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3.E: Exercises

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    83064
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    Additional Exercises for Chapter 3:

    1. Answer the following for an oxygen atom. (A) How many shells are occupied by electrons? (B) What is the number of electrons in each shell? (C) How many valence and how many core electrons?

    2. Answer the following for a silicon atom. (A) How many shells are occupied by electrons? (B) What is the number of electrons in each shell? (C) How many valence and how many core electrons?

    3. How many total electrons and protons in an aluminum atom? How many total electrons and protons in an aluminum ion?

    4. What number shell is the valence electron shell of a sodium atom? What number shell is the valence electron shell of a sodium ion? Explain the difference.

    5. Starting with neutral lithium and sulfur atoms (A) show formation of the lithium sulfide compound (B). (Hint: Think about how many electrons each atom is likely to gain or lose. This exchange may require more than one of each atom. Use curved arrows for movement of electrons.)

    6. For each of the following, determine the formula and calculate the formula mass to at least three decimal places. (A) sidewalk deicing salt, caclium chloride; (B) potash, potassium oxide; (C) red-brown rust, iron(III) oxide; (D) the fertilizer, ammonium sulfate

    7. Write names for each. (A) NH4NO3; (B) Na3P; (C) Na3PO4; (D) Cu2SO3; (E) CoCO3

    Answers:

    1. (A) The oxygen atom has two shells of electrons. (B) Oxygen has two electrons in the first shell and six electrons in the second shell. (C) Oxygen has six valence and two core electrons.

    2. (A) The sili on atom has three shells of electrons. (B) Silicon has two electrons in the first shell, eight electrons in the second shell, and four electrons in the third shell. (C) Silicon has four valence and ten (2+8) core electrons.

    3. An aluminum atom has 13 protons and 13 electrons. An aluminum ion has 13 protons and 10 electrons.

    4. The third shell is valence (outer-most) for a sodium atom. The second shell is valence for a sodium ion. When the sodium atom loses its single valence electron from the third shell, the resulting sodium ion will only have electrons in two shells (so the second shell becomes valence).

    5.

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    6. (A) CaCl2, 110.984 amu; (B) K2O, 94.195 amu; (C) Fe2O3, 159.687 amu; (D) (NH4)2SO4, 132.140 amu

    7. Write names for each. (A) ammonium nitrate; (B) sodium phosphide; (C) sodium phosphate; (D) copper(I) sulfite; (E) cobalt(II) carbonate


    3.E: Exercises is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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