Title: Atomic Structure
1Atomic Structure
2What Is An Atom?
- the smallest particle of an element that retains
the chemical properties of that element - Can be subdivided into electrons (e-), protons
(p) and neutrons (n0)
3Diagram Of An Atom
4Important Info About Subatomic Particles
Particle Relative Electric Charge Mass Number Relative Mass (amu) Actual Mass (kg)
Electron (e-) -1 0 .0005486 9.109 x 10-31
Proton (p) 1 1 1.007276 1.673 x 10-27
Neutron (no) 0 1 1.008665 1.675 x 10-27
1 amu (1/12)(mass of C-12 isotope in kg)
1 amu 1.660540 x 10-27 kg
Amu atomic mass units
5Atomic Number (Z)
- Tells us the number of protons in the nucleus of
an atom
Z
6Isotopes
- Some atoms of the same element will have
different masses. - These atoms are called isotopes because they have
the same number of protons, but differ in the
number of neutrons. - Isotopes of the same element have different mass
numbers. - Mass number (A) is the total number of protons
and neutrons in the nucleus of an isotope
7How Are Isotope Symbols Denoted?
8Hyphen Notation of Isotopes
- Isotopes can also be denoted through hyphen
notation - The element symbol will be listed, following a
hyphen, and then a mass number (p n0) - Ex. Hydrogen has 3 isotopes (H-1, H-2, H-3)
9Hydrogen Isotopes
AKA Protium 99.985 Abundant H-1
.015 Abundant H-2
Radioactive, Prepared Artifically H-3
10Sample Problems
- How many protons, electrons, and neutrons are
there in a Cl-37 atom? - How many protons, electrons, and neutrons are
there in the following isotopes?
-1
11Atomic Mass
- What is the atomic mass listed on the periodic
table under each element really measuring? - This mass is a weighted average of all of the
naturally occurring isotopes of an element - This mass is a relative average (compared to the
C-12 isotope) in atomic mass units (amu)
12How To Find The Atomic Mass of Hydrogen
- H-1 is 99.985 abundant with an atomic mass of
1.007825 amu - H-2 is .015 abundant with an atomic mass of
2.016490 amu - H-3 is not counted because of the fact that it is
not naturally occurring - To find the weighted average
- ( abundance/100)(relative atomic mass of isotope
1) - ( abundance/100)(relative atomic mass of isotope
2) - ( abundance/100)(relative atomic mass of isotope
3) - Mass may be substituted for the relative
atomic mass when given - (99.985/100)(1.007825 amu) (.015/100)(2.016940
amu) - 1.0079 amu
13Things To Remember
- If you change the number of protons, you change
the type of atom itself. - If you change the number of electrons, you change
the atom to an ion (charged particle). - If you change the number of neutrons, you change
the isotope of that element.