Java Games: Flashcards, matching, concentration, and word search.

Chapter 23-25 terms

Definitions for all key terms in this chapter

AB
solutiona homogeneous mixture containing particles so tiny that they cannot be seen even with a microscope
solutethe substance being dissolved into a solvent
solventthe substance that dissolves a solute
alloya mixture consisting of a metal and one or more elements
solubilitythe amount of a substance that will dissolve in a 100g of solvent at a particular temperature
concentrationthe proportion of a solute dissolved in a solvent
percentage by volumeprecise concentration
saturated solutiona solution that has dissolved all the solute that it can normally hold at a specific temperature
unsaturated solutiona solution that is capable of dissolving more solute at a specific temperature
supersaturated solutionan unstable solution that contains more solute than a standard solution can at the same specific temperature
concentrateda solution in which the amount of solute is near the maximum the solvent can hold at that temperature
dilutea solution in which the amount of solute is much less than the maximum the solvent can hold at that temperature
solubility curvea graph of the saturation values for a particular solute in a particular solvent; temp on x-axis; solubility on y-axis
solid solutionsolid substance (solute) dissolved into another solid substance (solvent)
gas solutiona gas substance (solute) dissolved into another gas substance (solvent)
liquid solutionany solution where the solvent is liquid; can have a gas, a solid, or another liquid as the solute
insolublea solute that is unable to dissolve in a particular solvent for that temperature
solublea solute that is able to be dissolved in a particular solvent at a specific temperature
solubility standardspecific amount of solvent (100 g) used to determine solubility values
type of solutiondetermined by the state of matter of the solvent
valence electronan electron in the outer energy level of an atom
oxidation numbera positive or negative number that indiates how many electrons an atom has lost, gained, or shared when bonding with other atoms
subscripta number in a chemical formula that tells how many atoms are present
coefficienta number in front of a chemical formula that indicates how many sets of that compound are present
iona positively or negatively charged atom
ionic bondformed by the attraction between opposite charges of the ions in an ionic compound; found between a metal and a nonmetal
covalent bonda type of bond formed between 2 or more nonmetals when they share electrons
diatomic bond2 of the same nonmetal; BrINCLHOF
polyatomic ionions that contain more than nonmetal that behave as a single, charged unit when forming chemical bonds
octet rulestates that all atoms are "driven" to have full outer energy levels; 8 except for H and He
reactantsubstance on the left side of a chemical equation that participates in a chemical reaction
productsubstance on the right side of the chemical equation that is formed as a result of a chemical reaction
->yields or produces
catalystused to speed up a reaction but is not permanently changed during the reaction
inhibitorhelps to prevent or slow down a reaction but is "used" up because it chemically binds with one of the reactants
synthesisalso called addition; 2 or more substances react to form one product
decompositionone reactant breaks down into 2 or more simpler products
single displacementa more "active" metal replaces a less active one
double displacement2 elements from 2 different compounds swap places with each other to form 2 new compounds
endothermic reactionmore energy is required (absorbed) to break the reactant bonds than is released from the formation of the new product bonds (feels cold)
exothermic reactionless energy is required (absorbed) to break the reactant bonds than is released from the formation of the product bonds (gives off heat or light)
solutiona homogeneous mixture containing particles so tiny that they cannot be seen even with a microscope
solutethe substance that is dissolved
solventthe substance that is actually doing the dissolving
solubilitythe amount of a substance that will dissolve in 100g of solvent at a particular temperature
electrolytea substance that separates or forms ions in a solution, making the solution an electrical conductor
polar covalent bondnonmetals are not sharing the electrons evenly; causes a "local" charge
nonpolar covalent bondnonmetals share electrons evenly
dissociationprocess where a base is dissolved to form ions
acida polar covalent substance that produces positive hydrogen ions in solutions
basean ionic substance that produces negative hydroxide ions in solution
indicatororganic compound that changes color in the presence of an acid or a base
neutralizationa chemical reaction between an acid and a base that produces a salt and water
pHa measure of the strength of an acid or a base; measures the concentration of hydronium ions in the solution


Mrs. Clark

This activity was created by a Quia Web subscriber.
Learn more about Quia
Create your own activities