Atoms and Molecules (CBSE Class 9 Science)

Atoms and Molecules


🔹 I. Laws of Chemical Combination

  1. Law of Conservation of Mass (Lavoisier)
    • Mass can neither be created nor destroyed in a chemical reaction.
    • Example: In the reaction of barium chloride + sodium sulphate → barium sulphate + sodium chloride, total mass of reactants = total mass of products.
  2. Law of Constant Proportions (Proust)
    • A chemical compound always contains the same elements in the same proportion by mass.
    • Example: Water (H₂O) always has 2 parts hydrogen and 16 parts oxygen by mass.

🔹 II. Dalton’s Atomic Theory

AssumptionModern View
All matter is made of tiny indivisible atomsAtoms are divisible (subatomic particles exist)
Atoms of same element are identicalIsotopes exist (same element, different mass)
Atoms combine in whole-number ratiosCorrect (basis of chemical formulae)
Atoms are neither created nor destroyedCorrect for chemical reactions

🔹 III. What is an Atom?

  • Atom: Smallest particle of an element that takes part in chemical reaction.
  • Represented by symbols (IUPAC system).

🔸 Atomic Symbols (By Berzelius)

ElementSymbolAtomic Mass
HydrogenH1 u
OxygenO16 u
CarbonC12 u
SodiumNa23 u
IronFe56 u

🔹 IV. Molecule

  • Molecule: A group of two or more atoms chemically bonded together.
  • Can be of:
    • Elements (e.g., O₂, N₂)
    • Compounds (e.g., H₂O, CO₂)

🔸 Types:

  • Monoatomic: He, Ne (noble gases)
  • Diatomic: O₂, H₂, N₂
  • Triatomic & Polyatomic: O₃, P₄, S₈

🔹 V. Atomicity

  • Number of atoms in a molecule.
TypeExampleAtomicity
MonoatomicHe1
DiatomicO₂, N₂2
TriatomicO₃3
TetraatomicP₄4
Octa-atomicS₈8

🔹 VI. Ions

  • Ion: An atom or group of atoms with a charge.
    • Cation (+ve): Na⁺, Ca²⁺
    • Anion (–ve): Cl⁻, SO₄²⁻

🔸 Chemical Formula:

  • Formed using valency.
  • Criss-cross method used.
  • Example: Na⁺ + Cl⁻ → NaCl

🔹 VII. Molecular Mass and Formula Unit Mass

  • Molecular Mass: Sum of atomic masses of all atoms in a molecule.
    • E.g., H₂O = 2(1) + 16 = 18 u
  • Formula Unit Mass: Used for ionic compounds.
    • E.g., NaCl = 23 + 35.5 = 58.5 u

🔹 VIII. Mole Concept

  • 1 mole = 6.022 × 10²³ particles (Avogadro’s number)
  • Used to count atoms, molecules, ions

🔸 Molar Mass:

  • Mass of 1 mole of a substance in grams.
    • E.g., H₂O = 18 g/mol

🔸 Important Formulas:

Number of moles (n)=Given mass (g)Molar mass (g/mol)\text{Number of moles (n)} = \frac{\text{Given mass (g)}}{\text{Molar mass (g/mol)}}Number of moles (n)=Molar mass (g/mol)Given mass (g)​ Number of particles=Moles×6.022×1023\text{Number of particles} = \text{Moles} \times 6.022 \times 10^{23}Number of particles=Moles×6.022×1023 Mass=Moles×Molar mass\text{Mass} = \text{Moles} \times \text{Molar mass}Mass=Moles×Molar mass


🔹 IX. Writing Chemical Formulae

🔸 Steps:

  1. Write symbol of element/ion.
  2. Write valency.
  3. Criss-cross valencies.
  4. Simplify (if required).

🔸 Examples:

  • Na (1) + Cl (1) → NaCl
  • Ca (2) + Cl (1) → CaCl₂
  • Al (3) + O (2) → Al₂O₃

🔹 X. Examples of Common Compounds and Valencies

Element/IonValencyFormula Example
Sodium (Na⁺)1NaCl
Calcium (Ca²⁺)2CaCO₃
Aluminium (Al³⁺)3Al₂(SO₄)₃
Sulphate (SO₄²⁻)2CuSO₄
Ammonium (NH₄⁺)1(NH₄)₂CO₃

🔹 XI. NCERT Textbook Important Questions

Q1: Define 1 mole.

  • 1 mole is the amount of substance containing 6.022 × 10²³ particles.

Q2: Calculate the number of atoms in 12 g of carbon.

  • Atomic mass = 12 g/mol → Moles = 12/12 = 1 mol
  • Atoms = 1 × 6.022 × 10²³ = 6.022 × 10²³ atoms

Q3: Write molecular formula of:

  • Calcium oxide → CaO
  • Magnesium chloride → MgCl₂
  • Aluminium sulphate → Al₂(SO₄)₃

🔹 XII. Mind Map: Atoms and Molecules

markdownCopyEdit            ATOMS & MOLECULES
                    |
    -------------------------------------
    |               |                 |
Laws of Combo   Dalton's Theory    Mole Concept
    |                                   |
Chemical Formulae                 Avogadro’s Number
    |                                   |
Valency & Ions                 Mass, Mole, Particles

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