Quick Review For SST interview
Compiled By AGB
CHEMISTRY One Liner:
absolute temperature: This is a temperature reading made relative
to absolute zero. We use the unit of Kelvins for these readings.
absolute zero: This is the lowest temperature possible. If you remember
that temperature is a measurement of how much atoms move around in a
solid,
you can guess that they stop moving entirely at absolute zero. In reality,
bonds still vibrate a little bit, but for the most part you don't see much
happening.
a c c u r a c y : When you measure something, the accuracy is how close your
measured value is to the real value. For example, if you're actually six feet tall
and your brother measures your height as six feet, one inch, he's pretty
accurate. However, if your cousin measures your height as twelve feet, 13
inches, he's not accurate at all.
acid: This is anything that gives off H+ ions in water. Acids have a pH
less than 7 and are good at dissolving metals. They turn litmus paper red
and phenolphthalein colorless.
acid anhydride: This is an oxide that forms an acid when you stick it in
water. An example is SO3 - when you add water it turns into sulfuric acid,
H 2SO4 .
acid dissociation constant (K a ): 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.
activated complex: In a chemical reaction, the reagents have to join together
into a great big blob before they can fallback apart into the products. This
great big blob is called the activated complex (a.k.a. transition state)
activation energy: The minimum amount of energy needed for a
chemical reaction to take place. For some reactions this is very small (it
only takes a spark to make gasoline burn). For others, it's very high (when
you burn
magnesium, you need to hold it over a Bunsen burner for a minute or so).
activity series: This is when you arrange elements in the order of how
much they tend to react with water and acids.
actual yield: When you do a chemical reaction, this is the amount of
chemical that you actually make (i.e. The amount of stuff you can weigh).
addition reaction: A reaction where atoms add to a carbon-carbon
multiple bond.
a d s o r p t i o n : When one substance collects of the surface of another one.
a l c o h o l : An organic molecule containing an -OH group
a l d e h y d e : An organic molecule containing a -COH group
alkali metals: Group I in the periodic table.
alkaline earth metals: Group II in the periodic table.
alkane: An organic molecule which contains only single carbon-
carbon bonds.
a l k e n e : An or ganic m olecule cont aining at leas t one C=C bond
alkyne: An organic molecule containing atleast one C-C triple bond.
allotropes: When you have different forms of an element in the same
state. The relationship that white phosphorus and red phosphorus have to
each
other is that they're allotropes.
alloy: A mixture of two metals. Usually, you add very small amounts of
a different element to make the metal stronger and harder.
alpha particle: A radioactive particle equivalent to a helium nucleus
(2 protons, 2 neutrons)
amine: An organic molecule which consists of an ammonia molecule
where one or more of the hydrogen atoms has been replaced by organic
groups.
amino acid: The basic building blocks of proteins. They're called
"amino acids" because they're both amines (they contain nitrogen) and
acids
(carboxylic acids, to be precise)
amphiprotic: When something is both an acid and a base. Like amino acids,
for example.
amphoteric: When something is both an acid and a base. Sounds familiar,
huh?
anode: The electrode where oxidation occurs. In other words, this is
where electrons are lost by a substance.
a q u e o u s : dissolved in water
atomic mass unit (a.m.u.): This is the smallest unit of mass we use in
chemistry, and is equivalent to 1/12 the mass of carbon-12. To all intents
and purposes, protons and neutrons weigh 1 a.m.u.
at om ic r adius : This is one half the distance between two bonded nuclei.
Why don't we just measure the distance from the nucleus to the outside of
the atom - after all, isn't that the same thing as a radius? It is, but atoms are
also (theoretically) infinitely large (due to quantum mechanics),making this
impossible to measure.
atomic solid: A solid where there's a bunch of atoms in the lattice. This
is different from an ionic solid, where ions are the things that are sticking
together.
Aufbau principle: When you add protons to the nucleus to build up the
elements, electrons are added into orbitals.
A v o g a d r o 's L a w : 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 which
actually exist.
base anhydride: An oxide that forms a base when water is added. CaO is an
example, turning into calcium hydroxide in water.
base: A compound that gives off OH- ions in water. They are slippery
and bitter and have a pH greater than 7.
battery: This is when a bunch of voltaic cells are stuck together.
beta particle: A radioactive particle equivalent to an electron.
bidentate ligand : A ligand that can attach twice to a metal ion.
b i n a r y c o m p o u n d : A com po und only having two elements
binding energy: The amount of energy that holds the neutrons and protons
together in the nucleus of an atom. It's a lot of energy, which is why you don't
see nuclei falling apart all over the place.
b o n d e n e r g y : The amount of energy it takes to break one mole of bonds.
bond length: The average distance between the nuclei of two bonded atoms.
Boyle's Law: The volume of a gas at constant temperature varies
inversely with pressure. In other words, if you put big pressure on
something, it gets small.
B r o n s t e d - L o w r y a c i d : Acids donate protons [H+ ions] and bases grab them
buffer: A liquid that resists change in pH by the addition of acid or base.
It consists of a weak acid and it's conjugate base (acetic acid and sodium
acetate, for example).
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.
carboxylic acid: An organic molecule with a -COOH group on it. Acetic acid
is the most famous one.
catalyst: A substance that speeds up a chemical reaction without being
used up by the reaction. Enzymes are catalysts because they allow the
reactions that take place in the body to occur fast enough that we can live.
cathode: The electrode in which reduction occurs. Reduction is when
a compound gains electrons.
chain reaction: A reaction in which the products from one step provide
the reagents for the next one. This is frequently referred to in nuclear
fission
(when large nuclei break apart to form smaller ones) and in free-radical
reactions.
Char les 's L aw: The volume of a gas at constant pressure is directly
proportional to the temperature. In other words, if you heat something up,
it gets big.
chemical equation: The recipe that describes what you need to do to make a
reaction take place.
chem ical pr oper t ies : Properties that can only be described by making a
chemical change (by making or breaking bonds). For example, color isn't a
chemical property because you don't need to change something chemically
to see what color it is. Flammability, on the other hand, is a chemical property,
because you can't tell if something burns unless you actually try to burn it.
c h i r a l i t y : When a molecule has a nonsuperimposable mirror image. To
imagine this, put your hands together. Although they are mirror images, you
can't put them right on top of each other so they are interchangeable. Well,
normal people can't, anyway.
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.
circuit: The closed path in a circuit through which electrons flow.
coagulation: When you destroy a colloid by letting the particles settle out.
colligative property: Any property of a solution that changes when the
concentration changes. Examples are color, flavor, boiling point, melting
point, and osmotic pressure.
colloid: It's a suspension.
combustion: When a compound combines with oxygen gas to form water,
heat, and carbon dioxide
common ion effect: When the equilibrium position of a process is altered
by adding another compound containing one of the same ions that's in the
equilibrium.
complex ion: An ion in which a central atom (usually a transition metal) is
surrounded by a bunch of molecules like water or ammonia (called "ligands")
concentration: A measurement of the amount of stuff (solute) dissolved in
a liquid (solvent). The most common concentration unit is molarity
(M),which is equal to the number of moles of solute divided by the number of
liters of
solution.
condensation: When a vapor reforms a liquid. This is what happens on your
bathroom mirror when you take a shower.
conductance: A measurement of how well electricity can flow through
an object.
conjugate acid: The compound formed when a base gains a
proton (hydrogen atom).
conjugate base: The compound formed when an acid loses a
proton (hydrogen atom).
continuous spectrum: A spectrum that gives offall the colors of light, like
a rainbow. This is caused by blackbody emission.
covalent bond: A chemical bond formed when two atoms share
two electrons.
critical mass: The minimum amount of radioactive material needed
to undergo a nuclear chain reaction.
critical point: The endpoint of the liquid-vapor line in a phase diagram. Past
the critical point, you get something called a "supercritical liquid",which has
weird properties.
crystal lattice: see "lattice"
c r y s t a l : A l a r g e c h u n k o f an io n i c s o li d.
Dalton's law of partial pressures: The total pressure in a mixture of gases is
equal to the sums of the partial pressures of all the gases put together.
decomposition: When a big molecule falls apart to make two or more
little ones.
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.
delocalization: This is when electrons can move around all over a molecule.
This happens when you have double bonds on adjacent atoms in a molecule
(conjugated hydrocarbon)
denature: When the 3-D structure of a protein breaks down due to heat
(or pH, etc), it's said to be denatured. This means that it unravels because
the
intermolecular forces between atoms in the chain aren't strong enough to
hold it together anymore.
diffusion: When particles move from areas of high concentration to areas of
low concentration. For example, if you open a bottle of ammonia on one end
of the room, the concentration of ammonia molecules in the air is very high on
that side of the room. As a result, they tend to migrate across the room,
which explains why you can smell it after a little while. Be careful not to mix
this up with effusion (see definition)
dilut ion: When you add solvent to a solution to make it less concentrated.
dipole moment: When a molecule has some charge separation
(usually because the molecule is polar), it's said to have a dipole moment.
dipole-dipole force: When the positive end of a polar molecule becomes
attracted to the negative end of another polar molecule.
dissociation: When water dissolves a compound.
distillation: This is when you separate a mixture of liquids by heating it up.
The one with the lowest boiling point evaporates first, followed by the one
with the next lowest boiling point, etc.
double-displacement reaction (a.k.a. double replacement reaction):
When the cations of two ionic compounds switch places.
e f f u s i o n : When a gas moves through an opening into a chamber that
contains no pressure. Effusion is much faster than diffusion because there
are no other gas molecules to get in the way.
elect r olys is : When electricity is used to break apart a chemical compound.
electrolyte: An ionic compound that dissolves in water to conduct electricity.
Strong electrolytes break apart completely in water; weak electrolytes only
fall apart a little bit.
(Actually, this isn't entirely true, as Raji Heyovska informs me. Apparently strong electrolytes also dissociate
p a r t i a l l y i n w a t e r , t h o u g h m u c h m o r e s o t h an w e a k o n e s . F o r m o r e i n f o , c h e c k o u t h i s p a p e r a t h t t p :/ /www.j h-
[Link]/~rheyrovs. However, it is also true that the usual definition of a strong electrolyte is one that
dissociates completely in water, which is why I include that definition above.)
electron affinity: The energy change that accompanies the addition of
an electron to an atom in the gas phase.
e l e c t r o n e g a t i v i t y : A measurement of how much an atom tends to steal
electrons from atoms that it's bonded to. Elements at the top right of the
periodic table (excluding the noble gases) are very electronegative while
atoms in the bottom left are not very electronegative (a.k.a. "electropositive")
electropositive: When something is not at all electronegative. In fact,
it tends to lose electrons rather than to gain them. Elements that are
electropositive are generally to the left and bottom of the periodic table.
empirical formula: A reduced molecular formula. If you have a molecular
formula and you can reduce all of the subscripts by some constant number,
the result is the empirical formula.
emulsion: When very small drops of a liquid are suspended in another. An
example of an emulsion is salad dressing after you've shaken it up.
enantiomers: molecules that are nonsuperimposable mirror images of
each other.
e n d o t h e r m i c : When a process absorbs energy (gets cold).
endpoint: The point where you actually stop a titration, usually because
an indicator has changed color. This is different than the "equivalence
point" because the indicator might not change colors at the exact instant
that the solution is neutral.
energy level: A possible level of energy that an electron can have in an atom.
e n t h a l p y : A measurement of the energy content of a system.
e nt r opy: A measurement of the randomness in a system.
enzyme: A biological molecule that catalyzes reactions in living creatures.
equilibrium: When the forward rate of a chemical reaction is the same as the
reverse rate. This only takes place in reversible reactions because these are
the only type of reaction in which the forward and backward reactions can
both take place.
equivalence point: The point in a titration at which the solution is
completely neutral. This is different than the "endpoint" (see above).
ester: An organic molecule with R-CO-OR' functionality.
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.
e x o t h e r m i c : W hen a pr oces s gives of f ener gy (get s hot ) .
f a m i l y : 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.
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.
gr ound s t at e: 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".
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.
h y d r o c ar b o n: A molecule containing carbon and hydrogen.
hydroge n bond: The tendency of the hydrogen atom stuck to an
electronegative atom to become attracted to the lone pair electrons on another
electronegative atom. It's a pretty strong intermolecular force, which
explains why water has such a high melting and boiling point.
h y d r o g e n a t i o n : 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 workout well for equations that describe
how gases behave.
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.
inhibit or : 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).
i n s o l u b l e : 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.
ir r ever s ible r eact ion: 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.
is ot onic s olut ions : Solutions containing the same osmotic pressure.
isotope: When an element has more than one possibility for the number of
neutrons, these are called isotopes. All known elements possess isotopes.
For the record, the word "isotope" doesn't imply that something is radioactive.
TV told you that, and TV is stupid.
Kelvin: A unit used to measure temperature. One Kelvin is equal in size to
one degree Celsius. To convert between degrees Celsius and Kelvins, simply
add 273.15 to the temperature in degrees Celsius to get Kelvins.
ketone: A molecule containing a R-CO-R' functional group. Acetone
(dimethyl ketone) is a common one.
kinetic energy: The energy due to the movement of an object. The more
something moves, the more kinetic energy it has.
Lanthanide contraction: The tendency of the lanthanides to get small when
you go from left to right in the periodic table.
lattice energy: The energy released when one mole of a crystal is
formed from gaseous ions.
lattice: The three-dimensional arrangement of atoms or ions in a crystal.
law of conservation of energy: The amount of energy in the universe never
changes, ever. It just changes form.
law of conservation of mass: The amount of stuff after a chemical
reaction takes place is the same as the amount of stuff you started with.
Le Chatlier's Principle: When you disturb an equilibrium (by adding more
chemical, by heating it up, etc.), it will eventually go back into equilibrium
under a different set of conditions.
L ewis acid: An electron-pair acceptor (carbonyl groups are really good ones)
Lewis base: An electron-pair donor. Things with lone pairs like water
and ammonia are really good ones.
Lewis structure: A structural formula that shows all of the atoms and
valence electrons in a molecule.
ligand: A molecule or ion that sticks to the central atom in a
complex. Common examples are ammonia, carbon monoxide, or
water.
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.
l i n e s p e c t r u m : A spectrum showing only certain wavelengths.
London dispersion force: The forces between nonpolar atoms or molecules
which is caused by momentary induced dipoles. It's real weak.
lone pair: two electrons that aren't involved in chemical bonding.
Also frequently referred to as an "unshared pair".
main-block elements: Groups 1,2, and 13-18 in the periodic table. They're
called main block elements because the outermost electron is in the s- or p-
orbitals. What that has to do with the term "main block" is unclear to me,
but hey, that's life.
m a s s d e f e c t : The difference between the mass of an atom and the sum of
the masses of its individual components. Atoms usually weigh a little less
than if you added up the weights of all the particles. This is because that extra
mass was converted into the energy which holds the atom together
(see "binding energy")
mass: The amount of matter in an object. The more mass, the more stuff
is present.
m e c h a n i s m : A s t e p - b y - s t e p s e q u e n c e t h a t s h o w s h o w t h e pr oduct s of a
reaction are made from the reagents. Mechanisms are very frequently shown
during organic chemistry.
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.
m olar m as s : The mass of one mole of particles.
m o l a r v o l u m e : 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.
molarity: A unit of concentration equal to moles of solute divided by liters
of solution.
mole fraction: The number of moles of stuff in a mixture that are due to
one of the compounds.
mole ratio: The ratio of moles of what you've been given in a reaction to
what you want to find. Handy in stoichiometry.
mole: 6.02 x 10 2 3 things.
m o l e c u l a r c o m p o u n d : A compound held together by covalent bonds.
molecular formula: A formula that shows the correct quantity of all of
the atoms in a molecule.
monatomic ion: An ion that has only one atom, like the chloride ion.
neutralization reaction: The reaction of an acid with a base to form
water and a salt.
node: A location in an orbital where there's no probability of finding
an electron.
nonpolar covalent bond: A covalent bond where the electrons are shared
equally between the two atoms.
normal boiling point: The boiling point of a substance at 1.00 atm.
normal melting point : The melting point of a substance at 1.00 atm.
normality: The number of equivalents of a substance dissolved in a liter
of solution.
nuclar fusion: When many small atoms combine to form a large one.
This occurs during a thermonuclear reaction.
nuclear f is s ion: This is when the nucleus of an atom breaks into many parts.
nuclear reaction: Any reaction that involves a change in the nucleus of an
atom. Nuclear reactions take loads of energy, which is why you don't see
them much around the lab.
nucleon: A particle (such as proton or neutron) that's in the nucleus of
an atom.
octet rule: All atoms want to be like the nearest noble gas. (Well, they
all want to have the same number of valence electrons, anyway). To do
this,
they either gain or lose electrons (to form ionic compounds) or share
electrons (to form covalent compounds).
optical isomerism: Isomerism in which the isomers cause plane
polarized light to rotate in different directions.
orbital: This is where the electrons in an atom live.
organic compound: A compound that contains carbon (except
carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, and carbonates)
osmosis: The flow of a pure liquid into an area of high concentration
through a semi-permeable membrane.
o x i d a t i o n n u m b e r : The apparent charge on an atom.
o x i d a t i o n : When a substance loses electrons.
partial pressure: The pressure of one gas in a mixture. For example, if you
had a 50:50 mix of helium and hydrogen gases and the total pressure was 2
atm, the partial pressure of hydrogen would be 1 atm.
Pauli exclusion principle: No two electrons in an atom can have the same
quantum numbers.
percent yield: The actual yield divided by the theoretical yield, times 100.
p e r i o d : A row (le ft t o r ig ht ) in t h e p er iodic table .
periodic law: The properties of elements change with increasing atomic
number in a periodic way. That's why you can stick the elements into a big
chart and have the elements line up in nice families.
pH: -log[H+]
phase diagram: A chart which showshow the phase depends on
various conditions of temperature and pressure.
phase: The state of a compound (solid, liquid, or gas)
physical property: A property which can be determined without changing
something chemically. If that doesn't make sense, see the definition of
"chemical change".
p i - b o n d : A double bond.
polar covalent bond: A covalent bond where one atom tries to grab the
electrons from the other one. This occurs because the electronegativities
of the two atoms aren't the same.
p o l y a t o m i c : contains more than one atom.
polymer: A molecule containing many repeating units. Plastics are
polymers and are formed by free radical chain reactions.
polyprotic acid: An acid that can give up more than one hydroniumion.
Examples are sulfuric acid and phosphoric acid.
potential energy: The energy something has because of where it is. Things
that are way up high have more potential energy than things that are way
down low because they have farther to fall.
precision: A measurement of how repeatable a measurement is. The
more significant figures, the more precise the measurement.
pressure: Force/area
product: The thing you make in a chemical reaction.
q uant um t he ory : The branch of physical chemistry that describeshow
energy can only exist at certain levels and makes generalizations about how
atoms behave from this assumption.
radioactive: When a substance has an unstable nucleus that can fall apart,
it's referred to as radioactive.
Raoult's Law: The vapor pressure of a solution is directly proportional to
the mole fraction of the solvent.
r at e det er m ining s t ep: The slowest step in a chemical reaction.
rate law: A mathematical expression for the speed of a reaction as a
function of concentration. A hint: It's usually true that things go faster if you
have more stuff in the first place.
redox reaction: A reaction that has both an oxidation and reduction.
resonance structure: When more than one valid Lewis structure can be
drawn for a molecule, these structures are said to be resonance structures.
Resonance structures arise from the fact that the electrons are delocalized.
reversible reaction: A reaction in which the products can make reagents, as
well as the reagents making products.
root mean square velocity (RMS velocity): The square root of the average
of the squares of the individual velocities of the gas particles in a mixture. To
put it in a way that a normal human can understand, it's the average of how
fast the particles in a gas are going (assuming you ignore the direction
they're traveling in).
s a l t : An ionic compound.
s at ur at ed: When the maximum amount of solute is dissolved in a liquid
Second law of thermodynamics: Whenever you do something, the universe
gets more random.
semiconductor: A substance that conducts electricity poorly at
room temperature, but has increasing conductivity at higher
temperatures. Metalloids are usually good semiconductors.
shielding effect: The outer electrons aren't pulled very tightly by the
nucleus because the inner electrons repel them. This repulsion is called the
shielding effect, and can be used to explain lots of neat-o stuff.
s i g m a b o n d : A real fancy way of saying "single bond"
significant figure : The number of digits in a number that tell you useful
information. For example, when you weigh yourself on a bathroom scale, it
says something like 1 5 0 pounds rather than 1 5 0 . 3 2 8 4 3 7 3 7 pounds. Why?
Because the thing can only weigh accurately to the nearest pound. Any other
digits that are on this number don't mean anything, because they're probably
wrong anyway.
single-displacement reaction (a.k.a. single replacement reaction): When
one unbonded element replaces an element in a chemical compound. These
are frequently redox reactions.
s olubilit y: A measurement of how much of a solute can dissolve in a liquid.
solubility product constant: Abbreviated K sp , this value indicates the degree
to which a compound dissociates in water. The higher the solubility product
constant, the more soluble the compound.
solute: The solid that gets dissolved in a solution.
solvent: The liquid that dissolves the solid in a solution.
specific heat capacity: The amount of heat required to increase
the temperature of one gram of a substance by one degree.
spectator ions: The ions in a reaction that don't react.
s po nt ane o us ch ange : A change that occurs by itself. All exothermic
reactions are spontaneous. However, this doesn't mean that all exothermic
reactions are fast. The combustion of gasoline is spontaneous, but not
very fast unless you add a little energy.
s t a n d a r d t e m p e r a t u r e a n d p r e s s u r e : O ne at m os pher e and 273 K.
steric hindrance: This is the idea that the functional groups on big
molecules get in the way of a chemical reaction, making it go slower. Imagine
a fat guy trying to get into a Honda Prelude - that's steric hindrance.
stoichiometry: The art of figuring how much stuff you'll make in a
chemical reaction from the amount of each reagent you start with.
S T P : See standard temperature and pressure.
s t r ong acid: An acid that fully dissociates in water
strong nuclear force: The force that holds the nucleus together. As
the name suggests, this force is strong.
s t r uct ur al f or m ula: See Lewis structure.
sublimation: When a solid can change directly into a gas. Dry ice does this.
s u p e r c o o l i n g : When you cool something below its normal freezing point
supersaturated : When more solute is dissolved in a liquid than is
theoretically possible. This doesn't happen much, as you might imagine.
surface tension: A measurement of how much the molecules on a liquid
tend to like to stick to each other. If something has a high surface tension, it
likes to bead up.
suspension: A mixture that looks homogeneous when you stir it, but
where the solids settle out when you stop. Mud is a very short-lived
suspension, while peanut butter is a very long-lived suspension.
synthesis: When you make a big molecule from two or more smaller ones.
system : Everything you're talking about at the moment.
temperature: A measurement of the average kinetic energy of the particles
in a system.
theoretical yield: The amount of product which should be made in
a chemical reaction if everything goes perfectly.
t h e r m o d y n a m i c s : T h e s t u d y o f e ner gy
Third law o' thermodynamics: The randomness of a system at 0 K is zero.
titration: When the concentration of an acid or base is determined
by neutralizing it.
t r ans it ion s t at e: See "activated complex"
triple point: The temperature and pressure at which all three states of
a substance can exist in equilibrium.
unit cell: The simplest part of a crystal that can be repeated over and over
to make the whole thing.
unsaturated: When you haven't yet dissolved all of the solute that's
possible to dissolve in a liquid.
unshared electron pair: two electrons that aren't involved in chemical
bonding. Also frequently referred to as a "lone pair".
v a l e n c e e l e c t r o n : The outermost electrons in an atom.
vapor pressure: The pressure of a substance that's present above it's liquid.
For example, you can tell that ammonia has a high vapor pressure because
the smell of it is very strong above liquid ammonia.
vapor iz at ion: When you boil a liquid.
volat ile: A substance with a high vapor pressure.
VSEPR: A theory for predicting molecular shapes that assumes that
electrons like to be as far from each other as possible.
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