Chemistry: A Very Short Introduction
Appearance
Origins, Scope, and Organization
- Chemistry exploits quantum mechanics and thermodynamics from physics.
- Biology is merely an elaboration of chemistry.
- Chemistry can be divided into:
- Physical Chemistry - At the interface between physics and chemistry.
- Organic Chemistry - Concerned with compounds of carbon. As a result of its mild and unaggressive character, Carbon is able to form chains and rings of startling complexity., which is exactly what organisms need if they are to be regarded as being alive, and thus the compounds of carbon are the structural and reactive infrastructure of life.
- Inorganic Chemistry - Covers the rest of the elements (including carbon).
- Also can be divided into:
- Analytical Chemistry - Breaking down substances to understand what is in them.
- Biochemistry - Concerned with the structures and reactions that constitute living things.
- Industrial chemistry - Where chemist meets engineer.
Atoms and Molecules
- An atom contains a nucleus at its center which consists of two types of subatomic particles:
- Protons - Positively charged. The number of protons in the nucleus is called the atomic number of the element.
- Neutrons - Electrically neutral. About the same number as protons. Isotopes are different versions of the same element with different numbers of neutrons. Hydrogen has three isotopes:
- Hydrogen itself - one proton, no neutrons
- Deuterium - One proton, one neutron
- Tritium - One proton, two neutrons
- Electrons:
- Has the same magnitude of electric charge as a proton, but is opposite in sign.
- Are arranged in layers of clouds around the nucleus with a maximum at each successive layer of 2, 8, 18, 32
- Electrons are about 2,000 times lighter than protons and so their presence barely affects the mass of an atom.
- All chemical reactions leave nuclei intact and only impact the electrons
- The layout of the Periodic Table represents the filling out of the cloud layers of electrons, with one electron present in the layer on the left of the table and the layer completed on the right.
- Atoms are electrically neutral, with the total negative charge of all its electrons matching and cancelling the total positive charge of all the protons in the nucleus.
- Ionic bonding - When an atom gains or loses and electron, the balance of charges is upset and the atom becomes an ion (an electrically charged atom):
- A cation is an atom that has lost one or more electrons and is now positively charged. For example, Sodium (Na) lies on the left of the Periodic Table, and readily releases its single outermost electron to form a sodium cation.
- An anion is an atom that has gained one or more electrons and is now negatively charged. Chlorine (Cl) lies on the right of the table, and happily accommodates an additional electron to complete its outer layer and thereby become a chloride anion. The ions clump together, and form sodium chloride, table salt, a solid rigid mass of ions held together by their mutual attraction.
- Ionic bonding typically results in rigid, brittle solids that melt only at high temperatures. Granite and limestone, and our bones are largely ionic.
- Covalent bonding - Is where electrons are shared:
- Water is made of a covalent bond. Oxygen has six outermost electrons and can accommodate two electrons to complete its outermost cloud layer and so can link to two Hydrogen atoms
- All gases are covalent, as are just about all substances that are liquid at room temperature.
- The majority of elements are metals, and metal atoms are bound together by metallic bonding. All metals lie towards the left hand side of the Periodic Tables where the atoms of the elements have only a few electrons in their outermost cloud layers and which are readily lost.