Chemistry Unit 2

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Scandium (Sc) has _____ protons in its nucleus.

21

The atomic number for nickel (Ni) is ____________ .

28

Ion

A charged atom

Law of difinite proportions

A given chemical compound always contains its component elements in fixed ratio and does not depend on its source and method of preparation

Anion

A negatively charged ion

Cation

A positively charged ion

Isotope

Atoms of the same element that have different numbers of neutrons

Rutherford's experiment showed that most of the atom was ______ _______ .

EMPTY SPACE

True or False: 42/20 Ca The subscript always stands for the number of neutrons in the atom.

F (atomic number = # of protons)

True or False: All atoms of a given element are identical.

F (isotopes differ by mass)

True or False: Rutherford's experiments showed the location of the electron.

F (showed location of proton)

True or False: If 125 grams of reactants are used in a reaction, only 50 grams of product are expected.

False (Law of Conservation of Mass says masses should be the same)

True or False: Atoms of one element may be the same as atoms of a different element.

False (atoms of different elements are different)

True or False: The cathode rays were deflected towards a negatively charged metal plate.

False (away from)

True or False: The number of positively charged protons must equal the number of negatively charged electrons.

False (can have ions (charged atoms) where they would be different)

True or False: Electrons contribute a large amount to the atomic mass of an element.

False (electrons have little mass)

True or False: Most elements do not have isotopes.

False (most elements naturally exist as mixtures of isotopes)

True or False: None of the particles in Rutherford's experiment bounced back toward the source.

False (some did which led to his conclusions about the nucleus)

Law of Conservation of Mass

Matter is not created nor destroyed in any chemical or physical change

True or False: All atoms of the same element must have the same atomic number.

True

True or False: Atoms combine in small whole-number ratios to form compounds.

True

True or False: Atoms of different elements can combine in fractional ratios to form compounds.

True

True or False: Dalton assumed that atoms could not be broken down further.

True

True or False: In Rutherford's experiment, most of the particles passed through the gold foil.

True

True or False: Isotopes of a given element have the same number of electrons.

True

True or False: Rutherford felt that all the atom's positive charge was in the nucleus.

True

True or False: Some elements can combine to form more than one compound.

True

True or False: The neutron has approximately the same mass as the proton.

True

True or False: The number of neutrons will not always equal the number of electrons in the atom.

True

True or False: The presence of isotopes does not affect chemical reactivity for an element.

True

Rutherford's experiment used _________ to bombard the foil. a. alpha particles b. beta particles c. gamma particles d. delta particles

a. alpha particles

By the 1700s chemists had accepted the idea of a. an element b. atomic structure c. existence of electrons d. element sub-particles

a. an element

Millikan's oil drop experiment determined the mass of the a. electron b. neutron c. proton d. atomic nucleus

a. electron

Masses of individual atoms can be determined by a. mass spectrometer b. atomic balance c. mass fluorometer d. fluorescence radiation

a. mass spectrometer

The atomic number for an element indicates the number of a. protons b. neutrons c. electrons d. muons

a. protons

Chemical reactions do not involve the _________ of atoms. a. transmutation b. separation c. combination d. rearrangement

a. transmutation

The law of definite proportions means that a. all compounds have similar compositions b. all samples of the same compound have the same composition c. sample of a compound from different sources can have different compositions d. a compound might have different amounts of atoms

b. all samples of the same compound have the same composition

John Dalton proposed that all matter was composed of a. elements b. atoms c. compounds d. particles

b. atoms

Isotopes of an element differ only by a. number of electrons b. number of neutrons c. number of protons d. number of neurons + electrons

b. number of neutrons

One of the following is not a main subatomic particle a. proton b. positron c. electron d. neutron

b. positron

The nucleus of the atom is composed of a. protons and electrons b. protons and neutrons c. neutrons and electrons d. protons and positrons

b. protons and neutrons

All atoms of a specific element must have all but one of the following a. same size b. same mass c. same color d. same reactivity

b. same mass

J.J. Thomson carried out experiments with a. an X-ray tube b. a test tube c. a cathode ray tube d. a fluorescent tube

c. a cathode ray tube

An atomic mass unit is defined in relation to the ______ atom. a. hydrogen b. fluorine c. carbon d. nitrogen

c. carbon

One of the following is not true about Democritus a. he was a Greek philosopher b. he suggested that atoms were the basic units of matter c. his ideas were quickly accepted d. his approach was philosophical, not experimental

c. his ideas were quickly accepted

Complete atoms are electrically a. positive b. negative c. neutral d. complex

c. neutral

Naturally occurring carbon has _____ isotopes. a. one b. four c. three d. two

c. three

The mass number for an element is the a. total number of subatomic particles b. total number of protons and electrons c. total number of protons and neutrons b. total number of neutrons and electrons

c. total number of protons and neutrons

Carbon and oxygen can combine to form a. only one compound b. many different compounds c. two different compounds d. three different compounds

c. two different compounds

Only one of the following is an appropriate way to indicate an isotope of iodine (I) with an atomic mass of 131 a. I b. 131I c. 131-I d. I-131

d. I-131

Elements can combine to form a. other elements b. gold c. reactants d. compounds

d. compounds

Rutherford performed the _________ foil experiment to study atomic structure. a. alpha b. beta c. silver d. gold

d. gold

Dalton's atomic theory was based on all of the following except a. law of conservation of mass b. law of definite proportions c. law of multiple proportions d. law of conservation of energy

d. law of conservation of energy

The number of neutrons in an atom equals a. mass number - number of electrons b. number of protons - mass number c. number of protons d. mass number - number of protons

d. mass number - number of protons

Cathode rays were shown to be streams of __________ particles. a. positively charge particles b. electrically neutral particles c. a mixed of charged particles d. negatively charged particles

d. negatively charged particles

An atom can be classified as a particular element based on a. atomic mass b. number of neutrons c. molar mass d. number of protons

d. number of protons

J.J. Thomson developed the __________ model of the atom a. apple pie b. rice pudding c. cherry pie d. plum pudding

d. plum pudding

Chemical behavior is determined by the number of a. protons + neutrons b. protons + electrons c. neutrons + electrons d. protons alone

d. protons alone

Law of Multiple Proportions

if two or more different compounds are composed of the same two elements, then the ratio of the masses of the second element combined with a certain mass of the first element is always a ratio of small whole numbers

"Atomos" is a Greek word that means _____________ .

indivisible

Atomic Mass

the mass of an atom of a chemical element expressed in atomic mass units. It is approximately equivalent to the number of protons and neutrons in the atom (the mass number) or to the average number allowing for the relative abundances of different isotopes.

Atomic Number

the number of protons in the nucleus of an atom, which determines the chemical properties of an element and its place on the periodic table

Mass Number

the total number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus


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