Chapter 6 §2 and 3 Metals and salts

Chapter 6 Metals and salts



explained on macro and micro level
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Slide 1: Tekstslide
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In deze les zitten 20 slides, met interactieve quizzen en tekstslides.

time-iconLesduur is: 45 min

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Chapter 6 Metals and salts



explained on macro and micro level

Slide 1 - Tekstslide

In which groupnumber in the PT can you find the element nickel?

Slide 2 - Open vraag

Fluorine is in groupnumber 17 in the PT.
What is the name of this group?
A
noble gases
B
halogens
C
alkali earth metals
D
metalloids

Slide 3 - Quizvraag


Which of these atoms have the same atomic number?

A
All three
B
1 and 2 only
C
1 and 3 only
D
2 and 3 only

Slide 4 - Quizvraag

Why do we call atoms 'neutral´ ?
A
because they contain the same number of electrons and neutrons
B
because they contain the same number of protons and electrons
C
because they contain the same numbers of protons and neutrons
D
because they don't contain charged particles

Slide 5 - Quizvraag

The nucleus of an atom contains 9 protons and 10 neutrons.
Which statement is correct?
A
The atomic mass is 9 g.
B
The atomic mass is 9 u.
C
The atomic mass is 19 g.
D
The atomic mass is 19 u.

Slide 6 - Quizvraag

Learning Objectives
1. You can classify substances as metals, salts and molecular based on their atomic composition.
2. You can describe metals at the macro and micro levels.
3. You can describe salts at the macro and micro level.  
4. You can explain the properties of substances on macro and micro level

Slide 7 - Tekstslide

Statement:
All substances are made of molecules
A
True
B
False
C
...what are molecules again?

Slide 8 - Quizvraag

Properties of metals (macro-level):
All metals...
  • are shiny when polished
  • can be reshaped  (at high temperatures)
  • conduct heat and electricity
  • are solid at room temperature (except mercury (Hg)
  • they have high melting and boiling points

Slide 9 - Tekstslide

Metals (at the micro-level)
  • Metals are elements (so not compounds, not molecules)
  • They consist of positively charged metal atoms (called ions) with free
      electrons moving between between them. 
  • Strong attraction (metallic bonding)
  • Electricity and heat conductivity of the metal 
      lattice follows from these free flowing electrons. 

Slide 10 - Tekstslide

Slide 11 - Tekstslide

3.1: Atomic Structure (ALL elements look like this on
The atomic number = p+

The mass number =
p+ + n0

In a neutral atom: 
p+ = e-
Atomic structure:

Slide 12 - Tekstslide

Ions vs. atoms:

Metals like to lose one or more electrons

Non metals like to take in one or more electrons

Example: 
Li --> Li+ + 1e-
F + 1e- --> F-

Text

Slide 13 - Tekstslide

Practice:
1. Draw a sodium atom (with its protons, neutrons and electrons) and
    draw a sodium ion (Na+). Sodium has a mass number of 23
2. How many protons and electrons does a magnesium ion Mg2+ contain? 
3. How many protons, neutrons and electrons are present in a 35Cl- ion?


Answer Q 2
Magnesium has atomic number 12, so the number of protons is 12.
The charge is 2+ so it has (12-2) 10 elektronen (it has given away 2 electrons)
Answer Q 3
Cl has atomic number 17
Protons = 17
Mass number = 35
Neutrons = 18
Charge is -1 so there must be (17 + 1) 18 electrons

Slide 14 - Tekstslide

Salts
Solids salts are composed of metal and non-metal
ions. 
An ion is an atom with a charge. 
Ions form when an atom is losing or gaining electrons 
(and the number of p+ is not equal to the number of e-)

Examples: 
Kitchen salt consists of Na+ and Cl- ions
Lime stone consists of  Ca2+ CO32-(carbonate) ions

Slide 15 - Tekstslide

Slide 16 - Tekstslide

Slide 17 - Tekstslide

contains a net
charge that is
not zero
contains
a net
charge
that is
not zero

Slide 18 - Tekstslide

d
d

Metals
  • Solid at room temperature (except Hg)
  • Positively charged atoms (ions)
     surrounded by moving electrons
  • Metallic bonding
  • Metallic lattice
  • Conduct electricity in their solid AND liquid state.



Salts
  • Salts are solids at room temperature
  • Consist of positive metal ions and
     negative non-metal ions
  • Ionic bonding
  • Ionic lattice
  • Conduct electricity in the liquid state (and
      in solution). NOT in the solid state
Comparison between metals and salts

Slide 19 - Tekstslide

Alloys

Slide 20 - Tekstslide