Atoms: Nuclear Interactions - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 65
About This Presentation
Title:

Atoms: Nuclear Interactions

Description:

Survey: http://griffithchem.com/miscellaneous/Ch 21 nuclear misc ... Polonium and Radium. Marie Curie. Marie Curie. Pierre Curie. III. Nuclear Radiation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:36
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 66
Provided by: VidalM5
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Atoms: Nuclear Interactions


1
Atoms Nuclear Interactions
  • Part One
  • The Nature of Atoms
  • Survey http//griffithchem.com/miscellaneous/Ch2
    02120nuclear20misc20papers.pdf

2
Different Kinds of Radiation
  • 1. Are all atoms always unchanging?
  • No, Some atoms do change and become other types
    of atoms
  • 2. What is radiation? What is radioactive decay?
  • Energy and particles emitted when an atom breaks
    up. The process by which an atom breaks up is
    called Radioactivity.

3
  • 3. What is some of this energy in the form of?
  • High Energy EM Radiation(Electromagnetic)

4
EM Spectrum
5
  • 4. What are the properties of EM radiation ?
  • 1. waves of energy with no mass
  • 2. Travels at speed of light
  • 3. Can travel through a vacuum unlike sound
  • 4. Emitted by atoms when they decay or when they
    are energized (a light bulb)
  • 5. Moves in bundles of energy called photons, at
    their own frequency
  • 6. The higher the frequency, the higher the
    energy, the more dangerous

6
  • 5. How we are affected by nuclear radiation is
    dependent on what?
  • The energy of the radiation
  • 6. What is ionizing radiation?
  • Highest energy therefore greatest potential for
    causing harm to us

7
  • 7. How can it cause you damage?
  • Like ionization energy, it can knock away e- from
    an atom or molecule changing how it acts.
  • 8. What part of EM radiation is ionizing?
  • UV, X-rays, Gamma rays, Cosmic rays

8
  • 9. What is nonionizing radiation? Give some
    examples
  • Lower energy emissions, transfers energy to atoms
    but not enough to knock electrons away. Large
    exposures to these can also kill you!
  • (Microwave, Radiowaves, Infrared)

9
  • 10. What is a good analogy to distinguish between
    being hit by nonionizing radiation and ionizing
    radiation?
  • Being hit by a speeding baseball (non-ionizing)
    and a speeding bullet (ionizing). Impact in
    Baseball is more spread out so body can absorb
    the energy with less damage.
  • 11. React to this All radiation is harmful and
    should be avoided.

10
II. The Great Discovery
  • 12. Who was studying fluorescence and when?
  • German physicist W.K. Roentgen, he studied
    minerals that glowed when hit by a beam of
    electrons.
  • 13. What are beams of e- called?
  • cathode rays
  • Electron streams always flow toward the positive
    side, in a battery or a light bulb called the
    cathode.

11
Roentgens wife-first x-ray
12
WK Roentgen
13
  • 14. What are cathode ray tubes used for today?
  • TV and Monitor Images
  • 15. How did Roentgen discover X-rays?
  • Was working with a CRT covered with black paper
    when he saw a fluorescent material glowing across
    the room. Theorized that the CRT was also
    emitting a type of radiation that could pass
    through black paper.

14
Early Cathode Ray Tube
15
(No Transcript)
16
First X ray Machine
17
X-rays technology!
18
(No Transcript)
19
Later X ray Tube
20
  • 16. How far x-rays will penetrate depends on
    what?
  • Depends on the thickness and identity of the
    material.
  • 17. Give some characteristics of x-rays
  • Cannot pass through dense materials such as lead
    and bone. They are high energy EM radiation.

21
Henri Becquerel
22
  • 18. What part did the Frenchman Henri Becquerel
    play in the story of x-rays?
  • He discovered that certain minerals gave off
    X-rays.
  • 19. Further research into x-rays led to what?
  • That some of the rays being given off by such
    minerals as Uranium contained too much energy to
    be X-rays, Radiation was then discovered by
    Pierre and Marie Curie!

23
Becquerels experiment
Radioactive material sat in a window sill, then
on a photographic film. However, when placed in a
drawer, it still exposed the filmwe later
figured out that radioactivity gave off the rays
that exposed the film.
24
  • Do Chemquandary 1 on page 415

25
  • 20. Who were the early pioneers of radioactivity?
    What ore did they get their Uranium from?
  • Pierre and Marie Curie-Pitchblende
  • 21. What other 2 radioactive elements did they
    discover?
  • Polonium and Radium

26
Marie Curie
27
Marie Curie
28
Pierre Curie
29
III. Nuclear Radiation
  • 22. What scientist was responsible for the
    discovery of two parts of the atom? What type of
    rays did he work with?
  • Ernest Rutherford
  • Alpha and beta rays

30
  • 23. What other type of ray was discovered but was
    at first thought to be unrelated to the atom
    structure?
  • Gamma rays
  • Important we now know the 3 types of nuclear
    radiation
  • Alpha particles (positive)
  • Beta particles (negative
  • Gamma rays (neutral)

31
Scientists knew that in a magnetic force
positives deflected one way, negative things
another way, and neutral things would not be
deflected so they figured out what these nuclear
radiation types were like.
32
(No Transcript)
33
III. The Gold Foil Experiment
  • 24. What was the most popular model of the atom
    before Ernest Rutherford?
  • Atom was a solid mass of positively charged
    materials (not sure what they were) with
    negatively charged electrons imbedded within,
    like raisins in a pudding called Plum Pudding
    model and was proposed by J. J. Thomson.

34
JJ. Thomson
35
JJ Thomson and his CRT
36
Thomson Model
37
  • only matter can be bent like that, it is called
    inertia. The bending of the indicated that the
    stream was made of particles

38
(No Transcript)
39
(No Transcript)
40
  • Thomson introduced his model in 1904
  • a sphere of positive charge with e- embedded in
    it
  • called Plum Pudding Model

41
  • In 1908, the proton was discovered by the New
    Zealand scientist, Ernest Rutherford in his
    famous Gold Foil Experiment

42
History of Atomic Theory
  • Rutherford with his assistant W.H. Geiger

43
History of Atomic Theory
44
  • Rutherford theorized that if the Plum Pudding
    model was correct. The number of positive and
    negative particles in an atom would be the same
    with the particles evenly spread within the atom

45
(No Transcript)
46
(No Transcript)
47
(No Transcript)
48
(No Transcript)
49
  • the result was completely unexpected by
    Rutherford and his assistant Geiger(who actually
    performed the experiment)
  • Rutherford was forced to rethink the model
    realizing that the only explanation was that all
    the positive particles must have been together in
    a nucleus

50
Ernest Rutherford(1871-1937)
  • New Zealander who went to study in Cambridge
  • was really interested in studying radio waves but
    was convinced to study radioactivity by his
    professor
  • discovered and explained alpha and beta particles

51
  • noticed that the radioactive element called
    Thorium gave off Argon gas thus proving that
    transmutation could occur
  • was influenced by Marie Curies work
  • guided and influenced 10 future Nobel prize
    winners

52
Rutherford
53
Rutherford
54
  • 25. Describe the gold foil experiment
  • Beam of Alpha particles (positive) was focused on
    a sheet of Gold foil about 3000 atoms thick. A
    specially coated screen that emitted a flash of
    light when an alpha particle landed on it
    surrounded the sheet. Rutherford expected the
    alphas to pass right through it because there
    would be nothing big enough or positive enough in
    the atom to deflect it. BUT, 1 in every 20,000
    was deflected!

55
  • 26. Describe the model that was developed due to
    this experiment
  • Whatever the positive alphas must have hit must
    have been vary large and very positive. The
    Rutherford model was proposed-the atom had a
    positive nucleus with negative electrons orbiting
    around it like planets around the sun

56
Rutherford Model
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
57
Architecture of Atoms
  • 27. List the ways that the atomic model has
    changed since the turn of the century
  • 1. E- are not really orbiting, we think they
    move around in a specific area called orbitals,
    you can never know the exact location of the e-

58
  • 2. Nucleus itself is composed of two different
    types
  • of particles-Protons() and Neutrons(no charge),
    they are much larger than e-. Most of the atoms
    mass is taken up by the and n
  • 3. Nucleus takes up 1/10 the diameter of the
    atom-the rest is the electron cloud

59
  • 28. What are isotopes? Give some examples
  • atoms of the same element with the same number of
    protons but different number of neutrons
  • C-14(6, 8 n) C-12(6, 6n)
  • F-19(9, 10n) F-20(9, 11n)

60
(No Transcript)
61
29. What is a radioisotope? if an isotope has an
unstable nucleus and tends to decay, meaning it
is radioactive
62
  • 30. What are atomic numbers?
  • The number of protons in an atom
  • 31. Where can you find the atomic number on the
    periodic table?
  • It is the big whole number above the symbol
  • 32. What is the symbol for atomic number?
  • Z

63
  • 33. What are mass numbers?
  • the sum of the protons and neutrons
  • 34. Where can you find the mass number on the
    Periodic Table?
  • Below the symbol(round up or round down)

64
  • 35. What is the symbol for the mass number?
  • A

65
  • 36. What is a nuclear symbol?
  • Tells you the mass number and atomic number of an
    isotope
  • A Z X
  • C-14 146C
  • Do Building Skills 1 on page 421

66
(No Transcript)
67
Isotopes in Nature
  • 37. How many elements have isotopes?
  • Most
  • 38. How does this present a problem to the
    periodic table?
  • The Periodic Table gives the relative mass of the
    elements. It takes into consideration 2 things
  • a. How abundant each isotope is
  • b. The mass of each isotope

68
  • 39. What did Marie Curie originally think about
    isotopes?
  • She thought that radioactivity was a
    characteristic of only heavy elements
  • (all elements above 83(Bi) are radioactive.) but
    so are some of the smaller elements

69
Do Building Skills 2 on page 423
70
Scientists knew that in a magnetic force
positives deflected one way, negative things
another way, and neutral things would not be
deflected so they figured out what these nuclear
radiation types were like.
71
(No Transcript)
72
Do Making Decisions on page 425
73
Working with Radiation
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com