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Atomic Theory and Atomic Structure

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Title: Atomic Theory and Atomic Structure


1
Atomic Theory and Atomic Structure
2
Democritus440 BC Greek Philosopher
  • Universe was made of empty space and tiny bits of
    stuff
  • Called these tiny bits of stuff atomos
  • If you keep cutting something in half, eventually
    you would end up with a particle that could not
    be cut.
  • Atom- not able to be divided
  • He believed that atoms were indivisible and
    indestructible

3
Democritus ( continued)
  • Atoms are small hard particles.
  • Atoms are made of a single material thats formed
    into different shapes and sizes.
  • Atoms are always moving
  • Atoms form different materials by joining
    together.

4
Aristotle
Aristotle was a very famous Greek philosopher who
believed that matter could be divided into
smaller and smaller pieces forever.
5
AristotleGreek Philosopher
  • Matter is made of particles , which we call
    atoms.
  • An atom is the smallest particle into which an
    element can be divided and still be the same
    substance.
  • For example, the smallest particle of carbon is a
    single atom of carbon. If you divide it is no
    longer carbon anymore.

6
Carbon
7
John Dalton
British chemist and schoolteacher brings back
Democrituss idea of the atom. He performed many
experiments to study how elements join together
to form new substances He found that elements
combine in specific ratios and he supposed it was
because the elements are made of atoms.
8
Daltons Fixed Ratio
Remember Daltons Theory says all matter is
made of individual particles (atoms) which cannot
be divided. Main points All elements are
composed of atoms. All atoms of same element
have same mass, and atoms of different elements
have different masses. Compounds contain atoms
of more than one element In a compound, atoms of
different elements always combine in same way in
fixed ratios. Theory was revised with later
discoveries
9
John DaltonLate 1700s- British Chemist Teacher
  • Daltons Atomic Theory ( published in 1803 )
  • 1. All elements are made of atoms.
  • 2. Atoms are small particles that cannot be
    divided, created, or destroyed.
  • 3. Atoms of the same element are exactly alike,
    and atoms of different elements are different.
  • Atoms of same element have the same mass.
  • 4. Atoms join with other atoms to make new
    substances.
  • 5. Chemical reactions involve the rearrangement
    of atoms to make new compounds.

10
J.J. Thomson
J.J. Thomson discovered the existence of
electrons. He discovered that atoms are made of
smaller negatively-charged particles called
electrons.
Thomsons discovery was the result of doing
experiments with cathode ray tubes
11
Thomson
Atom is neutral (no charge). Must have positive
charges because he found negative charges. These
negative charges are later called electrons
12
Thomson Discovery of the Electron
In 1897, J.J. Thomson used a cathode ray tube to
deduce the presence of a negatively charged
particle the electron.
13
Modern Cathode Ray Tubes
  • Cathode ray tubes pass electricity through a gas
    that is contained at a very low pressure.

14
J.J. Thomson1897- British Scientist
  • There are small particles inside the atom.
  • Created the plum-pudding model. (Looks like
    chocolate chip ice cream)
  • Atom made of a positively charged material with
    the negatively charged electrons scattered
    through it.

15
Thomson believed that the electrons were like
plums embedded in a positively charged
pudding, thus it was called the plum
pudding model.
16
Thomsons Plum Pudding Model
17
Ernest Rutherford1909- A Student of Thomson
  • Gold Foil Experiment
  • Atoms are made of mostly empty space.
  • A tiny part of an atom is made of dense matter.
  • 1911- Revised Theory- New Model
  • The center of the atom, the nucleus, is extremely
    dense and has a positive charge.
  • Rutherford is responsible for
  • discovering the positively charged
  • nucleus.

18
Ernest Rutherford
  • Shot a beam of particles at a thin sheet of gold.
  • He predicted particles would travel straight
    through with a little deflection (very small
    change in direction).
  • Believed atoms mass and charge were too small to
    stop the particles (like shooting a bullet at a
    tissue).

19
Gold Foil Experiment
  • Alpha particles are helium nuclei - The alpha
    particles were fired at a thin sheet of gold foil
  • Particles that hit on the detecting screen
    (film) are recorded

20
Gold Foil Experiment
21
Rutherfords Findings
  • Most of the particles passed right through
  • A few particles were deflected
  • VERY FEW were greatly deflected

Like howitzer shells bouncing off of tissue
paper!
CONCLUSIONS
  1. The nucleus is small
  2. The nucleus is dense
  3. The nucleus is positively charged

22
Rutherfords Atomic Model
Based on his experimental evidence The atom is
mostly empty space. All the positive charge, and
almost all the mass is concentrated in a small
area in the center. He called this center of
the atom ? a nucleus The nucleus is composed of
protons and neutrons (they make the nucleus!) The
electrons distributed around the nucleus, and
occupy most of the volume. His model was called a
nuclear model
23
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24
Niels Bohr1913- Danish Scientist
  • Electrons move around the nucleus in paths or
    energy levels.

25
Bohrs Model
  • Added on to Rutherfords model
  • Described the electrons in energy levels (like
    planets orbiting the sun)
  • Each energy level has a specific energy (closer
    to nucleus lower energy)
  • (farther from the nucleus higher energy )
  • Electrons can move from one level to another, but
    cannot be between levels (think of steps on a
    staircase)

26
Bohrs Model
27
Energy Levels
  • When an electron gains energy, it moves up to a
    higher energy level
  • This is called exciting the electron
  • When an electron loses energy, it moves down to a
    lower energy level AND releases this energy
  • Energy released can be visible light

28
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29
Erwin Schrodinger (Austrian Physicist) and Werner
Heisenberg (German Physicist)
  • Electrons do NOT travel in specific paths.
  • They travel in Electron Clouds (a region around
    the nucleus where electrons are found)

30
Electron CloudsEnery Levels
31
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32
What is an atom made of?
33
What are Protons?
  • Much larger and heavier than electrons
  • Protons have a positive charge ()
  • Located in the nucleus of the atomĀ 
  • Atomic Mass Unit (amu)- SI Unit used to express
    the mass of parts of atoms
  • 1 proton 1 amu

34
What are Neutrons?
  • Large and heavy like protons
  • Neutrons have no electrical charge
  • Located in the nucleus of the atom
  • 1 neutron 1 amu

35
What are Electrons?
  • Tiny, very light particles
  • Have a negative electrical charge (-)
  • Move around the outside of the nucleus
  • Mass is almost 0 amu

36
How do we describe atoms ?
  • Atoms are composed of identical protons,
    neutrons, and electrons
  • How then are atoms of one element different from
    another element?
  • Elements are different because they contain
    different numbers of PROTONS
  • The atomic number of an element is the number
    of protons in the nucleus and identifies the type
    of atom.

37
How do we describe atoms?
  • Atomic Number equals the number of protons in the
    nucleus.
  • In a neutral atom, the number of protons equals
    the number of electrons.
  • Atomic Mass Number is equal to the number of
    protons plus neutrons.
  • Atomic Weight is the average mass of the
    naturally occurring isotopes of an element.

38
Atomic Number
  • Atomic number (Z) of an element is the number of
    protons in the nucleus of each atom of that
    element.

Element of protons Atomic (Z)
Carbon 6 6
Phosphorus 15 15
Gold 79 79
39
Mass Number
  • Mass number is the number of protons and neutrons
    in the nucleus of an isotope Mass p n0

Nuclide p n0 e- Mass
Oxygen - 18 8 10 8 18
Arsenic - 75 33 42 33 75
Phosphorus -31 15 16 15 31
40
Atomic Symbol
  • Contain the symbol of the element, the mass
    number and the atomic number.
  • Superscript ? Mass number
  • Subscript ? Atomic number

X
41
Atomic Symbol
  • Find each of these
  • number of protons
  • number of neutrons
  • number of electrons
  • Atomic number
  • Mass Number

Br
80
35
42
What are Ions?
  • An atom of an element without equal numbers of
    electrons and protons.
  • An atom of an element that carries an electrical
    charge is called an ion
  • If the atom loses electrons, the atom becomes
    positively charged (because the number of
    positively charged protons will be more the
    number of electrons) ion
  • If an atom gains electrons, the atom becomes
    negatively charged (more negative charges than
    positive charges) - ion

43
What are Ions?
  • The number of protons does not change in an ion
  • The number of neutrons does not change in an ions
  • So, both the atomic number and the atomic mass
    remain the same.

44
What are Isotopes?
  • An atom that has the same number of protons
    (atomic number) as other atoms in the same
    element BUT a DIFFERENT amount of neutrons
    therefore, it has different atomic masses.
  • Some are unstable- the atoms nucleus will change
    over time.
  • Some are considered Radioactive- When they fall
    apart, they will give off smaller particles and
    energy.
  • Identify Isotopes by mass number. (Sum of the
    protons and neutrons.)

45
What are Isotopes?
46
What holds atoms together?
  • Gravitational Force- mass attraction
  • Electromagnetic Force- charge attraction
  • Strong Force- keeps the nucleus together
  • Weak Force- Radioactive Atoms Only.
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