Atomic%20Theory - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Atomic%20Theory

Description:

Atomic Theory Atom smallest part of an element with that element s properties 2 parts Nucleus Protons (positive charge, weigh 1 amu*) Neutrons (neutral charge ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:63
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 15
Provided by: bpi92
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Atomic%20Theory


1
Atomic Theory
  • Atom
  • smallest part of an element with that elements
    properties
  • 2 parts
  • Nucleus
  • Protons (positive charge, weigh 1 amu)
  • Neutrons (neutral charge, weigh 1 amu)
  • Orbitals (inside electron cloud)
  • Electrons (negative charge, negligible mass)
  • ( amu atomic mass unit)

2
A note about electrons
  • They dont all have the same amount of energy.
  • The farther away from the nucleus they are, the
    more energy they have.
  • We dont know exactly where they are, we just
    have an idea. They move fast, like the blades of
    a fan. We know theyre there somewhere.
  • Outermost ones are called valence electrons.
    They are responsible for how elements react
    with each other and the physical and chemical
    properties.

3
Electrons
  • Electron cloud is split into energy levels that
    hold different amounts of electrons.
  • 1st one holds 2 (maximum)
  • 2nd one holds 8
  • 3rd one holds 18
  • 4th one holds 32
  • Electrons fill the lowest one first
  • The energy levels are split into orbitals, called
    s, p, d and f.

4
So it gets complicated
  • Really the 8 electrons in the second energy
    level are 2 in the s orbital and 6 in the p
    orbital
  • And the 18 in the third energy level are 2 in
    s, 6 in p and 10 in d orbital

5
s, p, d, f orbitals
  • You can see this pattern on the table!

6
Do we have to know this?
  • But youll hear more about that in chemistry.
    For now realize that each energy level is made
    up of sublevels that hold specific amounts of
    electrons.
  • The sublevels are called orbitals and are named
    s, p, d, f
  • You can see these patterns in the periodic table.

7
The Periodic Table
  • Was organized according to the chemical
    physical properties of the known elements
  • Protons, neutrons and electrons had not yet been
    discovered
  • Dmitri Mendeleev noticed that when the elements
    were put into order by their atomic mass, some
    of their properties repeated periodically (at
    regular intervals)
  • This is because the pattern of valence electrons
    repeats as orbitals are filled

8
What it tells you
  • Atomic number
    the number of
    protons
  • Atomic mass
    average mass for all the forms of that
    element
  • Name of the element
  • Symbol (first letter always capital)

9
Ions
  • Atoms arent always neutral (no charge)
  • Lose electrons
  • More protons, positive ion
  • Gain electrons
  • More electrons, negative ion
  • Has 1 charge for each electron lost or gained
  • Written above the symbol, e.g. Na, O2-

10
Isotopes
  • Some forms of the atom naturally have more or
    less neutrons
  • Because it has the same number of protons its
    still the same atom, but called an isotope.
  • Thats why atomic mass is not a whole number, it
    averages all the isotopes
  • Write the mass number and atomic number to left
    of symbol
  • C is carbon-14, used to carbon date

14
6
11
Patterns on the table
  • Rows are called periods
  • As you go across a period
  • Atomic number (p) increases by 1
  • So does e- for neutral atoms
  • So does valence electrons
  • Columns are called families or groups
  • Similar properties (density, melt pt, etc.)
  • React chemically the same way
  • Because have same valence electrons

12
How you use it
  • p to Atomic Number (by definition)
  • e- protons (in a neutral atom)
  • n0 atomic mass, rounded off atomic number

13
Bohr Model
  • Shows protons and neutrons in nucleus
  • Shows electrons in the cloud in layers called
    energy levels

14
Lewis Diagram
  • Also called dot diagrams
  • Only shows valence electrons (outer most)
  • Valence are only ones involved in chemical
    reactions
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com