A TOMS & Atomic Theory. D EFINING THE A TOM An atom is the smallest particle of an element that...
-
Upload
amelia-hood -
Category
Documents
-
view
215 -
download
0
Transcript of A TOMS & Atomic Theory. D EFINING THE A TOM An atom is the smallest particle of an element that...
ATOMS& Atomic Theory
DEFINING THE ATOMAn atom is the smallest particle of an element that retains its identity in a reaction.
The basic building blocks of matter that make-up everyday objects.
ATOMIC THEORY Democritus was an early Greek Scholar.
He was the first to suggest the existence of atoms
Democritus believed that atoms were indivisible and indestructible.
He never developed a theory because he did not have experimental support nor did he explain chemical behavior.
It took 2000 years after Democritus for the real nature of atoms and events at the atomic level to be established
DALTON’S ATOMIC THEORY
Using experimental methods, Dalton transformed Democritus’s ideas on atoms into a
scientific theory 1. All matter is composed of tiny indivisible particles
called atoms 2. Atoms of the same element are identical. The
atoms of any one element are different from those of any other element.
3. Atoms from different elements can physically mix together or can chemically combine in simple whole-number ratios to form compounds.
4. Chemical reactions occur when atoms are separated, joined, or rearranged. Atoms of one element, however, are never changed into atoms of another element as a result of a chemical reaction.
DALTON’S THEORY REVISEDMost of Dalton’s theory is still accepted today EXCEPT that atoms are known to be divisible.
Atoms can be broken down into 3 subatomic particles: electrons, protons and neutrons.
J.J. THOMSONUsed a cathode ray tube to prove
the smallest particles present must have a negative charge.
He discovered the ELECTRON!
J.J. THOMSON Atoms were
electrically neutral, so there must be a + particle to cancel out the – charge from the electron.
Developed the Plum Pudding Model (positive ball containing scattered electrons)
RUTHERFORD’S GOLD-FOIL EXPERIMENT Former student of
Thomson, disproved the Plum Pudding Model of the atom.
The Gold Foil Experiment: Sent a beam of + charges (alpha particles) through a piece of very thin gold foil.
Angles of deflection were measured.
RUTHERFORDResults: Most of the alpha
particles passed straight through, most of the foil must be regions of “empty” space – not a + sphere like Thomson believed.
+ charges and the atoms mass must be found in the center discovered the nucleus
RUTHERFORD’S ATOMIC MODEL
In Rutherford’s atomic model, the protons and neutrons are located in the nucleus.
The electrons are distributed around the nucleus and occupy almost all the volume of the atoms.
ATOMIC STRUCTURE
Particle
proton
neutron
electron
Charge
+ ve charge
-ve charge
No charge
1
1
nil
Mass
ATOMIC STRUCTURE
the number of protons in an atom
the number of protons and neutrons in an atom
He2
4 Atomic mass
Atomic number
number of electrons = number of protons
HELIUM ATOM
+N
N
+-
-
proton
electron
neutron
Shell
Are atoms electrically neutral? Why?
COMPLETE THE FOLLOWING TABLE IN YOUR NOTESAtomic #
Mass # # of Protons
# of Neutrons
# of Electrons
9 10
14 15
47 22
55 25
ATOMIC NUMBERElements are different because they contain different
numbers of protons
Atomic Number: The number of protons in the nucleus of an atom of that element. This is used to identify an element.
Example: Carbon’s atomic number is 6 because there are 6 neutrons in each Carbon atom’s nucleus
For each element the number of protons equals the number of electrons. Atoms are electronically neutral, so the negative charge must equal the positive charge.
MASS NUMBERThe total number of protons and neutrons in an
atom
If you know the atomic number and mass number of an atom of any element, you can determine the atom’s composition.
The number of neutrons in an atom is the difference between the mass number and atomic number.
Number of neutrons= mass # - atomic #
The composition of any atom can be represented in shorthand notation using atomic number and mass
number
ISOTOPESAtoms that have the same number of protons
but different numbers of neutrons
ISOTOPES Because isotopes have a different number of neutrons, they
also have different mass numbers. Chemically alike because they have identical numbers of
protons and electrons, which are responsible for chemical behavior.
Ex: Three known isotopes for H H: Hydrogen (no neutrons, mass # of 1) H-2: Deuterium (one neutron, mass # of 2) H-3: Tritium (two neutrons, mass # of 3)
CALCULATING AVERAGE ATOMIC MASS OF ISOTOPES In nature, isotopes occur in various
percentages. The higher the percent the more abundant.
In order to figure out the average mass of each element the percent abundance and mass of each isotope need to be considered
We can calculate average atomic mass in much the same way as we calculate your grade in this class…
CALCULATING AVERAGE ATOMIC MASS
1. Divide the percent abundances by 100.
(natural occurrence)
2. Multiply each isotope mass by its natural
occurrence. (maintain sigfigs)*
3. Add up all the masses (maintain place
values)
4. Include a unit (amu)
WHAT ARE THE DIFFERENT CATEGORIES THAT YOU ARE GRADED ON IN THIS CLASS? Classwork: 79pts Practice: 12pts Final: 14pts What would your semester grade be if you
received an 81% for classwork, 52% for practice, and 73% on your final?0.81 x 79 = 640.52 x 12 = 6.20.73 x 14 = 10Add all answers together to get % semester
grade 63.2 + 3.5 + 10.1 = 80.2 80 % (a B)
NOW LETS TRY WITH AN ELEMENT! Copper has two isotopes: copper-63 and
copper-65. The relative abundances of these isotopes are 69.2% and 30.8% respectively. Calculate the average atomic mass of copper.0.692 x 63 = 43.60.308 x 65 = 20.043.6 + 20.0 = 63.6
ONE MORE EXAMPLE…
Uranium has three naturally occurring isotopes with the following percent abundances: U-234 (0.0058%), U-235 (0.71%), and U-238 (99.23%). What do you expect the average atomic mass to
be and why? What is the average atomic mass?
237.9
SUMMARY
1. The Atomic Number of an atom = number of
protons in the nucleus.
2. The Atomic Mass of an atom = number of
Protons + Neutrons in the nucleus.
3. The number of Protons = Number of Electrons.
4. Electrons orbit the nucleus in shells.
5. Each shell can only carry a set number of electrons.
THE PERIODIC TABLE A periodic table allows you to easily compare
the properties of one element (or a group of elements) to another element (or group of elements)
Period- Each horizontal row of the periodic table. The properties of the elements vary as you move across it from element to element.
Group (or family)- Each vertical column of the periodic table. Elements within a group have similar chemical and physical properties.
THE PERIODIC TABLE