Chemical Formulae of Elements
- An element is a substance made of atoms that all contain the same number of protons and cannot be split into anything simpler
- So, if you had 500g of pure carbon and divided it into 500 x 1g piles, each pile would contain the same substance and would not differ from any other pile
- There are 118 elements on the Periodic Table e.g., hydrogen, carbon, nitrogen
- Each element is represented by its own unique symbol as seen on the Periodic Table e.g., N stands for nitrogen and for nitrogen only
- The symbols of elements can have one, two or three letters
- Where a symbol contains two or more letters, the first one is always written in uppercase letters and the others in lowercase e.g., sodium is Na, not NA
The Formulae of Metallic Elements
- The formula of a metallic element is always an empirical formula and cannot be made any simpler
The Formulae of Non-metallic Elements
- Non-metallic elements in Group 0 exist as individual atoms, so their formula is the same as their symbol
- Many other non-metallic elements exist as molecules and giant structures, so their formulae are not always empirical
- For example sulfur is S8 and phosphorus is P4
- The following elements must be written as molecules as they exist in nature as two atoms joined together: H2, N2, O2, F2, Cl2, Br2 and I2
- The atomic number and mass number are also shown on the periodic table
The symbol key for Carbon as represented in the periodic table - C is the symbol for Carbon and 12 is the mass number and 6 is the atomic number