Title: The Structure of the Atom
1(No Transcript)
2(No Transcript)
3The Structure of the Atom
- History, Structure, Properties and Forces
- Chapter 4
4Atomic Structure
History, Structure and Properties of the Atom
5History of the Atom
- Great Thinkers (2,000yrs. Ago)
- Age of Reason and Thought
- Democritus vs. Aristotle view on the make-up of
matter.
6 Democritus(400b.c.)Greek Philosopher
- Observed matter to be made up of atoms.
- Atoms are the smallest form of matter.
- Atoms cannot be broken down.
- The types of atoms in matter determine its
properties.
7 Aristotle Greek Philosopher (300b.c.)
- Aristotle observed matter to be composed of
one or more of these four elements - air, earth, fire and water.
- Most people believed Artistole.
- Why?
8John Daltons Atomic Theory
- English school teacher
- Proved Democritus atoms hypothesis using the
scientific method. - His conclusions produced
- Daltons Atomic Theory
9Daltons Atomic Theory
- Atoms are the building blocks of all matter.
- 2. Atoms cannot be subdivided.
- 3. Each element has the same kind of atoms.
- 4. In a compound, the different atoms chemically
combine in the same way (fixed composition). - 5. Atoms cannot be created or destroyed just
rearranged.
10Thomsons Cathode Ray Experiment
- J.J. Thomson (pg. 105)
- 1897 discovered electrons in gas atoms using a
cathode ray tube. - Determined electrons have a negative charge.
- Electrons have the same charge in all atoms.
-
-
11 Thomsons Plum Pudding Model
- If atoms are made of electrons how come most
matter does not shock us? - Atoms must have positive particles, too.
- He proposed the Plum Pudding Atomic Model
-
-
An atom is equally made up of positive and
negative particles.
12Goldsteins Cathode Tube Experiment
chemed.chem.purdue.edu
reich-chemistry.wikispaces.com
- He discovered the positively charged particle,
proton, using a cathode ray tube also.
13 Rutherfords Gold Foil Experiment
- The laser beam consisted of positively charged
alpha particles. - Hypothesized that if the Plum Pudding model of
the atom was correct then the - charged alpha particles should deflect or bend
slightly when in contact with the gold foil
atoms. - His experimental results revealed something
different. Most alpha particles paths were not
affected by any charge when in contact with gold
foil. (Red straight lines on left diagram). Just
a few deflected back at large angles. Knew it
had to be of the same charge, because repelled.
14Rutherfords Conclusion
- Most of the atom is empty space.
- Small dense region composed of
- () charged particles.
- (Nucleus)
15Rutherfords Nuclear Atom Model
16Subatomic Particle Neutron
- What keeps the protons within the nucleus ?
- (Like particles repel each other)
- 1932 - James Chadwick discovers the nucleus also
has neutral particles present. He called them
neutrons. - Neutrons have a significant mass like protons.
17Properties of Subatomic Particles
Atomic Subparticles Charge mass (g) mass (amu) atoms contribution
Electron (e-) () 9.11 x 10 -28 so tiny, no mass (10,000x smaller than p or no Contributes (-) charge
Proton (p) (-) 1.674 x10-24 1 atomic mass unit for each proton. Contributes () charge mass
Neutron (no) No charge 1.675 x10-24 1 atomic mass unit for each neutron Contributes mass minimizes repulsion force of p in nucleus
18Bell Ringer
- 1. Compare the different views Aristotle and
Democritus had about what matter was made of. - 2. Which Greek philosopher was correct ?
- 3. Which later scientist proved his view?
19Bell Ringer4. a. Identify and explain this
Atomic Model?b. Who concluded this atomic model?
20Bell Ringer
- 5. Look at the following experiment below.
- What was this experiment called?
- Who developed this experiment?
- Did his experiment prove or disprove the Plum
Pudding Model?
21Modern Atomic Model
22Properties of Subatomic Particles
Atomic Subparticles Charge mass (g) mass (amu) atoms contribution
Electron (e-) () 9.11 x 10 -28 so tiny, no mass (10,000x smaller than p or no Contributes (-) charge
Proton (p) (-) 1.674 x10-24 1 atomic mass unit for each proton. Contributes () charge mass
Neutron (no) No charge 1.675 x10-24 1 atomic mass unit for each neutron Contributes mass minimizes repulsion force of p in nucleus
23Distinguishing Atoms
- atomic number The number of protons within an
atoms nucleus. - Atoms I.D.
- Atoms of the same element always have the same
number of protons. - Elements are arranged numerically on the periodic
table based on their atomic number.
24Neutral Atoms
- Most matter in nature is neutral.
- (Doesnt shock us!)
- This means the atoms making up the matter is
neutral. ? - What are the two charged subatomic particles?
- p and e-
- For an atom to be neutral the of p of
e-.
25Atoms Mass
- Mass number (amu)
- What contributes mass to the atom?
- Sum of protons and neutrons in nucleus of atom.
- Problem A Selenium(Se) has an atomic of 34
and a mass of 80 amu. How many p, e-, and n0
are there in selenium? p (proton) 34
(atomic ) - e- (electron) 34
(balance p) - n0 (neutron) 80 34
46
26Atoms Subatomic Particles
- Problem B A cesium (Cs) atom has a mass of 133
and an atomic number of 55 amu. How many p, e-,
and no are there? - P 55 e- 55 no 78
- Problem C An iron atom has an atomic number of
26 and 30 neutrons. - How many p and e- are there?
- P 26 e- 26
- What is irons mass number?
- Mass number 56 amu
27An Elements Isotopes
- Isotopes atoms with different number of
neutrons in their nucleus. - Elements can have several isotopes.
- Ex. Carbon C-12 and C-14 (mass )
- Mass changes. (varied neutrons)
- The number of protons and electrons stay the
same.
28An Elements Isotopes
C-12
C-14 of p, n0, e-? of p,
n0, e-?
- Do you think an elements isotopes have similar
or different chemical properties?
29Elements Isotopes
- Oxygen has three isotopes. They are O-16,
- O-17, and O-18.
- What is the mass number for each isotope of
oxygen in amu? - 2. What is the atomic number for each isotope of
oxygen? - 3. What is the number of p, n0, and e- for each
isotope of Oxygen ?
30Atomic MassElements average mass
- Atomic mass the weighted average mass of all the
elements isotopes present within a naturally
occuring sample of matter. - Calculate Atomic Mass of an Element
- 1. Multiply the mass of each isotope by its
natural abundance ( common occurance) in decimal
form. - 2. Add all the isotopes products together.
31Atomic Mass(Elements average mass)
- Carbon (C) has two isotopes
- Carbon-12 has a natural abundance 99
- Carbon-13 has a natural abundance 1
- Carbons atomic mass
- (12 x 0.99) ( 13x0.01) 11.88 0.13 12.01
amu -
(sig. figs.) -
32Atomic Mass
- What is the difference between an atoms mass
number and an elements atomic mass? - Calculate the atomic mass of the following
magnesium isotopes.
Isotope Natural Abundance ()
I-127 80
I-126 17
I-128 3
Answer 126.86 126.9 (sig. figs)