Compared to an electron in the first electron shell of an atom‚ an electron in the third shell of the same atom has (1) less mass (2) less energy (3) more mass (4) more energy 8. ____ An atom in the ground state contains a total of 5 electrons‚ 5 protons‚ and 5 neutrons. Which Lewis electron-dot diagram represents this atom? 9. Determine the percent composition by mass of oxygen in the compound C6H12O6. State‚ in terms of subatomic particles‚ how an atom of C-13 is different from an atom of
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1. Atomic and Molecular Structure a. Students know how to relate the position of an element in the periodic table to its atomic number and atomic mass. The Periodic Table organizes elements by their atomic number - from hydrogen (1) to whatever is the highest one currently known (>105). It is arranged so that similiar members fall in a list such as Chlorine Bromine etc.. The average atomic weight is usually shown with each element‚ but due to isotopes (caused buy nuclear varations)
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(0 net carbon emission) The fundamental physical components of a typical dual-chamber MFC are the electrolyte‚ an anode and a cathode partitioned by a proton exchange membrane as shown in figure1 (Du‚ Li and Gu 2007). At the anode‚ microbial respiration oxidizes available substrates to carbon dioxide results in liberation of electrons and protons. These electrons are transported out of the cell to the electrolytes via electrochemically active carriers‚ also known as
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difference between atoms of different elements. - The number of protons in an atom determines the element to which the atom belongs. - The atomic number of an element shows: * The number of protons in the nucleus of an atom of the element * The number of electrons in the neutral atom of that element * The position of the element in the Periodic Table Mass number (A) - For any atom‚ the mass number is the sum of the number of protons and the number of neutrons. Particle name | Relative
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Effect of ions on living organisms (24 marks) An ion is a charged atom or molecule. This is because it does not have an equal amount of protons and electrons‚ therefore giving the atom an overall charge. An example of an ion is ‚ this is sodium and the plus sign represents an overall positive charge. Ions are very important to living organisms as they are essential for life‚ they play an important role within the cell allowing mechanisms within the living organisms such as respiration‚ to take
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aerosols 6. A naturally occurring ___________ is fog. v. aerosol w. colloid x. plasma y. liquid z. solid 7. The atomic number of an element is given by the number of __________ in its nucleus. {. protons |.
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Topic 8: Cell respiration and Photosynthesis 8.1 Cell respiration 8.1.1 State that oxidation involves the loss of electrons from an element‚ whereas reduction involves a gain of electrons; and that oxidation frequently involves gaining oxygen or losing hydrogen‚ whereas reduction frequently involves losing oxygen or gaining hydrogen Oxidation involves the loss of electrons from an element‚ whereas reduction involves a gain of electrons; and that oxidation frequently involves gaining oxygen
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role of atomic number in MiniLab: Modeling Isotopes‚ p. 102 How Atoms Differ 2 sessions 1 block determining the identity of an atom. 6. Define an isotope and explain why atomic masses are not whole numbers. 7. Calculate the number of electrons‚ protons‚ and neutrons in an atom given its mass number and atomic number. Section 4.4 8. Explain the relationship between Careers Using Chemistry: Radiation Unstable Nuclei and Radioactive Decay 2 sessions 1 block unstable nuclei and radioactive decay
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OMEPRAZOLE. Omeprazole was one of the first proton pump inhibitors bought onto the market in the late 1980’s‚ they appear to be the drug of choice for most gastric related disorders (Der‚ 2003) Omeprazole is the author’s drug of choice and it will be demonstrated through a drug framework. This drug has particular interest because of the gastroenterology nursing environment the author works in. Discussion based around the drug framework will include‚ structure‚ formulation‚ indications for use
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Zwitter ion C * : α- carbon : α- amino acid NH2 : α- amino group‚ basic (proton acceptor) COOH : α- carboxylic group‚ acidic (proton donor) R : side chain of amino acid Classification of amino acids depending on the nature of side chain: * Neutral * Basic amino acid : with extra amino group (NH2) in its side chain
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