Title: Chem 400 Chapter 2
1Chem 400 Chapter 2
2Going Further The Structure of Atoms
- Dalton thought that atoms were the smallest
particle of matter, but through a series of
experiments starting in the late 1800s, this was
proved to be incorrect. - In a series of experiments by various scientists,
the existence of electrons, protons, and neutrons
were deduced and verified.
3Going Further The Structure of Atoms
- Electrons were discovered in 1897 by JJ Thomson,
and they were found to have a negative electric
charge. - Protons were hypothesized in 1911 by Ernest
Rutherford, and were verified in 1919 by
Rutherford. They have a positive electric charge. - Neutrons were discovered in 1932 by James
Chadwick. They have no electric charge.
4Going Further The Structure of Atoms
- There are 2 important experiments that you should
be aware of - Robert Millikans Oil-Drop Experiment of 1909,
which enabled him to measure the magnitude of the
electric charge on electrons, and calculate their
mass in grams. - Ernest Rutherfords 1911 Gold-Foil Experiment,
also called the Alpha-Scattering Experiment. This
experiment enabled him to hypothesize the
existence of protons in the nucleus of atoms.
5Oil-Drop Experiment
6(No Transcript)
7The Structure of Atoms
- From this experiment, Millikan obtained the
actual charge on an electron, -1.60x10-19 C. - And from this charge and Thomsons charge/mass
ratio, the exact mass of an electron was
calculated to be 9.10x10-28 g. - So from these experiments, scientists deduced
that atoms were made up of even smaller subatomic
particles, one of which was the electron. - Since electrons have a negative charge, while
atoms are neutral, scientists also realized that
there had to be at least 1 more subatomic
particle with a positive charge.
8The Structure of Atoms
- Where was this atomic particle what did it look
like?
9Gold-Foil Experiment
10The Structure of Atoms
- How could something in the atom cause such huge
deflections in a massive positively charged
particle like an alpha particle? - So Rutherford proposed that atoms were composed
of mostly empty space (where the electrons moved
in circular orbits) with a very small, very
massive, very dense center called the nucleus. - The nucleus has a positive charge. This was
Rutherfords Atomic Model.
11The Structure of Atoms
12The Structure of Atoms
- Rutherford then proved the existence of protons
in 1919, and neutrons were discovered by James
Chadwick in 1932. - So whats the overall picture of an atom, and
what are the sizes, masses, charges, and
densities of the particles and regions?
13The Structure of Atoms
Particle Mass (g x10-24) Mass (amu) Relative Mass Charge (C x10-19) Relative Charge Location in Atom
proton, p 1.673 1.0073 1 1.602 1 nucleus
electron, e or e- 0.000911 0.000549 0 -1.602 -1 electron cloud
neutron, n 1.675 1.0087 1 0 0 nucleus
14The Structure of Atoms
- The diameter of a typical atom is around 1x10-10
m or 1 Å. - The diameter of a typical nucleus is only 0.0001
Å. - You can see that most of the mass of the atom is
contained in a very small volume, so the nucleus
is incredibly dense. - The density of a typical nucleus is 1x1013 to
1x1014 g/cm3, beyond our comprehension! If a
matchbox had this density, it would weigh 2.5
billion tons!
15The Structure of Atoms
16Atomic Number, Mass Number and Isotopes
- Dalton thought that atoms of different elements
differed mainly by mass, but we now know that
atoms of different elements differ by the number
of protons which they contain. - The number of protons which an element contains
is called the Atomic Number, Z. - The Atomic Number is found on the Periodic Table
above the elemental symbol.
17Atomic Number, Mass Number and Isotopes
18Atomic Number, Mass Number and Isotopes
- It is true that every atom of the same element
contains the same number of protons. - So every H atom has 1 proton, and every C atom
has 6 protons. - So the number of protons defines the element.
- But it is NOT true that all atoms of the same
element are identical. - Whats different? Well, what else is there?
19Atomic Number, Mass Number and Isotopes
- Although all atoms of the same element have the
same number of protons, they DO NOT have the same
number of neutrons! - and if it is a neutral atom, they all have the
same number of electrons - Atoms of the same element which have different
numbers of neutrons are called isotopes.
20Atomic Number, Mass Number and Isotopes
- So isotopes of the same element differ by the
number of neutrons. - And since neutrons are the same relative mass as
protons, isotopes also differ by mass. - Although this is not shown on the Periodic Table,
every element has at least 2 isotopes (except
some of the newly synthesized elements like Mt).
21Atomic Number, Mass Number and Isotopes
- To show different isotopes, we have several
different isotopic notations or isotopic symbols. - They all use the Mass Number, A, which is the sum
of the protons and neutrons in the nucleus. - For example, H has 3 common isotopes, H-1, H-2,
and H-3. - Carbon also has 3 common isotopes, C-12, C-13,
and C-14. - The number after the symbol or the superscript
left number is the Mass Number.
22Atomic Number, Mass Number and Isotopes
Mass Number
Mass Number
Atomic Number
- Practice with Isotopic Notation How many
electrons, protons, and neutrons do the following
isotopes have?
23Ions and Ionic Isotopic Notation
- A neutral atom has equal numbers of protons and
electrons. Why? - During chemical reactions, atoms may gain or lose
(or share) electrons, e-. - If an atom gains or loses 1 or more e-, there is
an imbalance between protons and e-, and the
result is a charged particle called an ion. - So an ion is formed when an atom gains or loses
e-.
24Ions and Ionic Isotopic Notation
- If an atom loses 1 or more e-, then it has more
protons than e-, so the ion has a charge. It is
called a cation. - If an atom gains 1 or more e-, then it has less
protons than e-, so the ion has a - charge. It is
called an anion. - Note that it is difficult to gain more than 3 e-
or lose more than 4 e-. - How do we show ions?
25Ions and Ionic Isotopic Notation
- If we have an isotope which is an ion, we can
show a complete isotopic notation for the ion. - How many protons, e-, and neutrons do the
following ionic isotopes have?
26Elements and the Periodic Table
- Elements are fundamental substances.
- They cant be broken down into smaller substances
by chemical reactions. - The Periodic Table arranges the known elements
(114 of them). - 90 of these are naturally occurring, while the
rest have been synthesized in nuclear reactions.
27Elements and the Periodic Table
28Elements and the Periodic Table
- Notice that the elements names have been given
shorthand notations (called symbols) of 1 or 2
letters. - Unnamed elements actually have a 3 letter
designation until they are named. - The first letter is ALWAYS capitalized, while the
second letter is ALWAYS lowercase. - What elements do you have to memorize (names and
symbols)? 1-40 42 46-57 76-90 92 and 94.
29Elements and the Periodic Table
- Although most of the symbols are obviously
related to the name, like N for nitrogen, others
seem to make no sense, like Pb for lead! - This is because some of the symbols come from
old Latin names or other languages. - Plumbum was an old Latin name for lead.
- W for tungsten comes from the German name wolfram.
30Elements and the Periodic Table
- Chemistry in some fashion has been around for
centuries. - Some elements were known thousands of years ago.
- But most elements were discovered and identified
in the last 250 years.
31Elements and the Periodic Table
- In the early to mid 1800s, chemists were trying
to organize the 60-some known elements into some
sort of pattern. - Mendeleev designed a Periodic Table in 1869 which
was based on the masses of the known elements
(atomic weights) and the compounds they formed
with hydrogen (hydrides) or oxygen (oxides). - Todays Table is similar, but the elements are
arranged by atomic numbers (number of protons)
instead of by atomic weights.
32Elements and the Periodic Table
- If you look at a Periodic Table, there are 18
columns called Groups or Families. - They are called families as they share common
chemical properties or characteristics. - The 7 rows are called Periods.
- The groups are numbered 2 ways on US Tables.
- The old US system uses numbers with A or B
sections, while the internationally approved
system simply numbers the groups from 1 to 18
going across from left to right.
33Elements and the Periodic Table
- There are several basic regions on the Table
- Metals
- Nonmetals
- Semimetals (metalloids or semiconductors)
- Main Block or Representative Elements
- Transition Metals
- Inner Transition Metals
- Lanthanides
- Actinides
34Elements and the Periodic Table
- Several important Groups also have names
- Group 1, except hydrogen, are the Alkali Metals
- Group 2 is the Alkaline Earth Metals
- Group 17 are the Halogens
- Group 18 are the Noble Gases
35Elements and the Periodic Table
- Metals lustrous, silvery, malleable, ductile,
generally hard, solids except Hg, conductors,
lose electrons to become cations, react with
nonmetals to form ionic salts. - Nonmetals nonconductors, react with metals, gain
electrons to form anions, brittle, most gases (1
l, 5 s) - Metalloids B, Si, As, Te, At, Ge, Sb in between
metals nonmetals, semiconductors, solids
36Elements and the Periodic Table
- Here are some shared characteristics in the
regions and groups - Alkali Metals Very reactive metals, soft, not
found in nature as pure element - Alkaline Earth Metals same as Alkali metals but
less reactive - Halogens most reactive nonmetals, corrosive, not
found in nature as pure element
37Elements and the Periodic Table
- Noble Gases also called Inert gases as very
nonreactive, dont form compounds except Xe - Lanthanides f-fillers, rare earth metals, inner
transition metals, reactive, silvery-grey - Actinides f-fillers, rare earth metals, inner
transition metals, reactive, silvery-grey,
radioactive, synthetic above 92 - Why is hydrogen placed in Group 1 if it is NOT an
Alkali Metal and is actually a nonmetal?
38Elements and the Periodic Table
39Elements and the Periodic Table
40Atomic Mass and Weighted Averages of Elements
- As atoms have a very tiny mass in grams,
scientists use another scale to state the masses
of atoms, the atomic mass unit, amu. You see
this in the table with the masses of p, e, and n
given earlier. - The conversion factor between mass in g and mass
in amu is - 1 amu 1.66054x10-24g OR
- 1 g 6.02214x1023amu
41Atomic Mass and Weighted Averages of Elements
- The average atomic mass of the elements is shown
beneath the elemental symbol on the Periodic
Table.
42Atomic Mass and Weighted Averages of Elements
- But every element has different isotopes with
different masses! - Thats why the atomic masses on the Table are
average masses it is really the mass in amu of a
single average atom of an element. - But what does an average atom of an element
look like? - What does the average student look like? Does
it exist?
43Atomic Mass and Weighted Averages of Elements
- For H, 99.985 of all H atoms are H-1, while
0.015 are H-2 (there are basically 0 H-3).
This is called the natural abundance or
-abundance of an isotope. - So shouldnt the average H atom look a lot like
H-1, and shouldnt the average atomic mass of H
be very close to the mass of the H-1 isotope? - Because the different isotopes do not have equal
natural abundances, we calculate atomic masses of
elements using a weighted average of all the
isotopes
44Atomic Mass and Weighted Averages of Elements
- So if lead has 4 common isotopes with the
following masses and -abundance, what is the
atomic mass of lead? - Pb-204 203.973020 amu 1.40
- Pb-206 205.974440 amu 24.1
- Pb-207 206.975872 amu 22.1
- Pb-208 207.976627 amu 52.4
45Molar Mass of Atoms Avogadros Number
- The atomic mass is the mass in amu of a single
average atom. - Is this useful in the lab? Can we pick out and
weigh an individual atom? - Chemists weigh in g, which is a HUGE number of
atoms. - So we need a unit to express large numbers of
atoms or molecules without using scientific
notation. - Chemists defined a counting unit to do this.
46Molar Mass of Atoms Avogadros Number
- They chose a unit called mole so that the atomic
mass on the Periodic Table is also used for
measuring grams. - 1 mole 1 mol 6.02214x1023 things
- So if you have 1 mol of pennies, how many pennies
do you have? How many dollars is this? - The number 6.02214x1023 is Avogadros number.
47Molar Mass of Atoms Avogadros Number
- Avogadros number is very important as it is a
conversion factor between number of things and
moles of things. - EX if you have 2.5 mol of aluminum, how many
atoms of aluminum do you have? - Avogadros number is also very special as if we
have 1 mol of an element, we have the atomic mass
in g of the element.
48Molar Mass of Atoms Avogadros Number
- If we have 1 mol of Na atoms, prove that this is
22.99 g of Na
49Molar Mass of Atoms Avogadros Number
- The molar mass is the mass in g of exactly 1 mol
of an element. - The atomic mass and the molar mass are the same
number, they differ only by units!
50Molar Mass of Atoms Avogadros Number
- The molar mass is also a conversion factor it
converts between mol of an element and g of an
element. - Ex If you have 25.7840 g of gold, how many mol
of gold is this? - There are 6 types of simple calculations that we
can do using molar masses and Avogadros number.