Chemistry
12th Edition
ISBN: 9780078021510
Author: Raymond Chang Dr., Kenneth Goldsby Professor
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
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Textbook Question
Chapter 2, Problem 2.24QP
Describe the changes in properties (from metals to nonmetals or from nonmetals to metals) as we move (a) down a periodic group and (b) across the periodic table from left to right.
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(a) Calculate the number of electrons in a small, electrically neutral silver pin that has a mass of 9.0 g. Silver has 47 electrons per
atom, and its molar mass is 107.87 g/mol.
(b) Imagine adding electrons to the pin until the negative charge has the very large value 1.00 mC. How many electrons are
added for every 10 electrons already present?
v. Answer true or false.
(a) Mendeleev discovered that, when elements are arranged in
order of increasing atomic weight, certain sets of properties
recur periodically.
(b) Main-group elements are those in the columns 3A to 8A of the
Periodic Table.
(e) Nonmetals are found at the top of the Periodic Table,
metalloids in the middle, and metals at the bottom.
(d) Among the 116 known elements, there are approximately
equal numbers of metals and nonmetals.
(e) A horizontal row in the Periodic Table is called a group.
() The Group 1A elements are called the "alkali metals."
(g) The alkali metals react with water to give hydrogen gas and a
metal hydroxide, MOH, where “M" is the metal.
(h) The halogens are Group 7A elements.
(1) The boiling points of noble gases (Group 8A elements)
increase in going from top to bottom of the column.
1. Using the various group classifications from the periodic table, assign all appropriate labels to each of the following elements. Each element will have multiple (2 or more) answers.
(a) Silver
(b) Tennessine
(c) Samarium
(d) Antimony
2. Calculate the numbers of each type of nucleon and the number of electrons in each of the following species.
(a) neodymium-149
(b) tantalum-179
(c) sellenium-79 dianion
(d) krypton-85 trication
3. Write the ground-state electron configuration for the following atoms or ions. Use core notation in your electron configurations at your own discretion.
(a) As
(b) Au
(c) Ce
(d) Zn2−
(e) Po4+
4. Write an appropriate set of four quantum numbers (n, l, ms & ms) that could be representative of a valence electron in each of the following atoms or ions.
(a) Bi
(b) Sr
(c) Mo
(d) Ru2+
(e) Eu
5. In theory, there are an infinite number of energy levels and atomic orbital types that we can define using the solutions to the Schrödinger…
Chapter 2 Solutions
Chemistry
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