Topic 03 | Chemical sciences

Elements, compounds & atomic theory

Year 8 (Levels 7-8 band): atomic theory, elements vs compounds vs mixtures, chemical symbols and formulas, and the periodic table as a map of the elements.

45-60 min Printable practice Answer key Challenge included
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Read the explanation, work through the examples, then complete the core practice before printing.

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What you will learn

Worked example 0 Real-world example: sea salt and fresh water

You boil away a pan of sea water and are left with a white solid (salt, NaCl\text{NaCl}). Was the sea water a compound, a mixture, or an element?

  1. Sea water is water (H2O\text{H}_2\text{O}) with salt (NaCl\text{NaCl}) dissolved in it.
  2. Both parts keep their own properties, and you could recover them by physical means (boiling).
  3. So sea water is a mixture — specifically a solution.
  4. Water and salt are each compounds (two or more different elements chemically joined).

Key idea: if a physical method (filtering, boiling, magnetism) can separate the parts, the substance is a mixture, not a compound.

1. Atomic theory

John Dalton (1803) proposed the first modern atomic theory. Updated for today, its main ideas are:

  1. All matter is made of tiny particles called atoms.
  2. Atoms of one element are identical (in chemical behaviour); atoms of different elements are different.
  3. Atoms cannot be created, destroyed, or subdivided by ordinary chemical reactions.
  4. Atoms combine in simple whole-number ratios to form compounds.
  5. A chemical reaction is the rearrangement of atoms — never a change in the atoms themselves.

2. Elements, compounds, mixtures

Element vs compound vs mixtureElementCompoundfixed 1:1 ratio, bondedMixture
Elements (single type of atom), compounds (fixed ratio of two or more atom types chemically bonded), and mixtures (two or more substances physically combined).

3. Chemical symbols and formulas

Each element has a one- or two-letter symbol. The first letter is always capitalised; the second (if any) is lowercase.

ElementSymbolElementSymbol
HydrogenHSodiumNa
OxygenOIronFe
CarbonCCopperCu
NitrogenNGoldAu
ChlorineClSilverAg

A chemical formula tells you which atoms are present and how many of each. Subscripts (“little down numbers”) count the atoms.

Worked example 1 Counting atoms in a formula

How many atoms of each element are in one molecule of sulfuric acid, H2SO4\text{H}_2\text{SO}_4?

  1. H: subscript 2 \to 2 hydrogen atoms.
  2. S: no subscript \to 1 sulfur atom.
  3. O: subscript 4 \to 4 oxygen atoms.
  4. Total atoms in the molecule: 2+1+4=72 + 1 + 4 = 7.
Worked example 2 Reading a coefficient

How many oxygen atoms are in 3CO23\text{CO}_2?

  1. The coefficient 33 means “three molecules of CO2\text{CO}_2”.
  2. Each CO2\text{CO}_2 has 22 oxygen atoms.
  3. Total oxygen atoms: 3×2=63 \times 2 = 6.

Key idea: the coefficient multiplies everything in the formula; the subscript only multiplies the atom it follows.

4. Molecules and why atoms bond

Most elements are happier combined with other atoms than alone. When atoms bond they share or transfer electrons to form stable arrangements called molecules (for non-metals) or ionic compounds (for metal + non-metal).

5. The periodic table (introduction)

The periodic table arranges elements by their atomic number (number of protons per atom). Elements with similar chemical behaviour fall in the same vertical column, called a group. Horizontal rows are called periods.

Main features to know at Year 8:

Worked example 3 Predicting from the group

Sodium (Na) is a very reactive metal. Potassium (K) is in the same group. What would you predict about potassium?

  1. Same group \to similar chemical behaviour.
  2. So potassium is also a reactive metal, and probably reacts with water in a similar way to sodium.
  3. In reality, potassium is even more reactive than sodium.

Key idea: the periodic table is organised so you can predict an unfamiliar element’s behaviour from its group mates.


Practice: Year 8

Fluency

Elements, compounds, mixtures

    1. Classify each as element, compound or mixture: (a) oxygen gas, O2\text{O}_2; (b) carbon dioxide, CO2\text{CO}_2; (c) air; (d) pure gold; (e) sea water; (f) table salt, NaCl\text{NaCl}.
    2. Give the chemical symbol for: hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, sodium, chlorine, iron.
    3. Name the element with symbol (a) Au, (b) Cu, (c) Ag, (d) K, (e) Fe.
    4. How many atoms in total are in one molecule of (a) H2O\text{H}_2\text{O}, (b) CO2\text{CO}_2, (c) NH3\text{NH}_3?
    5. How many hydrogen atoms are in CH4\text{CH}_4?
Fluency

Formulas and coefficients

    1. How many oxygen atoms are in 2H2O2\text{H}_2\text{O}?
    2. How many atoms of each element in Ca(OH)2\text{Ca(OH)}_2?
    3. Which has more oxygen: 3CO23\text{CO}_2 or 2SO32\text{SO}_3?
    4. Write the formula for a compound with 2 hydrogen atoms and 1 sulfur atom.
    5. What does the subscript 33 tell you in NH3\text{NH}_3?
Reasoning

Explain and classify

    1. Explain the difference between a compound and a mixture using water and sea water as examples.
    2. Why are diamond and graphite both considered elements even though they look completely different?
    3. A substance can be separated by filtering. Is it an element, a compound or a mixture? Justify.
    4. Explain why Co\text{Co} and CO\text{CO} mean completely different things.
Problem solving

Applied contexts

    1. Baking soda is NaHCO3\text{NaHCO}_3. Count the atoms of each element in one formula unit.
    2. A scientist analyses a gas and finds it contains only one type of atom. What type of substance is this (element, compound, or mixture)?
    3. Using the idea of atomic theory, explain why burning wood does not violate “atoms cannot be created or destroyed” — even though the wood seems to disappear.
    4. Predict whether argon (Ar, Group 18) reacts easily with other elements, and give a reason.

Challenge

Reasoning

Harder reasoning

    1. A compound has the formula X2Y3\text{X}_2\text{Y}_3. In 44 formula units, how many atoms are there of X and Y?
    2. A sample contains N2\text{N}_2, O2\text{O}_2 and Ar\text{Ar} all mixed together. Classify this sample and name a real-world example.
    3. Explain why the discovery that the same element could have atoms of different masses (isotopes) did not overturn atomic theory.
    4. Mendeleev left gaps in his first periodic table where no known element fitted. Why was this a scientific strength rather than a weakness?
Answers

Answer key

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Year 8 answers

Fluency

Elements, compounds, mixtures

    1. (a) Element, (b) compound, (c) mixture, (d) element, (e) mixture, (f) compound.
    2. H, O, C, Na, Cl, Fe.
    3. (a) Gold, (b) copper, (c) silver, (d) potassium, (e) iron.
    4. (a) 3, (b) 3, (c) 4.
Fluency

Formulas and coefficients

    1. 2H2O2\text{H}_2\text{O} has 2×1=22 \times 1 = 2 oxygen atoms.
    2. Ca(OH)2\text{Ca(OH)}_2: 1 Ca, 2 O, 2 H.
    3. 3CO2=63\text{CO}_2 = 6 O atoms; 2SO3=62\text{SO}_3 = 6 O atoms. Equal.
    4. H2S\text{H}_2\text{S}.
    5. There are 3 hydrogen atoms per ammonia molecule.
Reasoning

Explain and classify

    1. Water is a compound — hydrogen and oxygen are chemically bonded in a fixed 2:1 ratio with entirely new properties. Sea water is a mixture — salt is simply dissolved in water and can be recovered by evaporating the water.
    2. Both diamond and graphite are made of only carbon atoms (one kind of atom), so they are both the element carbon. They look different because the same atoms are arranged in different patterns.
    3. A mixture — filtering is a physical separation method, which only works when substances are not chemically bonded.
    4. Symbols are case-sensitive. Co = cobalt (one element). CO = carbon monoxide (a compound of carbon and oxygen). The capitalisation tells you whether you are reading one symbol or two.
Problem solving

Applied contexts

    1. Na: 1, H: 1, C: 1, O: 3. Total atoms = 6.
    2. An element.
    3. Wood contains carbon, hydrogen and oxygen atoms. Burning rearranges them into carbon dioxide and water vapour, which escape as gas. No atoms are lost — they just move into the air, which is why the wood “seems” to disappear.
    4. Argon is in Group 18 (noble gases), which are very unreactive because their atoms are already stable. So argon reacts very little with other elements.
Reasoning

Challenge

    1. Each formula unit has 2 X and 3 Y. Four formula units: 4×2=84 \times 2 = 8 X atoms and 4×3=124 \times 3 = 12 Y atoms.
    2. A mixture (of elements). Real example: the air we breathe is mostly N2_2, O2_2 and argon.
    3. The core idea of atomic theory is that atoms of an element behave the same way chemically. Isotopes have the same number of protons and so react the same way; they just differ in mass. Atomic theory still holds — it just became more detailed.
    4. Mendeleev’s gaps let him predict the properties of elements that had not yet been discovered (such as gallium and germanium). When those elements were later found with matching properties, it was strong evidence that his table was a real pattern in nature, not an arbitrary sorting.

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