Elements, Atoms and Compounds
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Elements, Atoms and Compounds
Lesson The Big Question Key words
1 How are atoms Proton, neutron,
structure electron, nucleus, shells,
positive, negative,
neutral
2 What are elements? Element, symbol,
3 What are the Property, flexible,
properties of conductor, dense, brittle,
elements? (practical) metal, non-metal,
malleable, magnetic
4 What is the Periodic Periodic table, period,
table? group, element,
5 How are compounds Element, mixture,
and mixtures different compound, iron sulphide
to elements?
6 How do you write State symbol, reactants,
chemical formulas? products, element,
compound, symbol
7 How can we linking our Elements, symbols,
learning? compounds, periodic
table
8 Revision
9 End of Unit Test
Topic Overview
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Elements, Atoms and Compounds
Key Words
Element – A substance made from one type of atom e.g. hydrogen
Compound – A pure substance made from two or more elements chemically
bonded together e.g. water
Mixture – Two or more substances in the same space but not chemically
bonded e.g. air (oxygen, carbon dioxide & nitrogen)
Property - an attribute, quality, or characteristic of something.
Conductor – Type of material that allows the flow of electrical current
Dense – How closely compacted the atoms in a substance is
Example: Gas= Low density Metal= High density
Magnetic – Objects that are affected by magnets
Malleable – able to be hammered or pressed into shape without breaking or
cracking.
Period – A horizontal row on the periodic table (7 periods)
Group – A vertical row on the periodic table (8 groups)
State Symbol – A symbol used to show how compounds are found: l, g, s, aq
Reactants – Chemicals or elements that are present before the chemical
change takes place
Products – Compounds and substances produced by the chemical reaction
Atom – the smallest particle of a chemical element that can exist.
Nucleus – The middle of an atom containing the proton and neutron
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Elements, Atoms and Compounds
Lesson 1 – Atoms
Atoms are the smallest unit of any substance. Lots of the same type of atom
make up an element. Here is a list of the most common elements in a human
body what are the missing ones?
We can draw atoms like this below. TASK: Label the atom using the words
The
middle of the atom is called the N __ __ __ __ __ __
EXTENSION: The rings around the nucleus are called
shells. This is where the electrons sit. Depending on the
shell only a certain amount of electrons can be on there.
We draw electrons with a cross or dot
Shell 1: ___ Shell 2: ___ Shell 3: ___
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Elements, Atoms and Compounds
Homework:
Put into the google search “Scale of the Universe 2”
Launch the application and zoom down to the size of atoms and particles which is
Nanometres or smaller. Find 1 thing at this size and write down the information
about it into this booklet (clicking the picture gives you the information)
Find any other 2 objects in the application and record the facts about them.
Use the boxes to add a picture or draw a picture of your object
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Elements, Atoms and Compounds
Lesson 2 – Introduction to the Elements
Chemistry is the study of the chemical elements and how they react to form compounds.
There are about 90 naturally occurring elements and they are the basic building blocks of all
substances including you.
An element is made up of only one type of atom. The atoms of one element are different
from the atoms of other elements and each element has a symbol consisting of one capital
letter and usually a lower case letter. The elements are found in a Periodic Table, which you
will meet in more detail in the next lesson.
Complete the following table by finding the symbol or the name of some of the more
commonly studied elements.
Element Symbol Element Symbol
Hydrogen P
Fe Ne
Lithium Carbon
Lead Argon
Mercury O
Cl Zn
N Fluorine
Cu He
Potassium Br
S Iodine
Sodium Ba
Mg Silicon
Al Lead
Calcium Sn
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Elements, Atoms and Compounds
Homework: Learn the names and symbols of the elements on the
left hand side of the table. Be prepared for a short test next lesson.
Homework Test Score
out of
Elements I need to remember
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
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Elements, Atoms and Compounds
3. What Are the Properties of Elements
Instructions
Set up a circuit as shown below.
Place each of the elements in turn into the circuit to see if it conducts
electricity.
Record your observations in the table
Once all have been tested. Hit each with a hammer and describe what
happens. Can they be bent into shape?
Final use a magnet to test whether they are magnetic
Elements available; carbon (charcoal), copper, magnesium, sulphur, zinc, iron
Metals Non-metals
High melting and boiling points Low melting and boiling points (many
(all except mercury solid at room are gases at room temperature)
temperature)
Good conductors of electricity and Poor conductors of electricity (except
heat graphite – a form of carbon)
Malleable (change shape when Brittle (break when hit)
hit)
Shiny when polished Dull
Dense (heavy) Less dense
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Elements, Atoms and Compounds
Three metals are magnetic None are magnetic
Results
Element Observations
In a circuit When hit Magnetic
(Tick box)
Findings
Which substances were metals how did you know?
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A vertical column is called a
__________. A horizontal row is
called a _________
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Elements, Atoms and Compounds
T___________ M______
Elements, Atoms and Compounds
How did Hennig Brand discover phosphorus?
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Lesson 5 – Compounds and molecules
Compounds are made up of elements chemically joined together in specific amounts. Two
common compounds that are found on earth are water and salt. We draw elements as
circles. To tell two different elements making a compound we colour in one of the circles.
A molecule is two or more atoms strongly bonded together.
TASK: Under each box state whether the box contains;
a. an element - all atoms the same
b. a compound - two or more different elements chemically joined
c. a molecule - two or more atoms strongly bonded
d. All
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Elements, Atoms and Compounds
Practical Activity
Step 1: Look at the iron filings. What do you observe about the colour, feel, shape?
Record your observations
Step 2: Test irons filing with a magnet does the magnet attract the filings?
Step 3: Now test the Sulphur… record observations. Is it magnetic?
Step 4: With the mixture try and separate the iron from the sulphur using the magnet
Step 5: Use the Bunsen burner to produce a reaction fill in the rest of your table
Substance Observations
Iron filings
Sulphur
Mixture of iron filings
and sulphur
When the mixture is
heated
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Elements, Atoms and Compounds
The product FeS _ _ _ _ Sulphide
How did you know when a reaction was taking place?
Lesson 6 – Chemical Formulae
When writing the formula of a compound e.g. Li2O the subscript number (little number)
tells you how many elements are found in whatever came immediately before.
TASK 1: Write down how many of each element are found in this substance
Lithium Oxide:
___ x Lithium
___ x Oxygen
An element starts with a capital letter. We can count the number of capital letters so we can
find out how many elements there are.
TASK 2: How many elements are in this impossible formula?
FeONCaNaPKPbAgLiZnCB There are ________ elements
Name of compound Symbol Elements present
Carbon dioxide CO2 1 x Carbon and 2 x Oxygen
Calcium carbonate CaCO3 ____ x Calcium ____ x Carbon
____ x Oxygen
Magnesium sulphate MgSO4 1x________________
1x____________ 4x _____________
Sodium nitrate NaNO3
Potassium sulphate K2SO4
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Elements, Atoms and Compounds
Magnesium hydroxide Mg (OH)2
Calcium chloride CaCl2
TASK 3: Use what you have learnt to complete the table of formulas for
different compounds
When iron reacts with sulphur a new compound called iron sulphide is
formed. All reactions can be written as chemical equations. These can be word
equations or symbol equations.
There are two sides of an equation, before the arrow and after. One side is
the products the other is the reactants.
TASK 4: Label the reactant and product side.
…………………………… …………………………
Iron + Sulphur Iron sulphide
Fe …. + S …. FeS ….
Formulas have state symbols which tell us how each element or compound is
found. TASK 5: Add symbols to the symbol equation above.
State Symbols
(s) = Solid
(g) = Gas
(l) = Liquid
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Elements, Atoms and Compounds
(aq) = in solution (Aqueous)
TASK 6: Turn these word equations into symbol equations with state symbols
1) Iron + Oxygen Iron Oxide
2) Hydrogen + Oxygen Water
Lesson 7 – Linking Learning
Below is a periodic table square. It can tell us a lot of information about an element
1. Oxygen is in group ____ and period ____ on the periodic table.
2. Oxygen is a metal non-metal (tick the right box)
3. This means that oxygen can’t conduct electricity? TRUE FALSE (circle the answer)
4. How many Oxygen’s are in the formula for carbon dioxide? ____
5. Write a formula that includes oxygen
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Elements, Atoms and Compounds
Extension
Here is an oxygen atom. It has two shells. The
atomic number tells us how many electrons there
are. Use the atomic number of oxygen to work
out how many electrons to draw on each shell.
Shell 1 has a maximum of 2
Shell 2 has a maximum of 8
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Elements, Atoms and Compounds
The Atoms Family - Atomic Math Challenge
Atomic number equals the number of ELECTRONS or PROTONS.
Atomic mass equals the number of PROTONS + NEUTRONS
TASK: Use the above information to fill in the information for these element squares
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Elements, Atoms and Compounds
What do you Know Tick
I can recall the names and symbols for 14 elements in the periodic
table.
I can state what an element is.
I can state what a compound is.
I can state what a mixture is.
I could identify some examples of elements, compounds and
mixtures from names, symbols and diagrams.
I know where metals and non-metals are found on the periodic
table.
I could show using chemical equations how elements react to
produce compounds
I could look at an equation and say which side is products or
reactants.
I know the 4 different type of state symbols.
I could label an atom.
I know what the middle of an atom is called.
I can state what an atom is and where they are found.
I know where to find the atomic number or mass.
Topic test mark =
Feedback:
Targets for the next topic:
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Elements, Atoms and Compounds
What I
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