Chapter 9, 10, 11 – Flashcards
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            | heterogeneous mixture | 
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        | a nonuniform mixture that has regions of different composition | 
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            | homogeneous mixture | 
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        | a uniform mixture that has the same composition throughout | 
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            | solution | 
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        | a homogeneous mixture that contains particles the size of a typical ion or small molecule. | 
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            | colloid | 
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        | a homogeneous mixture that contains particles that range in diameter from 2 to 500 nm. | 
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            | solute | 
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        | a substance that is dissolved in a solvent | 
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            | solvent | 
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        | the substance in which another substance (the solute) is disolved | 
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            | solvation | 
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        | the clustering of solvent molecules around a dissolved solute molecule or ion | 
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            | hygroscopic | 
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        | having the ability to pull water molecules from the surrouni atmosphere | 
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            | miscible | 
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        | mutually soluble in all proportions | 
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            | saturated solution | 
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        | a solution that contains the maximum amount of dissolved solute at equilibrium | 
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            | solubility | 
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        | the maximum amount of a substance that will dissolve in a given amount of solvent at a specified temperature | 
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            | supersaturated solution | 
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        | a solution that contains more than the maximum amount of dissolved solute; a nonequilibrium solution | 
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            | mass/mass percent concentration (m/m)% | 
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        | Concentration expressed as the number of grams of solute per 100 grams of solution | 
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            | volume/volume percent concentration (v/v)% | 
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        | Concentration expressed as the number of milliliters of solute dissolved in 100 mL of solution. | 
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            | mass/volume percent concentration (m/v)% | 
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        | concentration expressed as the number of grams of solute per 100 mL of solution | 
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            | parts per million (ppm) | 
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        | number of parts per 1 million | 
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            | parts per billion (ppb) | 
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        | number of parts per 1 billion parts | 
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            | Molarity | 
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        | concenration expressed as the number of moles of solute per liter of solution | 
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            | dilution factor | 
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        | the ratio of the initial and final solution volumes (Vc/Vd) | 
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            | electrolyte | 
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        | a substance that produces ions and therefore conducts electricity when dissolved in water | 
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            | strong electrolyte | 
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        | a substance that completely ionized when dissolved in water | 
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            | weak electrolyte | 
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        | a substance that is only partly ionized in water | 
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            | nonelectrolyte | 
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        | a substance that does not produce ions when dissolved in water | 
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            | equivalent | 
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        | for ions, the amount equal to 1 mol of charge | 
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            | gram-equivalent | 
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        | for ions, the molar mass of the ion divided by the ionic charge | 
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            | colligative property | 
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        | aproperty of a solution that depends only on the number of dissolved particles, not on their chemical identity | 
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            | osmosis | 
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        | the passage of solvent through a semipermiable membrane separating two solutions of different concentration | 
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            | osmotic pressure | 
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        | the amount of external pressure that must be applied to a solution to prevent the net movement of solvent molecules across a semipermeable membrane | 
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            | osmolarity | 
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        | the sum of the molarities of all dissolved particles in a solution | 
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            | isotonic | 
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        | having the same osmolarity | 
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            | hypotonic | 
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        | having an osmolarity less than the surrounding blood plasma or cells | 
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            | hypertonic | 
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        | having an osmolarity greaterthan the surrounding blood plasma or cells | 
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            | Bronsted-Lowry acid | 
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        | a substance that can donate a hydrogen ion, H+, to another molecule or ion | 
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            | bronsted lowry base | 
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        | a substance that can accept H+ ions from an acid | 
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            | conjugate acid-base pair | 
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        | two substances whose formulas differ by only a hydrogen ion | 
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            | conjugate base | 
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        | the substance formed by loss of H+ ions from an acid | 
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            | conjugate acid | 
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        | the substance formed by gain of H+ ions from a base | 
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            | strong acid | 
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        | an acid that gives up H+ easily and is essentially 100% dissociated in water | 
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            | dissociation | 
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        | the splitting apart of an acid in water to give H+ and nanion | 
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            | weak acid | 
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        | an acid that gives up H+ with difficulty and is less than 100% dissociated in water | 
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            | weak base | 
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        | a base that has only a slight affinity for H+ and holds it weakly | 
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            | strong base | 
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        | a base that has a high affinity for H+ and holds it tightly | 
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            | acid dissociation constant | 
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        | the equilibrium constant for the dissociation of an acid (HA) equal to [H+][A-]/[HA] | 
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            | amphoteric | 
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        | a substance that can react either as an acid or a base | 
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            | Ion-product constant for water (Kw) | 
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        | the product of the H30 and OH molar concentrations in water or any aqueous solution | 
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            | p function | 
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        | the negative common log of some variable | 
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            | pH | 
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        | a measure of the acid strength of a solution; the negative common log of the H3O conc. | 
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            | Acid-base indicator | 
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        | a dye that changes color depending on the pH of the solution | 
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            | buffer | 
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        | a combination of substances that act together to prevent a drastic change in pH; usually a weak acid and it's conjugate base. | 
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            | equivalent of acid | 
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        | amount of acid that contains 1 mole of H+ ions | 
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            | equivalent of base | 
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        | amont of base containing 1 mole of OH- ions | 
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            | normality | 
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        | a measure of acid (or base) equivalents per liter of solution | 
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            | titration | 
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        | a procedure for determining the total acid or base concentration of a solution | 
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            | nucleon | 
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        | a general term for both protons and neutrons | 
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            | radioactivity | 
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        | the spontaneous emission of radiation from a nucleus | 
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            | gamma radiation | 
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        | radioactivity consisting of high energy light waves | 
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            | beta particle | 
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        | an electron (e-) emitted as radiation | 
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            | alpha particle | 
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        | a helium nucleus (He 2+) emitted as alpha radiation | 
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            | radioisotope | 
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        | a radioactive isotope | 
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            | radionuclide | 
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        | the nucleus of a radioactive isotope | 
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            | nuclear decay | 
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        | the spontaneous emission o a particle from an unstable nucleus | 
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            | transmutation | 
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        | the change of one element into another | 
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            | positron | 
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        | a "positive electron," which has the same mass as an electron but a positive charge | 
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            | electron capture (E.C.) | 
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        | a process in which the nucleus captures an inner shell electron cloud, thereby converting a proton into a neutron | 
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            | half-life (t1/2) | 
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        | the amount of time required for one-half of radioactive sameple to decay | 
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            | decay series | 
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        | a sequential series of nuclear disintifgrations leading from a heavy radioisotope to a nonradioactive product | 
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            | ionizing radiation | 
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        | a general name for high-energy radiation of all kinds | 
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            | x rays | 
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        | electromagnetic radiation with an energy somewhat less than that of gamma rays | 
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            | cosmic rays | 
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        | a mixture of high energy particles-- primarily of protons and various atomic nuclei -- that shower earth from outer space | 
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            | artificial transmutation | 
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        | the change of one atom into another brought about by a nuclear bombardment reaction | 
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            | nuclear fission | 
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        | the fragmenting of heavy nuclei | 
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            | nuclear fusion | 
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        | the joining together of light nuclei | 
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            | chain reaction | 
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        | a reaction that, once started, is self sustaining | 
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            | critical mass | 
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        | the minimum amount of radioactive material needed to sustain a nuclear reaction | 
