Introduction to chemistry Atoms and Elements Molecules and

Molecules and
Compounds
Introduction to
chemistry
100
This is the definition
of Chemistry
Atoms and Elements
100
The periodic table
was organized by this
Russian chemist.
100
A triple bond occurs
when this number of
electrons are shared
between two atoms
Study of matter
Dmitiri Mendeleev
6
200
In a lab report, this
crucial section should
be located between
the
materials/procedure
and the analysis
Observations
200
This chemist won the
nobel prize in
chemistry 100 years
ago. She also won the
nobel prize in physics
in 1903.
Marie Curie
200
This is what happens
with electrons when
a metal bonds with a
non-metal.
300
It is the name for the
lab equipment
pictured here
Volumetric flask
Electron is
transferred from
metal to non-metal
300
300
The diatomic
These are forces
elements are
within a molecule
Hydrogen, Nitrogen, such as ionic or
Bromine, Iodine,
covalent bonding.
Chorine, Fluorine and (enunciate please)
this.
oxygen
Intramolecular forces
Chemical Reactions
Moles!
100
One way to increase
the rate of a reaction
is to increase this so
the molecules move
around faster and
collide more often
temperature
100
This is the molar
mass of sodium
Organic
100
This is the name of
the compound with
the line drawing:
22.9898g/mol
3-methyl pentane
200
If a substance is in a
closed system with
high temperature and
low pressure it would
most likely be in this
state
gas
200
This is the molar
mass of aluminum
borate.
200
This is the chemical
formula for the
compound with the
name 3, 3- diethyl
hexane
85.76g/mol
C10H22
300
When aqueous
barium iodide mixes
with copper (II)
sulfate, this
precipitate forms.
300
This is the mass of
2.00 moles of
chlorine gas
300
This is the structural
diagram for Propene.
Barium sulfate
142 g
400
The six easy to
observe signs of a
chemical change are
color change, gas
produced, odour
change, solid
produced light
produced and this.
400
This is the latin name
for gold, and where it
gets its symbol Au
from
400
This is the number of
nitrogen atoms in
ammonium
ferrocyanide.
400
This term means
“Within heating” and
can be used to
describe a reaction
where an energy
term is on the
reactants side of the
balanced equation
400
This is how many
atoms are in a 2.0 g
sample of lead (II)
iodide.
400
It is the name of the
unsaturated
compound shown
below
Temp change
Aurum
10
endothermic
7.8 x 1021 atoms
2-butene
500
Melting point is an
example of this type
of property
500
This is the particle in
an atom that has the
most mass.
500
This is the name
given to the
compound with the
chemical formula:
Cu3(BO3)2
500
2.3 moles of
hydrogen gas would
take up this volume
at STP
500
This is the proper
name for 2, 4- diethyl
pentane
Physical
Neutron
Copper (II) borate
500
This is the name of
the exothermic
biochemical reaction
that occurs when
sugar combines with
oxygen.
Respiration
52 L
3, 5- dimethyl
heptane
600
This is the ability to
reproduce the same
result over and over.
This doesn’t
necessarily mean
getting the correct
result.
600
The isotope
represented below
has this many
neutrons:
19 −1
9𝐹
600
This is the name of
the compound with
the following
chemical formula:
P4O10
600
When magnesium
reacts with water, the
reaction type is this.
600
This is the percent
composition of
oxygen in water to
one decimal place.
600
This is the special
name given to the
compound shown
below
Precision
10
Single displacement
88.8%
Xylene
Tetraphosphorus
decoxide
700
If you had 350g of
gold and you added
315g of gold to it, you
would have this mass
of gold.
700
The lewis dot
structure for a
neutral iodine atom
has this number of
dots around it.
700
This is the name of
the compound with
the chemical formula:
HNO2
700
The activity series is
used to determine if
this type of reaction
will occur
370g
7
Nitrous Acid
Single displacement
68.4 M
meta
800
When converting
grams to kilograms,
you would use a
conversion factor that
looks like this.
800
This is the number of
electrons the
fundamental orbital
holds.
800
This is the molecular
and electron pair
geometry for XeH2
800
When you balance
the following
equation using whole
numbers, you end up
with this coefficient
in front of
hydrochloric acid:
800
In the reaction
between propane and
oxygen, if we want to
completely react
10.0g of propane,
what is the least
amount (volume) of
oxygen we could use
(@STP)?
800
The molecule below
contains this
funcational group
25.4 L
Carboxylic acid
____KMnO4 + ____HCl
 ____KCl +
____MnCl2 + ____H2O +
____Cl2
10-3kg
1g
14
Trigonal bipyramidal
linear
16
700
A solution would
have this
concentration if you
combine 3.42 moles
of solute with 50mL
of water.
700
The molecule shown
below is not a real
molecule, but rather a
joke that is funny
because when you
have 2 branches off of
carbon 1 and 3 on a
benzene ring, it can
be names with this
prefix
900
This is the SI unit that
milliliters would be
derived from (be
careful)
900
This is the
abbreviated electron
configuration for lead
900
These are the
intermolecular forces
involved in
hydrosulfuric acid
900
This is the word
equation for the
combination of
sodium nitrate and
potassium chloride
900
If we mix 200.0g of
silver nitrate with
200.0g of sodium
phosphate, this is
number of moles of
the limiting reagent
we have.
900
This is the name
given to the molecule
shown below
meter
[Xe]6s2,4f14,5d10,6p2
Van der waals and
london
1.177 mol AgNO3
ethanol
1000
This is the distance
light would travel in
one year if it was
travelling 3.0 x 108
m/s
1000
This is the percent
abundance of boron
11 (which has a mass
of 11.009amu) to 2
decimal places.
Boron’s other isotope
is 10B (10.013 amu)
80.10%
1000
This is the 3D
drawing of
hydrosulfuric acid
Sodium nitrate and
potassium chloride
yield no reaction
1000
This is the net ionic
equation for the
reaction that occurs
between hydrochloric
acid and sodium
hydroxide
1000
If we mix 200.0g of
silver nitrate with
200.0g of sodium
phosphate, this is the
mass of precipitate
that would form.
1000
This is the name of
the compound that
was created in our
apple pie lab to give it
the sour apple taste
H+ + OH-  H2O
164.3 g
Tartaric acid
9.5 x 1015m
Final Jeopardy:
This is the full name for the worldwide federation that determines the rules for nomenclature,
among other things.
International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry