1. What does this symbol mean? 2. Sodium has this hazard symbol - what precautions should you take...

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1. What does this symbol mean?

2. Sodium has this hazard symbol - what precautions should you take when using it?

corrosive

Goggles, pick up with tweezers, use a safety screen

3. What does this mean?

toxic

4. What element does this represent?

Na

5. Which group is it in?

6. Which period is it in?

sodium

1

3

7. Which of these is the flame colour for sodium chloride?

The yellow one

8. What can you say about the spectrum for each element?

Each element has a different spectrum, it can be used to identify the element.

10. What is the name of the group which this element belong to?

Cl

11. What does Cl2 tell you? 2 atoms in a

chlorine molecule.

12. Why am I added to water at the swimming pool? To kill bacteria.

The Halogens (Group 7)

13. What do these alkali metals have in common? Soft, silvery, one electron in outer

shell, react with water to make hydrogen and an alkaline solution, all end in ium, metals ….

Li

Na

K

Rb

Cs

14. Do they become more or less reactive as you go down the group? more

15. Name the two products:

Sodium + water sodium

hydroxide + hydrogen

16. Inside an atom there are neutrons. What else are there?

Protons and electrons

17. What word do we use to describe a charged particle like Na+? ions

18. Element or compound? Compound because the atoms aren’t all the same.

19. Atom, molecule or ion? It is a

molecule – a group of atoms joined together.

H2

20. Atom, molecule or ion? Ion

because it has a charge.

Cl-

21. If my electron configuration is 2,8,1; what group am I in? 1 because there

is one electron in the outer shell.

22. What period am I in? Period

3 because 3 shells are used.

23. Why does sodium chloride have a high melting point? There is a strong attraction

between the + and – ions and a lot of energy is needed to pull them apart.

24. Why are salt crystals cubic? The

ions are arranged in a regular way – in a lattice.

25. Why don’t salt crystals conduct electricity? The ions are

fixed in position and can’t move around.

26. Why does melted salt or salt solution conduct electricity?

The ions can move around and carry current.

27. What’s the formula?

• Water

• Sodium chloride

• Hydrogen

• Chlorine

• Sodium hydroxide

H2O, NaCl, H2, Cl2, NaOH

28. Give any trends.

Name Hardness Density g/cm3

Melting point oC

Lithium Fairly hard to cut

0.53 180

Sodium Easy to cut 0.97 98

Potassium Very easy to cut

0.86 64

As you go down the group, the elements get softer, there is no pattern in density, the melting point decreases.

29. What do they mean?

• H2O (l)

• Na (s)

• Cl2 (g)

• NaCl (s)

• NaCl (aq)Water is a liquid, sodium is a solid, chlorine is a gas, sodium chloride solid and sodium chloride solution.

30. What happens to a chlorine atom when it reacts?

Cl 2.8.7

The atom will gain an electron to get a full outer shell. It will become Cl-

31. What happens to a sodium atom when it reacts?

Na 2.8.1

The atom will lose an electron to get a full outer shell. It will become Na+

32. Give the ion for:

• Sodium Na+ (Group1)

• Magnesium Mg2+ (Group 2)

• Aluminium Al3+ (Group 3)

• Fluorine F- (Group 7)

• Oxygen O2- (Group 6)

33. Which are salts?

• Sodium

• Chlorine

• Sodium chloride

• Potassium bromide

• Magnesium

• iodine

Salts are made when you react a metal with a non-metal.