needed to break the lattice thus it has a very high melting point
 Diamond ś hardness makes it very useful for purposes where extremely tough material is required
 Diamond is used in jewellery due to its sparkly appearance and as cutting tools as it is such a hard
material
 The cutting edges of discs used to cut bricks and concrete are tipped with diamonds
 Heavy-duty drill bits and tooling equipment are also diamond-tipped

Exam Tip
Diamond is the hardest naturally occurring mineral, but it is by no means the strongest. Students
often confuse hard with strong, thinking it is the opposites of weak. Diamonds are hard, but
brittle – that is, they can be smashed fairly easily with a hammer. The opposite of saying a material
is hard is to describe it as soft.

Properties of Graphite

 Each carbon atom is bonded to three others forming layers of hexagonal-shaped forms, leaving


one free electron per carbon atom
 These free (delocalised) electrons exist in between the layers and are free to move through the
structure and carry charge, hence graphite can conduct electricity
 The covalent bonds within the layers are very strong but the layers are connected to each other
by weak forces only, hence the layers can slide over each other making
graphite slippery and smooth
 Graphite thus:
o Conducts electricity
o Has a very high melting point
o Is soft and slippery, less dense than diamond 
 Graphite is used in pencils and as an industrial lubricant, in engines and in locks
 It is also used to make non-reactive electrodes for electrolysis

Exam Tip
Don’t confuse pencil lead with the metal lead – they have nothing in common. Pencil lead is
actually graphite, and historical research suggests that in the past, lead miners sometimes
confused the mineral galena (lead sulfide) with graphite; since the two looked similar they termed
both minerals ‘lead’. The word graphite derives from the Latin word ‘grapho’ meaning ‘I write’, so it
is a well named mineral!
2.4.2 Silicon(IV) Oxide
Structure of Silicon(IV) Oxide
EXTENDED

 Silicon(IV) oxide (also known as silicon dioxide or silica), SiO 2, is a macromolecular compound which
occurs naturally as sand and quartz
 Each oxygen atom forms covalent bonds with 2 silicon atoms and each silicon atom in turn forms
covalent bonds with 4 oxygen atoms
 A tetrahedron is formed with one silicon atom and four oxygen atoms, similar to diamond 

Diagram showing the structure of SiO2  with the silicon atoms in blue and the oxygen atoms
in red

Comparing Diamond & Silicon(IV) Oxide


EXTENDED

 SiO2 has lots of very strong covalent bonds and no intermolecular forces so it has similar properties
to diamond
 It is very hard, has a very high boiling point, is insoluble in water and does not conduct electricity
 SiO2 is cheap since it is available naturally and is used to make sandpaper and to line the inside of
furnaces

2.4.3 Metallic Bonding


Metallic Bonding
EXTENDED

 Metal atoms are held together strongly by metallic bonding in a giant metallic lattice
 Within the metallic lattice, the atoms lose the electrons from their outer shell and become positively
charged ions
 The outer electrons no longer belong to a particular metal atom and are said to be delocalised
 They move freely between the positive metal ions like a 'sea of electrons'
 Metallic bonds are strong and are a result of the attraction between the positive metal ions and the
negatively charged delocalised electrons

Diagram showing metallic lattice structure with delocalised electrons


Properties of Metals
EXTENDED

 Metals have high melting and boiling points


o There are many strong metallic bonds in giant metallic structures between the positive
metal ion and delocalised electrons
o A lot of heat energy is needed to break these bonds

 Metals conduct electricity
o There are free electrons available to move through the structure and carry charge
o Electrons entering one end of the metal cause a delocalised electron to displace itself from
the other end
o Hence electrons can flow so electricity is conducted

 Metals are malleable and ductile
o Layers of positive ions can slide over one another and take up different positions
o Metallic bonding is not disrupted as the outer electrons do not belong to any particular
metal atom so the delocalised electrons will move with them
o Metallic bonds are thus not broken and as a result metals are strong but flexible
o They can be hammered and bent into different shapes or drawn into wires without breaking

Exam Tip
When explaining why metals can conduct electricity, be careful of the terminology you use. Don't
get confused with ionic compounds. Metals can conduct electricity as they have
free electrons that can carry charge whereas molten or aqueous ionic compounds can conduct
electricity because they have free ions that can carry charge.

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