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Chapter 4 Section 1 Notes The History of Atomic Theory Who are these men? Democritus This is the Greek philosopher Democritus who began the search for a description ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 4 Section 1 Notes


1
Chapter 4 Section 1Notes
  • The History of Atomic Theory

2
Who are these men?
In this lesson, well learn about the men whose
quests for knowledge about the fundamental nature
of the universe helped define our views.
3
Democritus
460-370 B.C.E.
  • This is the Greek philosopher Democritus who
    began the search for a description of matter more
    than 2400 years ago.
  • He asked Could matter be divided into smaller
    and smaller pieces forever, or was there a limit
    to the number of times a piece of matter could be
    divided?
  • He had no way of knowing what atoms looked like!

4
The word atom comes from a Greek word that
means unable to be cut
Imagine you had a piece of gold that you then cut
in half
and you kept on cutting the leftover piece in
half
and then you cut one of these smaller pieces in
half
Gold
Go
ld
5
The word atom comes from a Greek word that
means unable to be cut
Eventually you would have 1 piece of gold left.
If you cut it in half, you wouldnt have gold any
more youd have something else. This tiny,
tiny single piece of gold is called an atom of
gold. An atom is the smallest particle of an
element that acts like the element.
and kept going
and kept going
6
Atomos
  • His theory Matter could not be divided into
    smaller and smaller pieces forever, eventually
    the smallest possible piece would be obtained.
  • This piece would be indivisible.
  • He named the smallest piece of matter atomos,
    meaning not to be cut.

7
Atomos
  • To Democritus, atoms were small, hard particles
    that were all made of the same material but were
    different shapes and sizes.
  • Atoms were infinite in number, always moving and
    capable of joining together.

8
  • This theory was ignored and forgotten for more
    than 2000 years!

9
A Big Debate
  • Can matter be divided into smaller and smaller
    pieces forever?

What do you think?
YES!
NO!
10
Democritus
  • He hypothesized that atoms were
  • Small Hard
  • Different in shape size
  • Infinite
  • Always moving
  • Capable of joining

But no one believed him!
11
Why?
  • The eminent philosophers of the time, Aristotle
    and Plato, had a more respected, (and ultimately
    wrong) theory.

Aristotle and Plato favored the earth, fire, air
and water approach to the nature of matter. The
atomos idea was buried for approximately 2000
years.
12
Time Goes By
  • 1600s-1700s Key experiments occur which support
    Democrituss ideas.
  • Robert Boyle (1627-1691)
  • Antoine Lavoisier (1743-1794)

13
Dalton (1766-1844) Daltons Model
  • English chemist and school teacher
  • In the early 1800s, the English Chemist John
    Dalton performed a number of experiments that
    eventually led to the acceptance of the idea of
    atoms.

14
Daltons Theory (1803)
  • All elements are composed of atoms.
  • Atoms are indivisible and indestructible
    particles.
  • Atoms of the same element are exactly alike.
  • Atoms of different elements are different.
  • Compounds are formed by the joining of atoms of
    two or more elements.

His model was called the Billiard Ball!
15
.
  • This theory became one of the foundations of
    modern chemistry.

16
Thomsons Plum Pudding Model
  • In 1897, the English scientist J.J. Thomson
    provided the first hint that an atom is made of
    even smaller particles.

17
Atomic Model Thomson
  • Passed electricity through an uncharged gas
  • The gas gave off rays to show it was NEGATIVELY
    charged
  • How?
  • Negative charges must come from inside the atom!
  • gt Electrons!

Click here for more on the Discovery of the
electron
18
(No Transcript)
19
But wait
  • How can an atom be NEUTRAL if it is full of
    negatively charged particles (electrons?)

20
Atomic Models Thomson
  • The atoms are neutral How?
  • charges must be present to balance - charges
  • - lumped in a cluster he said looked like
    plum pudding

21
Thomson Model
  • He proposed a model of the atom that is sometimes
    called the Plum Pudding model.
  • Atoms were made from a positively charged
    substance with negatively charged electrons
    scattered about, like raisins in a pudding.

22
Thomson Model
Where did they come from?
  • This surprised Thomson, because the atoms of the
    gas were uncharged. Where had the negative
    charges come from?

23
Thomson concluded that the negative charges came
from within the atom. A particle smaller than
an atom had to exist. The atom was divisible!
  • Thomson called the negatively charged
    corpuscles, today known as electrons.
  • Since the gas was known to be neutral, having no
    charge, he reasoned that there must be positively
    charged particles in the atom.
  • But he could never find them.

24
Rutherfords Gold Foil Experiment
  • In 1908, the English physicist Ernest Rutherford
    was hard at work on an experiment that seemed to
    have little to do with unraveling the mysteries
    of the atomic structure.

25
Atomic Models Rutherford
  • Passed Charged Particles through gold foil
  • Most passed right through
  • Atom is mostly empty space
  • Some bounced off at odd angles
  • Nucleus must be
  • Calculate size of nucleus



26
Rutherfords Gold Foil Experiment

start experiment
27
Rutherfords Work

What's Different This Time???
start experiment
28
  • Rutherfords experiment involved firing a stream
    of tiny positively charged particles at a thin
    sheet of gold foil (2000 atoms thick)
  • http//chemmovies.unl.edu/ChemAnime/RUTHERFD/RUTHE
    RFD.html
  • rutherford.mov

29
  • Most of the positively charged bullets passed
    right through the gold atoms in the sheet of gold
    foil without changing course at all.
  • Some of the positively charged bullets, bounced
    away from the gold sheet as if they had hit
    something solid.
  • He knew that positive charges repel positive
    charges.

30
  • This could only mean that the gold atoms were
    mostly open space, not a pudding filled with a
    positively charged material.
  • Rutherford concluded that an atom had a small,
    dense, positively charged center that repelled
    his positively charged bullets.
  • He called the center of the atom the nucleus
  • The nucleus is tiny compared to the atom as a
    whole.

31
Rutherford
  • All of an atoms positively charged particles
    were contained in the nucleus.
  • The negatively charged particles were scattered
    outside the nucleus.

32
Okay
  • So the atom is made up of positive and negative
    particles.
  • Where are the electrons found in the atom?

33
Bohr Model
  • In 1913, the Danish scientist Niels Bohr proposed
    an improvement. In his model, he placed each
    electron in a specific energy level.

34
Bohrs Model
35
Bohrs Model
  • According to Bohrs atomic model
  • Electrons respond to light
  • Electrons move in definite orbits around the
    nucleus
  • Like planets around the sun
  • Electrons are found in specific energy levels
  • These orbits, or energy levels, are located at
    certain distances from the nucleus.
  • Electrons can jump from path to path (like a
    ladder)

36
The Electron Cloud Model (a.k.a. The Wave Model)
  • Todays atomic model is based on the principles
    of wave mechanics.
  • According to the theory of wave mechanics,
    electrons do not move about an atom in a definite
    path, like the planets around the sun.

37
Atomic Model Electron Cloud (wave)
  • Electrons move so fast that it is impossible to
    determine their location
  • Move in all directions around the nucleus

38
Electron Cloud Model
39
The Electron Cloud Model
  • I is impossible to determine the exact location
    of an electron.
  • The probable location of an electron is based on
    how much energy the electron has.
  • In the electron cloud model, the atom has a small
    positively charged nucleus surrounded by a large
    region in which there are enough electrons to
    make an atom neutral.

40
Electron Cloud
  • A space in which electrons are likely to be
    found.
  • Electrons whirl about the nucleus billions of
    times in one second
  • They are not moving around in random patterns.
  • Location of electrons depends upon how much
    energy the electron has.

41
Electron Cloud
  • Depending on their energy they are locked into a
    certain area in the cloud.
  • Electrons with the lowest energy are found in the
    energy level closest to the nucleus
  • Electrons with the highest energy are found in
    the outermost energy levels, farther from the
    nucleus.

42
Atomic Model Review
43
Daltons Atomic Model(1807)
  • The Billiard ball model.
  • Atoms were considered to be featureless,
    indivisible, spheres of uniform density

44
J. J. Thomsons Atomic Model Plum Pudding Model
  • Atoms are not hard spherical balls.
  • Further experiments showed two particles in atoms
  • Protons () electrons (-)
  • Electrons were like raisins stuck randomly inside
    a mass of positively charged pudding.
  • Negative electrons used to hold together the
    positively changed mass of pudding.

45
Rutherfords Nuclear Model(1911)
  • Central nucleus composed of positively charged
    protons.
  • Negatively charged cloud of electrons surrounds
    the nucleus.
  • PROBLEM As atoms lost energy why didnt the
    electrons eventually spiral into the nucleus due
    to electrical attraction of for -?
  • PROBLEM How could all the positive protons stay
    packed together in the nucleus?

46
Neil Bohrs Model of Hydrogen(1913)
  • Solves problem of why electrons to do fall into
    nucleus.
  • Used quantized orbits with specific energies.
  • Electron can only move between orbits by getting
    or losing the exact amount of energy required.
  • It could not take fractional steps.

47
Schrödinger Electron Cloud Model(1926)
  • According to Schrödinger atoms are composed of
  • Central nucleus
  • A fuzzy electron cloud

48
Summary of Atomic Models
49
Indivisible Electron Nucleus Orbit Electron Cloud
Greek X
Dalton X
Thomson X
Rutherford X X
Bohr X X X
Electron Cloud X X X
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