Wednesday, Nov 4 5pm – 6pm
ISB 135
Review for Exam 2
Nov Review
23 thoughts on “Review Session 2”
Nicole Gendreau
hey everyone!
I have a question
How do you find n? Is n the number orbitals in an atom?
Balazs Martai
Just adding onto Justine’s statement…
The number of protons will not change, only the number of electrons. That being said, I think your question had to do something with how the electrons go into the orbitals. Ions lose electrons from the highest n-subshells.
Also, if you have, for example, Chromium (Cr), whose valence electron configuration is [Ar]4s2 3d4, you’d think that the “boxes” that get filled up are 2 in the s orbital, and 1 per box in the d orbital, leaving one of them completely empty. However, it will want to form a more stable half-full shell, which has 1 electron in the s orbital, and 1 in each of the d orbital boxes, giving you 5 there.
Justine Downing
Hey Lauren,
To find out how many electrons are in Ca (or in any element for that matter) you would look at the atomic number= number of protons and that will give you the number of electrons, so for Ca its 20. If it is a cation or anion the number of elcetron will change for instance if its Ca2+ there will only be 18 electrons.
I hope that helps!
Laura Risch
I was wondering if anyone could explain how you determine the number of electrons used to fill up orbitals for a specific element. For example. If we were asked to write the electron configuration for Ca, how would I find the number of electrons?
Thanks so much
Anne Papacostas
Hi Stephanie,
the specific heat capacity equation is q=m *Csp*T if you are in units of grams or q=n*Cn*T if you are in units of moles.
q =Energy in Joules
m=mass of substance
n=moles of substance
T=(Tfinal – Tinitial)
The owl section for specific heat is around 5.2, so if you want to practice some problems, go to past due assignments and look in that section and the ones around it.
Stephanie Bruno
Does anybody know where I can find a specific heat capacity equation? Like for problem #8 on the practice exam, or problem 7 from Tuesday’s SI worksheet?
Stephanie Bruno
If you mean a set of quantum numbers such as what the Pauli Exclusion principle talks about then you can find a really good explanation in the e-book on page305. I didn’t understand that at first either but I thought that the explanation in the book helped me out, hope it works for you too.
Robert Kane
I meant to ask at the review session today, but can someone please explain what a “set of quantum numbers” means. An example for where this is used is question 25 on the practice exam.
thanks,
Robert Kane
chem111-mjknappPost author
any combination is fine!
Connie Diep
I just wanted to make sure for extra credit on Exams
Answering 2 questions on a blog gives you 4 extra points on the exam?
or…
Asking 4 questions on a blog give you 4 extra points on the exam?
or you can do a mix of answering 1 question and asking 2 questions, right?
Shaheen Hakim
Brittany,
Professor Knapp suggested we over the follwing sections of the book:
Ch 3.9, Ch 5, Ch 6, Ch 7, the interchapter and then the bit of reading from chapter 21. Its about 8 pages from chapter 21 and its on the homepage.
Shaheen Hakimi
Robert Kane
Professor, could you please record this extra help session so we can review it again tomorrow?
Thanks,
Rob Kane
Brittany Bausch
Hey everyone I don’t have a question but i have a suggestion. on pages 241-242 and pages 296 it contains equations we will need for this exam. These pages really helped me do the practice test.
I do have a question, does anyone know what questions Prof. Knapp suggested for us to go over for this exam?
Thank You,
Brittany Bausch
Christina Dube
Alison,
Last review session, we went over any questions that students had (you had to bring in an example problem of some sort) and we did go over the practice test if people had problems with certain questions. I found it very useful!
Kaitlin Desmarais
Will Redox reactions be covered in the exam?
Dan B
Hey, I was wondering how much on redox reactions are going to be on the exam? I don’t feel like I know them as well as I should.
If is going to be on the exam can we go over them in this review?
Thanks!
Justine Downing
Aimee,
Yes there is a practice exam for exam 2 it is under the tab up top that says EXAMS. Then you would scroll down to the Midterm 2 Exam section and see a link for Practice Exam 2
Hope That helps =)
hey everyone!
I have a question
How do you find n? Is n the number orbitals in an atom?
Just adding onto Justine’s statement…
The number of protons will not change, only the number of electrons. That being said, I think your question had to do something with how the electrons go into the orbitals. Ions lose electrons from the highest n-subshells.
Also, if you have, for example, Chromium (Cr), whose valence electron configuration is [Ar]4s2 3d4, you’d think that the “boxes” that get filled up are 2 in the s orbital, and 1 per box in the d orbital, leaving one of them completely empty. However, it will want to form a more stable half-full shell, which has 1 electron in the s orbital, and 1 in each of the d orbital boxes, giving you 5 there.
Hey Lauren,
To find out how many electrons are in Ca (or in any element for that matter) you would look at the atomic number= number of protons and that will give you the number of electrons, so for Ca its 20. If it is a cation or anion the number of elcetron will change for instance if its Ca2+ there will only be 18 electrons.
I hope that helps!
I was wondering if anyone could explain how you determine the number of electrons used to fill up orbitals for a specific element. For example. If we were asked to write the electron configuration for Ca, how would I find the number of electrons?
Thanks so much
Hi Stephanie,
the specific heat capacity equation is q=m *Csp*T if you are in units of grams or q=n*Cn*T if you are in units of moles.
q =Energy in Joules
m=mass of substance
n=moles of substance
T=(Tfinal – Tinitial)
The owl section for specific heat is around 5.2, so if you want to practice some problems, go to past due assignments and look in that section and the ones around it.
Does anybody know where I can find a specific heat capacity equation? Like for problem #8 on the practice exam, or problem 7 from Tuesday’s SI worksheet?
If you mean a set of quantum numbers such as what the Pauli Exclusion principle talks about then you can find a really good explanation in the e-book on page305. I didn’t understand that at first either but I thought that the explanation in the book helped me out, hope it works for you too.
I meant to ask at the review session today, but can someone please explain what a “set of quantum numbers” means. An example for where this is used is question 25 on the practice exam.
thanks,
Robert Kane
any combination is fine!
I just wanted to make sure for extra credit on Exams
Answering 2 questions on a blog gives you 4 extra points on the exam?
or…
Asking 4 questions on a blog give you 4 extra points on the exam?
or you can do a mix of answering 1 question and asking 2 questions, right?
Brittany,
Professor Knapp suggested we over the follwing sections of the book:
Ch 3.9, Ch 5, Ch 6, Ch 7, the interchapter and then the bit of reading from chapter 21. Its about 8 pages from chapter 21 and its on the homepage.
Shaheen Hakimi
Professor, could you please record this extra help session so we can review it again tomorrow?
Thanks,
Rob Kane
Hey everyone I don’t have a question but i have a suggestion. on pages 241-242 and pages 296 it contains equations we will need for this exam. These pages really helped me do the practice test.
I do have a question, does anyone know what questions Prof. Knapp suggested for us to go over for this exam?
Thank You,
Brittany Bausch
Alison,
Last review session, we went over any questions that students had (you had to bring in an example problem of some sort) and we did go over the practice test if people had problems with certain questions. I found it very useful!
Will Redox reactions be covered in the exam?
Hey, I was wondering how much on redox reactions are going to be on the exam? I don’t feel like I know them as well as I should.
If is going to be on the exam can we go over them in this review?
Thanks!
Aimee,
Yes there is a practice exam for exam 2 it is under the tab up top that says EXAMS. Then you would scroll down to the Midterm 2 Exam section and see a link for Practice Exam 2
Hope That helps =)
Is there a practice exam for exam 2?
Is there a practice exam for this test?
Yah I wouldn’t worry too much about missing a few owls, unless you miss like entire sections.
Will we be going over the practice exam at the review session?
Hello Andrew,
In the syllabus it says that owls count for 60 points approximately 10% of our grades, but he drops 10% of the models.
Brittany Bausch
will missing a few owl question affect my grade a lot?