Rabu, 26 April 2017

vocabulary



vocabulary



if you are in the class of chemistry, you will get vocabulary that you use every leasson in chemistry class or you do practicum in the lab. in here I have 40 vocabulary, read carefully and make sure that you are have remainded this 40 vocabulary.
• free radical : An atom or molecule with an unpaired electron. They're way reactive.
• 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.
• 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 more stable.
• 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 cis- trans- isomerism.
•ground state : The lowest energy state possible for an electron.
• group: A column (the things up and down) in the periodic table. Elements in the same group tend to have the same properties. These are also called  "families".
excess reagent : Sometimes when you do a chemical reaction, there's some of one reagent left over. That's called the excess reagent.
• excited state: A higher energy level that electrons can jump to when energy
is added.
•exothermic : When a process gives off energy (gets hot).
•family : The same thing as a "group" (see above)
• first law of thermodynamics : The energy of the universe is constant. It's
the same thing as the Law of conservation of energy.
• fission : A nuclear reaction where a big atom
breaks up into little ones. This is what happens in nuclear power plants.
• free energy : also called "Gibbs free energy", it's the capacity of a system to do work.
• half-life : The time required for half of the radioactive atoms in a sample to decay. When talking about chemical reactions, it's the amount of time required to make half the reagent react.
• half-reaction: The oxidation or reduction part of a redox reaction.
• halogen : The elements in group 17. They're really reactive.
•heat of reaction: The amount of heat absorbed or
released in a reaction. Also called the "enthalpy of reaction"
• heat : The kinetic energy of the particles in a system. The faster the particles  move, the higher the heat.
• Hess's Law : The enthalpy change for a change
is the same whether it takes place in one big step or in many small ones.
• heterogeneous mixture: A mixture where the substances aren't equally
distributed.
• homogeneous mixture: A mixture that looks really "smooth" because
everything is mixed up really well.
• Hund's rule: The most stable arrangement of electrons occurs when they're all unpaired.
• hybrid orbital: An orbital caused by the mixing of s, p, d, and f-orbitals.
• hydration : When a molecule has water molecules attached to it.
• hydrocarbon : A molecule containing carbon and hydrogen.
• hydrogen bond : The tendency of the hydrogen atom stuck to an electronegative atom to become attracted to the lonepair electrons on another electronegative atom. It's a pretty strong intermolecular force, which explains why water has such a high melting and boiling point.

•ideal solution : A solution in which the vapor pressure is directly proportional
to the mole fraction of solvent present
• immiscible: When two substances don't dissolve in each other. Think of oil and water.They're immiscible. Organic compounds and water are frequently immiscible.
•indicator: A compound that turns different colors at different pH values. We  generally like to have the color change at a pH of around seven because that's where the equivalence point of a titration is.
• inhibitor: A substance that slows down a chemical reaction.
• inorganic compound: Any compound that doesn't contain carbon (except for carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, and carbonates).
•hydrogenation: When hydrogen is added to a carbon-carbon multiple bond.
•hydronium ion: The H+ ion, made famous by acids.
•hydroxide ion: The OH- ion, made famous by bases.
• ideal gas law : PV=nRT
• ideal gas : A gas in which the particles are infinitely small, have a kinetic energy directly proportional to the temperature, travel in random straight lines, and don't attract or repel each other. Needless to say, there's no such thing as an ideal gas in the real world. However, we use ideal gases anyway because they make the math work out well for equations that describe how gases behave.
• insoluble: When something doesn't dissolve.
•intermediate: A molecule which exists for a short time in a chemical reaction before turning into the product.
• intermolecular force: A force that exists between two different molecules. Examples are hydrogen bonding (which is strong), dipole-dipole forces (which are kind of weak), and London dispersion forces (a.k.a. Van der Waal forces), which are very weak.
• ionic bond: A bond formed when charge particles stick together.
•ionization energy: The amount of energy required to pull an electron off of a gaseous atom.

18 komentar:

  1. What is an example for heterogeneous mixture?

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. A bowl of Fruit Loops cereal is a heterogeneous mixture because it has cereal bits of many colors floating around in milk.
      A bottle of balsamic vinaigrette salad dressing is a mixture that is heterogeneous, and has to be shaken up to make the mixture appear and taste more combined.
      Sand shaken up in a bottle of water is a heterogeneous mixture of sand particles floating around which will eventually settle to the bottom of the bottle, making it look a lot less like a mixture.
      Rocks in the sand at the beach are a heterogeneous mixture – all different shapes, sizes and colors - just thrown together at random.
      Smog is a heterogeneous mixture of various particles suspended in the air. The dirty particles that make up the smog can be removed from the air and breathed into the lungs, making smog quite a problematic heterogeneous mixture.
      Mixed nuts at a party is a type of heterogeneous mixture that can be separated simply by pouring them onto a table and sorting them into separate piles, each of the same nut.
      A puddle of mud counts as a heterogeneous mixture – dirt, leaves, grasses, animal byproducts - all blended together in water.
      Pizza is a heterogeneous mixture of dough, sauce, cheese, and other toppings

      Hapus
  2. could you explain the meaning of allotrops and give some example for me? :)

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. Allotropes are two or more forms of the same element in the same physical state (solid, liquid, or gas) that differ from each other in their physical, and sometimes chemical, properties. The most notable examples of allotropes are found in groups 14, 15, and 16 of the periodic table. Gaseous oxygen, for example, exists in three allotropic forms: monatomic oxygen (O), a diatomic molecule (O2), and in a triatomic molecule known as ozone (O3).

      Hapus
  3. and what the meaning of emition?

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. are you sure the spelling is "emition"?

      Hapus
  4. Could you give me more explain with the sentence from your vocabulary?

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. Chemists need to know which reactant will run out first, because that information allows them to deduce how much product and excess reagent they can expect, based on how much of the limiting reagent they’ve put into the reaction.

      Hapus
  5. Why the ideal gas law is PV=nRT? and than, Could you give me some example about this?

    Thank you miss Niso ^^

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. its depend on BOYLE LAW, CHARLES LAW, GAY-LUSSAC LAW

      Hapus
  6. Can you explain about gamma rays with effective and easy to understand example?

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. Gamma-rays have the smallest wavelengths and the most energy of any other wave in the electromagnetic spectrum. These waves are generated by radioactive atoms and in nuclear explosions. Gamma-rays can kill living cells, a fact which medicine uses to its advantage, using gamma-rays to kill cancerous cells.

      Gamma-rays travel to us across vast distances of the universe, only to be absorbed by the Earth's atmosphere. Different wavelengths of light penetrate the Earth's atmosphere to different depths. Instruments aboard high-altitude balloons and satellites like the Compton Observatory provide our only view of the gamma-ray sky.

      Hapus
  7. Balasan
    1. a thermodynamic quantity equal to the enthalpy (of a system or process) minus the product of the entropy and the absolute temperature

      Hapus
  8. Balasan
    1. the atomic orbitals for bonding may not be "pure" atomic orbitals directly from the solution of the Schrodinger Equation. Often, the bonding atomic orbitals have a character of several possible types of orbitals. The methods to get an AO with the proper character for the bonding is called hybridization. The resulting atomic orbitals are called hybridized atomic orbitals or simply hybrid orbitals.

      Hapus
  9. Give examples for hydrogen bonds?

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. The most ubiquitous and perhaps simplest example of a hydrogen bond is found between water molecules. In a discrete water molecule, there are two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom.

      Hapus

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