Sabtu, 22 April 2017

chemical vocabulary





CHEMICAL VOCABULARY
NO
VOCABULARY
EXPLANATION
1
acid dissociation constant (Ka)
This is equal to the ratio of the concentrations of an acid's conjugate base and the acid present when a weak acid dissociates in water. That is, if you have a solution of Acid X where the concentration of the conjugate base is 0.5 M and the concentration of the acid is 10 M, the acid dissociation constant is 0.5/10 = 0.05.
2
activation energy
The minimum amount of energy needed for a chemical reaction to take place. For some reactions this is very small (it onl takes a spark to make gasoline burn). For others, it's very high (when you burnmagnesium, you need to hold it over a Bunsen burner for a minute or so).
3
Avogadro's Law
If you've got two gases under the same conditions of temperature, pressure, and volume, they've got the same number of particles (atoms or molecules). This law only works for ideal gases, none of whichactually exist.

4
calorimetry
The study of heat flow. Usually you'd do calorimetry to find the heat of combustion of a compound or the heat of reaction of two compounds.
5
chromatography
This is when you use a system containing a mobile phase (usually a liquid in general chemistry classes) and a stationary phase (something dissolved in the liquid) to separate different compounds. This is usually done by exploiting the differing polarities of solutes, though you can do it a whole slew o' ways.
6
circuit
The closed path in a circuit through which electrons flow.
7
coagulation
When you destroy a colloid by letting the particles settle out.
8

decomposition: When a big molecule falls apart to make two or more little ones.
9
degenerate
Things (usually orbitals) are said to be degenerate if they have the same energy. This term is used a whole lot in quantum mechanics. Also when dealing with kids who steal cars.
10
delocalization
This is when electrons can move around all over a molecule. This happens when you have double bonds on adjacent atoms in a molecul(conjugated hydrocarbon)
11
endothermic
When a process absorbs energy (gets cold).
12
functional group
A generic term for a group of atoms that cause a molecule to react in a specific way. It's really common to talk about this in organic chemistry, where you have "aldehydes, carboxylic acids, amines" and so on.
13
gamma ray
 High energy light given off during a nuclear process. When a nucleus gives off this light, it goes to a lower energy state, making it mor stable.
14
geometrical isomer:
isomerism where atoms or groups of atoms can take up  different positions around a double bond or a ring. This is also called cistrans-isomerism.
15
heterogeneous mixture
A mixture where the substances aren't equally
distributed.
16
homogeneous mixture:
A mixture that looks really "smooth" because
everything is mixed up really well.
17
irreversible reaction
A chemical reaction in which the reagents make products but the products can't reform reagents. Most chemical reactions in basic chemistry classes are thought of as being irreversible.
18
isotonic solutions
Solutions containing the same osmotic pressure
19
Lewis acid
An electron-pair acceptor (carbonyl groups are really good ones)
20
Lewis base:
An electron-pair donor. Things with lone pairs like water and ammonia are really good ones.
21
Lewis structure
A structural formula that shows all of the atoms and valenceelectrons in a molecule.
22
ligand
A molecule or ion that sticks to the central atom in a complex.
Common examples are ammonia, carbon monoxide, or water.
23
limiting reagent
If you do a chemical reaction and one of the chemicals gets used up before the other one, the one that got used up is called the "limiting reagent" because it limited the amount of product that could be formed. The  other one is called the excess reagent.
24
line spectrum
A spectrum showing only certain wavelengths.
25
mechanism
A step-by-step sequence that shows how the products of a reaction are made from the reagents. Mechanisms are very frequently shown during organic chemistry.
26
molality
The number of moles of solute per kilogram of solvent in a solution. This is a unit of concentration that's not anywhere near as handy or common as molarity.
27
molar mass:
The mass of one mole of particles.
28
molar volume:
The volume of one mole of a substance at STP. If you believe that everything is an ideal gas, this is always 22.4 liters. Unfortunately,there's no such thing as an ideal gas.
29
molecular compound
A compound held together by covalent bonds.
30
molecular formula
A formula that shows the correct quantity of all of the atoms in a molecule.
31
monatomic ion
An ion that has only one atom, like the chloride ion.
32
optical isomerism
Isomerism in which the isomers cause plane polarized light to rotate in different directions.
33
orbital
This is where the electrons in an atom live.
34
organic compound
A compound that contains carbon (except carbondioxide, carbon monoxide, and carbonates)
35
osmosis
The flow of a pure liquid into an area of high concentration through
a semi-permeable membrane
36
oxidation number
The apparent charge on an atom.

37
STP
See standard temperature and pressure.

38
unshared electron pair:
two electrons that aren't involved in chemical
bonding. Also frequently referred to as a "lone pair".
39
unshared electron pair
two electrons that aren't involved in  chemical bonding. Also frequently referred to as a "lone pair".
40
valence electron
The outermost electrons in an atom.
41
synthesis
When you make a big molecule from two or more smaller ones.
42
system
Everything you're talking about at the moment.
43
temperture:
A measurement of the average kinetic energy of the particles in a system

16 komentar:

  1. I just know ad acid lewis, can you give me example of acid lewis?

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. H+ + NH3 ->
      H+ Acting as acid
      BF3 + NH3 ->
      BF3 Acting as acid

      Hapus
  2. hi Munik, I'm Novi, I am confused about gamma ray. Where can we find gamma rays? Whether gamma rays can be seen by the naked eye? And how did a scientist first discover gamma rays?

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. Gamma rays emerge from unstable atomic nuclei of atoms that have conditions that are not in accordance with the condition (groundstate). Gamma rays can not be seen immediately.
      The discovery of gamma radiation begins with the discovery made by the work of Henri Becquerel, and the couple, Pierre Curie-Marie Curie in the late 1890s. They conducted experiments using active ingredients such as uranium, polonium, and radium, leading to the first discovery of radioactivity rays with very high energy levels. Before that, Rontgen had discovered X-rays and Becquerel saw the rays emitted by uranium similar to X-rays, so he called the "phosphorescence metal" rays.

      Hapus
  3. Hi munikaaa. would you give me different and example of lewis acid, lewis base, and lewis structure?

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. Is and Lewis's base. According to Lewis's acid-base theory, what is meant by Lewis acid is a compound capable of accepting pairs of electrons from other compounds, or acceptor pairs of electrons.
      Lewis structure is a diagram showing the bonds between atoms in a molecule. The Lewis structure is used to describe covalent bonding and covalent coordination bonds.

      Hapus
  4. What is the value of the constant for stp?

    BalasHapus
  5. What the meaning of reagen?

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. Reagents are chemicals that are applied to other substances to produce chemical reactions to provide valuable information about the substance.

      Hapus
  6. Give an example of a molecular compound !

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. Examples of molecular compounds:
      HCl Hydrogen chloride
      CO Carbon Monoxide
      CO2 Carbon dioxide
      N2O4 Dinitrogen Tetraoxide

      Hapus
  7. what the fungtions of calorimetry, and how to use that ?

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. A calorimeter is a tool for determining the heat of a substance. The working principle of the calorimeter is as follows: The calorimeter consists of a metal vessel of a known type, insulating wall of an insulator which serves to prevent the occurrence of heat propagation to the surrounding environment, thermometer, and stirrer. A metal vessel containing water whose temperature can initially be known from a thermometer. If an unknown material of heating type is heated, then put into the calorimeter quickly, the heat of that type can be calculated. Here is a discussion that is still associated with the heat that includes the working principle of calorimeter, how the calorimeter works, the sense calorimeter.
      Ways of working :
      1. Arrange a calorimeter tool.
      2. Fill the beaker with 50ml NaOH
      3. Fill the beaker with 50ml HCL 0,1M. Measure and cata the temperature of each solution.
      4. Pour 100ml 1M NaOH into calorimeter, followed by 100ml HCL M. Cover the calorimeter with rubber stopper and mix the solution mixture. Record the temperature of the solution mixture.

      Hapus
  8. Give me examples of coagulation and decomposition

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. Application of Coagulation in everyday life. Examples of coagulation are as be ...
      Purifying water
      The process of clogging dust or factory smoke
      Rubber processing with latex
      Establishment of delta in estuary
      The process of neutralizing the albuminoid particles in the blood by Fe3 + or Al3 + ions
      Decomposition reaction is a type of chemical reaction in which a single compound decomposes into two or more new elements or compounds. These reactions often involve energy sources such as heat, light, or electricity that divide the bonds of compounds. Decomposition reaction occurs when one reactant breaks down into two or more products. The decomposition reaction can be represented by the general equation: AB → A + B

      In this equation, AB is the starting reactant of the reaction, and A and B represent the reaction product. The arrows indicate the direction in which the reaction occurs.
      Q: What is the chemical equation for decomposition of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) water (H2O) and oxygen (O2)?

      A: the equations for the decomposition reaction are:
      2 H2O2 → 2 H2O + O2

      Hapus

A chemical learning video about the difference in the number of bonds between alkanes and alkenes

Differenrate The Number Of Bond  Between Of Alkanes And Alkenes 1. Alkanes Alkane compounds are the simplest carbon chains. Alkane...