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Glossary: A
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- ab initio.
- A calculation or prediction that is based purely on theory rather
than on experimental data. Accurate ab initio predictions are an
important test of a theory. (Lat., "from first principles")
- abrasive.
- A very hard, brittle, heat-resistant substance that is used to grind
the edges or rough surfaces of an object. boron carbide, diamond, and
corundum are abrasives.
- absolute error.
absolute uncertainty. Compare with relative error.
- The uncertainty in a measurement, expressed with appropriate units.
For example, if three replicate weights for an object are 1.00 g, 1.05
g, and 0.95 g, the absolute error can be expressed as ¡¾ 0.05 g. Absolute
error is also used to express inaccuracies; for example, if the "true
value" is 1.11 g and the measured value is 1.00 g, the absolute error
could be written as 1.00 g - 1.11 g = -0.11 g. Note that when absolute
errors are associated with indeterminate
errors, they are preceded with
"¡¾"; when they are associated with determinate
errors, they are preceded by
their sign.
- absolute
temperature.
- Temperature measured on a scale that sets absolute zero as zero. In the SI system, the kelvin scale is used to measure absolute
temperature.
- absolute zero.
- The temperature at which the volume of an ideal gas becomes zero; a theoretical coldest
temperature that can be approached but never reached. Absolute zero is
zero on the Kelvin scale, -273.15¡ÆC on the Celsius scale, and -459.67¡ÆF on the Fahrenheit
scale.
- absorbance. (A, D, E) optical density;
extinction; decadic absorbance.
- A measure of the amount of light absorbed by a sample. The
absorbance (A) equals minus the base-10 log of the transmittance.
- absorption. absorb; absorbent. Compare with adsorption and sorption.
- 1. Penetration of molecules into the bulk of a solid or
liquid, forming either a solution or compound. Absorption can be a
chemical process (a strong solution of NaOH absorbs CO2 from
the air) or a physical process (palladium absorbs hydrogen gas).
2. Capture and transformation of energy by a substance; for
example, copper looks reddish because it absorbs blue light. An
absorbent captures another material and distributes it throughout; an
adsorbent captures another material and distributes it on its surface
only.
- absorption
spectroscopy. Compare with absorption
spectrum.
- A technique for determining the concentration and structure of a
substance by measuring the amound of electromagnetic
radiation the sample absorbs
at various wavelengths.
- absorption spectrum.
absorption spectra. Compare with absorption
spectroscopy.
- A plot that shows how much radiation a substance absorbs at
different wavelengths. Absorption spectra are unique for each
element and compound and they are often used as chemical "fingerprints"
in analytical chemistry. The spectrum can represented by a plot of
either absorbance or transmittance versus wavelength, frequency, or wavenumber.
- absorptivity. (a) extinction coefficient;
absorption cross section; decadic absorptivity. Compare with molar
absorptivity and absorbance.
- The absorbance of a solution per unit of path length and per unit concentration; a = A/(bc) where
a, A, b, and c are the absorptivity, absorbance, path length, and
concentration, respectively. Absorptivity varies with wavelength of the incident light.
- accelerator.
- 1. A substance that makes vulcanization of rubber occur more quickly or at a
lower temperature. 2. A substance that makes crosslinking in a polymer occur more quickly or at a lower
temperature, e. g., accelerators are added to Super Glue to make it set
up quickly.
- accuracy. Compare with precision and trueness.
- Accuracy is the correctness of a single measurement. The accuracy of
a measurement is assessed by comparing the measurement with the true or
accepted value, based on evidence independent of the measurement. The
closeness of an average to a true value is referred to as
"trueness".
- acetate. (CH3COO-,
C2H3O2-) acetate ion.
- 1. an ion formed by removing the acidic hydrogen of acetic acid, HC2H3O2.
2. a compound derived by replacing the acidic hydrogen in acetic
acid. 3. A fiber made of cellulose acetate.
- acetic acid (CH3COOH,
HC2H3O2) ethanoic acid; vinegar acid;
methanecarboxylic acid.
- A simple organic acid that gives vinegar its characteristic odor and
flavor. Glacial acetic acid is pure acetic acid.
- acid. ([Lat. acidus, sour])
Compare with base.
- 1. a compound which releases hydrogen ions (H+) in
solution (Arrhenius). 2. a compound containing detachable
hydrogen ions (Bronsted-Lowry). 3. a compound that can
accept a pair of electrons from a base (Lewis)..
- acid anhydride. Compare with acid.
- Nonmetallic oxides or organic compounds that react with water to
form acids. For example, SO2,
CO2, P2O5, and SO3 are the
acid anhydrides of sulfurous, carbonic, phosphoric, and sulfuric acids,
respectively. Acetic anhydride (CH3CO)2O) reacts
with water to form acetic acid.
- acid-base
indicator.
- A weak acid that has acid and base forms with sharply different
colors. Changes in pH around the acid's pKa are "indicated" by color changes.
- acid dissociation
constant. (Ka) acid ionization
constant. Compare with base
hydrolysis constant.
- The equilibrium
constant for the dissociation
of an acid into a hydrogen ion and an anion. For example, the acid
dissociation constant for acetic acid is the equilibrium constant for
HC2H3O2(aq)
H+(aq) +
C2H3O2-(aq), which is
Ka =
[H+][C2H3O2-]/[HC2H3O2].
- acid error. Compare with
alkaline
error.
- A systematic
error that occurs when glass
pH electrodes are used in strongly acidic
solutions. Glass electrodes give pH readings that are consistently too
high in these solutions.
- acid
halide. acid chloride; acyl halide; acyl chloride.
- Compounds containing a carbonyl group bound to a halogen atom.
- acidic solution.
- A solution in which the hydrogen ion activity is higher than that of the hydroxide ion, when the solvent is water.
- acidulant.
- A substance added to food or beverages to lower pH and to impart a tart, acid taste. Phosphoric acid is an acidulant added to cola drinks.
- actinide.
- Elements 89-102 are called actinides. Electrons added during the Aufbau
construction of actinide atoms
go into the 5f subshell. Actinides are unstable and undergo radioactive
decay. The most common
actinides on Earth are uranium and thorium.
- activated charcoal. activated carbon; active carbon.
- A porous form of carbon that acts as a powerful adsorbent, used to decolorize liquids, recover
solvents, and remove toxins from water and air.
- activated complex.
transition state.
- An intermediate structure formed in the conversion of reactants to
products. The activated complex is the structure at the maximum energy
point along the reaction path; the activation
energy is the difference
between the energies of the activated complex and the reactants.
- activation energy.
(Ea)
- The minimum energy required to convert reactants into products; the
difference between the energies of the activated
complex and the reactants.
- active site.
- A pocket or crevice on an enzyme molecule that fits reactant molecules like a
hand in a glove. The active site lowers the activation
energy for reaction.
- activity. (a)
- An effective concentration used in thermodynamic calculations in
place of the actual concentration to allow equations developed for ideal
solutions to be used to treat
real solutions.
- activity
coefficient. (
)
- The ratio of activity to concentration; a =
c where a, , and c are the activity, activity coefficient,
and concentrations, respectively. Activity coefficients are usually
obtained from measurements of the emf of electrochemical
cells or the colligative
properties of solutions.
- adiabat. adiabatic line.
Compare with adiabatic.
- A line on an indicator
diagram that represents an adiabatic process.
- adiabatic. adiabatic process; isentropic
process.
- A process that neither absorbs nor releases energy into the
surroundings. For example, a chemical reaction taking place in a closed
thermos bottle can be considered adiabatic. Very fast processes can
often be considered adiabatic with respect to heat exchange with the
surroundings, because heat exchange is not instantaneous.
- adiabatic
ionization energy. Compare with vertical
ionization energy.
- The lowest energy required to remove an electron from an atom, ion,
or molecule in the gas phase. The adiabatic ionization energy is the
difference between the ground state energy of the ion formed and the
energy of the original atom, molecule, or ion.
- addition compound. complex compound. Compare with hydrate.
- An addition compound contains two or more simpler compounds that can
be packed in a definite ratio into a crystal. A dot is used to separate
the compounds in the formula. For example, ZnSO4¡¤7
H2O is an addition compound of zinc sulfate and water. This
represents a compound, and not a mixture, because there is a definite
1:7 ratio of zinc sulfate to water in the compound. Hydrates are a common type of addition compound.
- adhesion. (cohesion)
- Attraction between different substances on either side of a phase boundary.
- adsorb. adsorbed; adsorbing.
- To collect molecules of a substance on a surface.
- adsorbent. Compare with absorbent.
- A substance that collects molecules of another substance on its
surface. For example, gases that make water taste bad are strongly
adsorbed on activated
charcoal granules in water
filters.
- adsorption. adsorb; adsorbed. Compare with absorption and sorption.
- Adsorption is collection of a substance on the surface of a solid or
a liquid. For example, gases that make water taste bad are strongly
adsorbed on charcoal granules in water filters.
- adsorption
chromatography.
- A technique for separating or analyzing mixtures that contain at
least one component that is preferentially adsorbed by the stationary
phase as it moves over it.
- adsorption
indicator.
- A substance that indicates an excess of a reactant in a precipitation reaction. For example,
dichlorofluorescein is added to an NaCl solution being titrated with
silver nitrate. Before the endpoint, excess chloride ions make the surface of
the AgCl precipitate negative, and dichlorofluorescein anions
remain in solution. After the endpoint, the excess silver ions make the
surface of the AgCl precipitate positive, and the dichlorofluorescein
anions are adsorbed onto their surface. Adsorption changes
the color of the indicator from yellow-green to pink.
- aeration.
aerate.
- Preparation of a saturated
solution of air gases by
either spraying the solution in air or by bubbling air through it.
- aerosol. Compare with colloid.
- A colloid in which solid particles or liquid droplets
are suspended in a gas. Smoke is an example of a solid aerosol; fog is
an example of a liquid aerosol.
- agar.
- A gel made from seaweed used to make salt bridges.
- alanine. (A,
CH3CH(NH2)COOH) Ala; alpha-aminopropionic acid.
- A naturally occurring aliphatic amino acid which is required for protein synthesis but
is not essential in the diet. Beta-alanine
(NH2CH2CH2COOH) also occurs naturally.
- alcohol. (ROH) Compare with phenol and hydroxide.
- An alcohol is an organic compound with a carbon bound to a hydroxyl group. Examples are methanol,
CH3OH; ethanol, CH3CH2OH; propanol,
CH3CH2CH2OH. Compounds with -OH
attached to an aromatic ring are called phenols rather than alcohols.
- aldehyde. (RCHO)
- An aldehyde is an organic compound with a carbon bound to a -(C=O)-H
group. Examples are formaldehyde (HCHO), acetaldehyde,
CH3CHO, and benzaldehyde, C6H6CHO.
- aliphatic. Compare with aromatic.
- An organic compound that does not contain ring structures.
- aliquot.
- A sample of precisely determined amount taken from a material.
- alkali metal. (alkaline earth metal) alkali
metal element.
- The Group 1 elements, lithium (Li), sodium (Na), potassium (K),
rubidium (Rb), cesium (Cs), and francium (Fr) react with cold water for
form strongly alkaline hydroxide solutions, and are referred to as
"alkali metals". Hydrogen is not considered an alkali metal,
despite its position on some periodic tables.
- alkaline.
- Having a pH greater than 7.
- alkaline earth.
- An oxide of an alkaline earth
metal, which produces an alkaline solution in reaction with water.
- alkaline earth
metal. (alkali metal)
- The Group 2 elements, beryllium (Be), magnesium (Mg), calcium (Ca),
strontium (Sr), barium (Ba), and radium (Ra) form alkaline oxides and
hydroxides and are called "alkaline earth metals".
- alkaline error.
Compare with acid
error.
- A systematic
error that occurs when glass
electrodes are used to read the pH of an extremely alkaline
solution; the electrode
responds to sodium ions as though they were hydrogen ions, giving a pH
reading that is consistently too low.
- alkalinity.
- A measure of a material's ability to neutralize acids. Alkalinities are usually determined using
titration.
- alkaloid.
- A class of bitter-tasting, basic organic compounds with
nitrogen-containing rings. Alkaloids often have powerful effects on
living things. Examples are cocaine, nicotine, strychnine, caffeine, and morphine.
- alkane. paraffin. Compare with hydrocarbon and alkene.
- A series of organic compounds with general formula
CnH2n+2. Alkane names end with -ane.
Examples are propane (with n=3) and octane (with n=8).
- alkene.
- A compound that consists of only carbon and hydrogen, that contains
at least one carbon-carbon double bond. Alkene names end with
-ene. Examples are ethylene (CH2=CH2);
1-propene (CH2=CH2CH3), and 2-octane
(CH3CH2=CH2(CH2)4CH3).
- alkoxide. (RO- M+)
alkoxide ion.
- An ionic
compound formed by removal of
hydrogen ions from the hydroxyl group in an alcohol using reactive metals, e. g. sodium. For
example, potassium metal reacts with methanol (CH3OH) to
produce potassium methoxide (KOCH3).
- alkyl.
(-CnH2n+1)
alkyl group.
- A molecular fragment derived from an alkane by dropping a hydrogen atom from the
formula. Examples are methyl (CH3) and ethyl
(CH2CH3).
- alkyl halide.
- An alkyl
group attached to a halogen atom.
- alkyne.
- A compound that consists of only carbon and hydrogen, that contains
at least one carbon-carbon triple bond. Alkyne names end with
-yne. Examples are acetylene (CH
CH); 1-propyne (CH2 CH2CH3), and 2-octyne
(CH3CH2 CH2(CH2)4CH3).
- allo-.
- A prefix that designates the more stable of a pair of geometric
isomers. allo- is
sometimes used less precisely to designate isomers or close relatives of
a compound.
- allobar.
- A form of an element that has isotopic
abundances that are different
from the naturally occuring form. For example, "depleted" uranium has
had most of the uranium-235 removed, and is an allobar of natural
uranium.
- allomer.
allomerism.
- Substances with different chemical composition but the same
crystalline form.
- allosteric effect.
allosteric interaction.
- A change in the behavior of one part of a molecule caused by a
change in another part of the molecule.
- allotrope.
allotropy; allotropic; allotropism.
Compare with isotope and polymorph.
- Some elements occur in several distinct forms called allotropes.
Allotropes have different chemical and physical properties. For example,
graphite and diamond are allotropes of carbon.
- alloy. alloying; alloyed. Compare with amalgam.
- A mixture containing mostly metals. For example, brass is an alloy
of copper and zinc. Steel contains iron and other metals, but also
carbon.
- allyl. allylic; allyl group;
allyl radical.
- A molecular fragment derived by removing a methyl hydrogen from
propene (-CH2-CH2=CH2). For example,
"allyl chloride" is 3-chloropropene,
Cl-CH2-CH2=CH2.
- alpha particle. (42He)
- A particle that is commonly ejected from radioactive nuclei, consisting of two protons and two
neutrons. Alpha particles are helium nuclei. Alpha particles have a mass
of 6.644 655 98 ¡¿ 10-27 kg or 4.001 506 1747 atomic mass
units. [1998
CODATA values]
- alpha
ray. (
-ray) alpha radiation.
- A stream of alpha
particles. Alpha rays rapidly
dissipate their energy as they pass through materials, and are far less
penetrating than beta particles and gamma rays.
- amalgam. Compare with alloy.
- An alloy that contains mercury.
- American Chemical Society ACS.
- A large and influential professional society for professionals and
students in chemistry and related fields.
- amide.
- An amide is an organic compound that contains a carbonyl group bound to nitrogen:
. The simplest amides are formamide
(HCONH2) and acetamide (CH3CONH2).
- amine. Compare with ammine.
- An amine is an organic compound that contains a nitrogen atom bound
only to carbon and possibly hydrogen atoms. Examples are methylamine,
CH3NH2; dimethylamine,
CH3NHCH3; and trimethylamine,
(CH3)3N.
- amino acid.
- Amino acids are molecules that contain at least one amine group
(-NH2) and at least one carboxylic acid group (-COOH). When these groups
are both attached to the same carbon, the acid is an
-amino acid. -amino acids are the basic building blocks of
proteins.
- ammine. Compare with amine.
- A metal ion complex containing ammonia as a ligand. The ammonia nitrogen is bound directly to a
metal ion in ammines; amines differ in that the ammonia nitrogen is
directly bound to a carbon atom.
- ammonia. (NH3) Compare with
ammonium.
- Pure NH3 is a colorless gas with a sharp, characteristic
odor. It is easily liquified by pressure, and is very soluble in water.
Ammonia acts as a weak
base. Aqueous solutions of
ammonia are (incorrectly) referred to as "ammonium hydroxide".
- ammonium
ion. (NH4+)
ammonium.
- NH4+ is a cation formed by neutralization of
ammonia, which acts as a weak base.
- amorphous. amorphous solid. Compare with crystal.
- A solid that does not have a repeating, regular three-dimensional
arrangement of atoms, molecules, or ions.
- amperage.
- The amount of charge moved per second by an electric
current, measured in amperes.
- ampere. (A) amp.
- The SI unit of electric
current, equal to flow of 1 coulomb of charge per second. An ampere is the
amount of current necessary to produce a force of 0.2 micronewtons per
meter between two arbitrarily long, arbitrarily thin wires, placed
parallel in a vacuum and exactly 1 m apart. Named for 19th century
physicist André Marie Ampère.
- amperometry. amperometric.
- Determining the concentration of a material in a sample by measuring
electric
current.
- amphi-.
- A prefix used to name certain members of a series of geometric
isomers or stereoisomers.
- amphiprotic
solvent. Compare with aprotic
solvent.
- Solvents that exhibit both acidic and basic properties; amphiprotic
solvents undergo autoprotolysis. Examples are water, ammonia, and
ethanol.
- amphoteric. ampholyte.
- A substance that can act as either an acid or a base in a reaction.
For example, aluminum hydroxide can neutralize mineral acids (
Al(OH)3 + 3 HCl = AlCl3 + 3 H2O ) or
strong bases ( Al(OH)3 + 3 NaOH =
Na3AlO3 + 3 H2O).
- amplitude.
- The displacement of a wave from zero. The maximum amplitude for a
wave is the height of a peak or the depth of a trough, relative to the
zero displacement line.
- amylopectin. Compare with
amylose.
- A form of starch made of glucose molecules linked in a branching pattern.
- amylose. Compare with amyopectin.
- A form of starch made of long, unbranched chains of
-D-glucose molecules.
- aprotic solvent.
Compare with amphiprotic
solvent.
- A solvent that does not act as an acid or as a base; aprotic
solvents don't undergo autoprotolysis. Examples are pentane, pet ether, and
toluene.
- analysis. chemical analysis.
- Determination of the composition of a sample.
- analyte.
- An analyte is the sample constituent whose concentration is sought
in a chemical
analysis.
- Angstrom. (Å) Ångstrom; Ångstrom units.
- A non-SI unit of length used to express wavelengths
of light, bond lengths, and molecular sizes. 1 Å = 10-10 m =
10-8 cm.
- angular
momentum quantum number. (
) azimuthal quantum number; orbital angular
momentum quantum number.
- A quantum number that labels the subshells of an atom. Sometimes called the orbital
angular momentum quantum number, this quantum number dictates
orbital shape.
can take on values
from 0 to n-1 within a shell with principal
quantum number n.
- anhydrous. anhydrous compound; anhydride.
Compare with hydrate.
- A compound with all water removed, especially water of hydration.
For example, strongly heating copper(II) sulfate pentahydrate
(CuSO4¡¤5H2O) produces anhydrous copper(II) sulfate
(CuSO4).
- anion. Compare with cation.
- An anion is a negatively charged ion. Nonmetals typically form anions.
- anode. Compare with cathode.
- The electrode at which oxidation occurs in a cell. Anions migrate to the anode.
- anodize.
- To coat a metal with a protective film by electrolysis.
- anthocyanin. anthocyan.
- A family of pigments that give flowers, fruits, and leaves of some
plants their red or blue coloring. Anthocyanins consist of sugar
molecules bound to a benzopyrylium salt (called anthocyanidin). See Water
to Wine for more about anthocyanins.
- antibonding
orbital. antibonding; antibonding molecular
orbital.
- A molecular
orbital that can be described
as the result of destructive
interference of atomic
orbitals on bonded atoms.
Antibonding orbitals have energies higher than the energies its
constituent atomic orbitals would have if the atoms were separate.
- antichlor.
- A chemical compound that reacts with chlorine-based bleaches to stop
the bleaching. Thiosulfate
compounds are antichlors.
- antioxidant.
- Antioxidants are compounds that slow oxidation processes that degrade foods, fuels, rubber,
plastic, and other materials. Antioxidants like butylated hydroxyanisole
(BHA) are added to food to prevent fats from becoming rancid and to
minimize decomposition of vitamins and essential fatty acids; they work
by scavenging destructive free radicals from the food.
- antiozonant. antiozidant.
- Substances that reverse or prevent severe oxidation by ozone.
Antiozonants are added to rubber to prevent them from becoming brittle
as atmospheric ozone reacts with them over time. Aromatic amines are often used as antiozonants.
- antipyretic.
- A substance that can lessen or prevent fever.
- Antoine equation Antoine's equation.
- A simple 3-parameter fit to experimental vapor pressures measured
over a restricted temperature range:
where A, B, and C are
"Antoine coefficients" that vary from substance to substance.
Sublimations and vaporizations of the same substance have separate sets
of Antoine coefficients, as do components in mixtures. The Antoine
equation is accurate to a few percent for most volatile substances (with
vapor pressures over 10 Torr).
- aqua regia.
- A mixture of nitric and hydrochloric acids, usually 1:3 or 1:4 parts
HNO3 to HCl, used to dissolve gold.
- aqueous. (aq) aqueous solution.
- A substance dissolved in water.
- arene.
- A hydrocarbon that contains at least one aromatic ring.
- arginine. (R,
C6H14N4O2) Arg.
An essential amino acid and building block of proteins. Arginine
acts as a base under physiological conditions; the double-bonded
nitrogen on the end of the side chain readily captures a hydrogen ion,
becoming positively charged. This charged side group makes arginine hydrophilic.
- aromatic ring. (Ar)
- An exceptionally stable planar ring of atoms with resonance
structures that consist of alternating double and single bonds, e. g.
benzene:
- aromatic compound.
- A compound containing an aromatic ring. Aromatic compounds have strong,
characteristic odors.
- Arrhenius
equation.
- In 1889, Svante Arrhenius explained the variation of rate constants with temperature for several elementary
reactions using the
relationship
k = A exp(-Ea/RT)
where the rate constant
k is the total frequency of
collisions between reaction
molecules A times the fraction of collisions exp(-Ea/RT) that
have an energy that exceeds a threshold activation
energy Ea at a
temperature of T (in kelvins). R is the universal
gas constant.
- aryl. (Ar) aryl group.
- A molecular fragment or group attached to a molecule by an atom that
is on an aromatic
ring.
- asparagine.
Asn.
A natural amino acid that is the amide of aspartic acid.
- aspartic
acid.
(D,HOOCCH2CH(NH2)COOH) Asp.
- A nonessential amino acid that is abundant in molasses. The carboxylic
acid group on the side chain
is ionized under physiological conditions, making aspartic acid residues
in proteins hydrophilic.
- atmosphere. (atm)
- A unit of pressure, equal to a barometer reading of 760 mm Hg. 1
atmosphere is 101325 pascals and 1.01325 bar.
- atomic mass unit. (amu,u) amu; dalton.
- A unit of mass equal to 1/12 the mass of a carbon-12 nucleus, which
is 1.660 538 73 ¡¿ 10-27 kg ¡¾ 0.000 000 13 ¡¿ 10-27
kg [1998
CODATA values]. Abbreviated as amu or u. Sometimes
called the dalton, after John
Dalton, architect of the first
modern atomic theory.
- atomic nucleus. nucleus; nuclei; atomic nuclei.
- A tiny, incredibly dense positively charged mass at the heart of the
atom. The nucleus is composed of protons and neutrons (and other particles). It contains almost
all of the mass of the atom but occupies only a tiny fraction of the
atom's volume.
- atomic number. (Z)
- The number of protons in an atomic nucleus. The atomic number and the element symbol are two alternate ways to label an
element. In nuclide
symbols, the atomic number is
a leading subscript; for example, in 126C, the "6"
is the atomic number.
- atomic orbital.
- A wavefunction that describes the behavior of an electron
in an atom.
- atomic
radius. metallic radius; covalent radius;
atomic radii. Compare with ionic radius.
- One half the distance between nuclei of atoms of the same element,
when the atoms are bound by a single covalent bond or are in a metallic
crystal. The radius of atoms obtained from covalent bond lengths is
called the covalent radius; the radius from interatomic distances in
metallic crystals is called the metallic radius.
- atomic theory.
- An explanation of chemical properties and processes that assumes
that tiny particles called atoms are the ultimate building blocks of
matter.
- atomic unit. Compare with
Bohr radius and hartree.
- A system of non-SI units used in quantum chemistry to
simplify calculations and mathematical expressions. The definitions of
atomic units include physical constants (like the speed of
light, the rest mass of the
electron, and other quantities that never change), so that all constants
drop out of expressions when atomic units are used.
- atomic
weight. atomic mass.
- The average mass of an atom of an element, usually expressed in atomic mass
units. The terms mass and weight are used interchangeably in this case. The
atomic weight given on the periodic table is a weighted average of isotopic
masses found in a typical
terrestrial sample of the element.
- atom. Compare with molecule and ion.
- An atom is the smallest particle of an element that retains the
chemical properties of the element. Atoms are electrically neutral, with
a positively charged nucleus that binds one or more electrons in motion
around it.
- atto-. (a)
- Prefix used in the SI system meaning "multiply by
10-18". For example, 3 am means 3¡¿ 10-18 meters.
- aufbau principle.
aufbau construction; building-up principle.
- An approximate procedure for writing the ground state electronic
configuration of atoms. The
configuration of an atom is obtained by inserting one electron into the
configuration of the atom immediately to its left on the periodic table.
The electron is inserted into the subshell indicated by the element's period and block.
- auto-ignition
temperature. Compare with flash point.
- Minimum temperature at which the vapor/air mixture over a liquid
spontaneously catches fire.
- autoxidation. autooxidation;
autoxidize; autoxidizing.
- Oxidation caused by exposure to air. Rust is an
example of autoxidation. Autoxidation makes ether taken from half-filled
bottles very dangerous, because air oxidizes ether to highly explosive
organic peroxides.
- autoprotolysis. autoionization; autoionization
constant; autoprotolysis constant.
- Transfer of a hydrogen ion between molecules of the same substance,
e. g. the autoprotolysis of methanol (2 CH3OH =
CH3OH2+ + CH3O-).
Autoprotolysis of water into hydronium ions and hydroxide ions results in equilibrium concentrations
that satisfy Kw =
[H3O+][OH-], where the
autoprotolysis constant Kw is equal to 1.01 ¡¿
10-14 at 25¡ÆC.
- auxochrome. Compare with chromophore.
- A group or substructure in a molecule that influences the intensity
of absorption of the molecule.
- average bond
enthalpy. Compare with bond enthalpy.
- Average enthalpy change per mole when the same type of bond is
broken in the gas phase for many similar substances
- Avogadro. Amadeo Avogadro.
- Italian chemist and physicist Amadeo Avogadro (1776-1856) proposed a
correct molecular explanation for Gay-Lussac's law of
combining volumes. His work
provided a simple way to determine atomic weights and molecular
weights of gases.
- Avogadro number. (NA, L) Avogadro's
number; Avogadro constant.
- The number of particles in one mole, equal to 6.02214199 ¡¿
1023 mol-1 (¡¾ 0.00000047 mol-1) [1998
CODATA values]
- Avogadro's law.
- Equal volumes of an ideal gas contain equal numbers of molecules, if both
volumes are at the same temperature and pressure. For example, 1 L of
ideal gas contains twice as many molecules as 0.5 L of ideal gas at the
same temperature and pressure.
- axial.
- 1. An atom, bond, or lone pair that is perpendicular to equatorial atoms, bonds, and lone pairs in a trigonal
bipyramidal molecular
geometry.
- azeotrope. azeotropic mixture; azeotropy.
- A solution that does not change composition when distilled. For
example, if a 95% (w/w) ethanol solution in water is boilled, the vapor
produced also is 95% ethanol- and it is not possible to obtain higher
percentages of ethanol by distillation.
- azo. azo compound; azo group; azo dye.
- The azo group has the general structure Ar-N=N-Ar', where Ar and Ar'
indicate substituted aromatic rings. Compounds containing the azo
compounds are often intensely colored and are economically important as
dyes. Methyl orange is an example of an azo dye.
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