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Chapter 4 The structure of the atom OS Objectives 1, 2,3,4,7, 10, 15, 20, 21, 22, 27and

Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

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Chapter 4 The structure of the atom. AL-COS Objectives 1, 2,3,4,7, 10, 15, 20, 21, 22, 27and 28. You’ll learn to…. Identify the experiments that led to the development of the nuclear model of atomic structure Describe the structure of the atom and the subatomic particles that comprise it - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Chapter 4

The structure of the atom

AL-COS Objectives 1, 2,3,4,7, 10, 15, 20, 21, 22, 27and 28

Page 2: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

You’ll learn to…

• Identify the experiments that led to the development of the nuclear model of atomic structure

• Describe the structure of the atom and the subatomic particles that comprise it

and…

Page 3: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

You’ll also learn…

• Explain the relationship between nuclear stability and radioactivity

• Write equations representing nuclear decay

• Discuss the atomic models of Democritus, Thomson, Rutherford, and Bohr

Page 4: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Vocabulary

*atom*atomic mass*atomic mass unit (amu)*atomic number*electron*isotope*mass number*neutron*nucleus*proton

Page 5: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Early Theories of Matter

Democritus ( 460-370 BC)

Page 6: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

A man ahead of his time…

•First to believe matter was not infintely divisible

•Believed matter to be made of small particles he called “atomos”

•Believed these particles could not be created or destroyed

Page 7: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Democritus’ Ideas• Matter is composed of empty space through which atoms move • Atoms are solid, homogeneous,

indestructible and indivisible

• Different kinds of atoms have different

sizes and shapes (give matter its

properties) • Changes in matter are due to changes

in grouping of atoms

Page 8: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Aristotle

• One of most influential Greek philosophers

Page 9: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Aristotle

•Believed matter was formed of air, water, earth and fire

•Did not believe in the “nothingness” of space

•All of his ideas were NOT based on empirical (experimental) science – just ideas

Page 11: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

John Dalton(1766-1844)

•Revived the ideas of Democritus

•First atomic model

•A teacher in England

Page 12: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Dalton’s atomic theory

•Matter is made of small particles called atoms

•All atoms of an element are identical **** (isotopes?)

•Atoms of different elements are different

Page 13: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

As well as…

• Atoms cannot be created or destroyed or divided into smaller particles ****(nuclear fission?)

• Different atoms combine in simple whole number ratios to form compounds

• In chemical reactions, atoms are separated, combined or rearranged.

Page 14: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

The atom

• Smallest particle of an element that retains the properties of that element

Page 15: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Relative size of an atom

Page 16: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

How many atoms?

•World population = 6 000 000 000

•Number of atoms in a penny= 29 000 000 000 000 000 000

000

Page 17: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Subatomic particles and the nuclear atom

• The electron- Sir William Crookes noticed the flash of light in a tube

Tube filled with a gas,+ and a – end,

Page 18: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

The cathode ray

Scientists were convinced this cathode ray was really a stream of charged particles -> electrons!

Page 19: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Further cathode tube experiments were conducted by J.J. Thomson (1856-1940)

•Was trying to determine the charge/mass ratio of these electrons

•Found the mass of this particles was less than hydrogen’s

Page 20: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

J.J. Thomson

• Identified the first subatomic particle – the electron

• Atoms were divisible into smaller particles

Page 21: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

J.J. Thomson’s atomic model •A spherical atom composed of evenly distributed positive charges within which the negatively charged electrons were also found

Page 22: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Robert Millikan (1868-1953)

• American physicist

• Determined the charge of an electron

• Calculated the mass of a single electron (e-)

Page 23: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Sir Ernest Rutherford

•Originally from New Zealand •Won a scholarship competition to study at Cambridge Univ. in England •Won the Nobel prize in 1908 for discovering radioactivity

Page 24: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Radioactivity • 3 types

–Alpha particles•Actually the nucleus of a helium atom

–Beta particle •A high speed electron

–Gamma particle •A photon of electromagnetic radiation

Page 25: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Radiation can be shielded by..

Page 26: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Designed an experiment to study the atom

•Experiment was actually conducted by his two graduate students, Geiger (later developed the Geiger counter) and Marsden

•Rutherford was their supervising professor

Page 27: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

The gold foil experiment..

Page 28: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Used alpha particles for “bullets”

• Alpha particles = Helium nucleus

2 protons + 2 neutrons

Page 29: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

What happened in the experiment

Page 30: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Observed that..

•Most of the alpha particles went straight through

•Some were deflected away from the foil

•Some hit something solid and “bounced back”

Page 31: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

What was learned?

• Most of an atom is empty space

• The nucleus has a positive charge (He nucleus was also positive, which caused the deflection)

• The nucleus, when hit straight on, is dense and solid – not a plum pudding!

Page 32: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Other subatomic particles

•Proton –Discovered by Goldstein using a cathode ray tube (1920’s)

•Neutron –Discovered by James Chadwick in 1932

Page 33: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Atomic number

• Henry Moseley discovered that atoms of different elements each have a unique positive charge in their nucleus

Page 34: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Henry Moseley (1887-1915)

•Discovered atomic numbers •Died at a young age in WWI

Page 35: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

The atomic number

12

C6

Symbol for element

Atomic number = number of protons in the nucleus

Mass number= Protons + neutrons

Page 36: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Practice writing atomic notation

23 Na

11

What does this tell us?

Page 37: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Write atomic notation

• For an atom of Fe

• For an atom of U

And ……

Page 38: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

56 238Fe U

26 92

Page 39: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Isotopes

•Same atomic number but a different atomic mass

•The number of protons remains the same, but the number of neutrons vary.

Page 40: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Isotopes of hydrogen

1 2 3 H H H 1 1 1 Protium deuterium tritium

Page 41: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Calculating Atomic Mass(Turn to pg. 102)

• 1. mass x %abundance (for each isotope)• 2. Add them together to get the

atomic mass• 3. find that atomic mass on the

periodic table and that is the element

VIOLA!

Page 42: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Example Problem: pg. 103

• 1.) 6X =(6.015)(0.075)= 0.451 amu

7X =(7.016)(0.925)= 6.490 amu

• 2.) 0.451 + 6.490 = 6.941 amu

• 3.) The element with an atomic mass of 6.941 amu is Lithium, Li.

• COOL!!!!!!!!!!!!

Page 43: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Look on pg. 104

•Let’s do # 15 and #16 together.

•Now, you do #17 on your own.

Page 44: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Pg. 104, #17

• (23.985)(0.7899) = 18.94575 amu

• (24.986)(0.10) = 2.4986 amu

• (25.982)(0.1101) = 2.86062 amu

24.30497 amu

The element with that atomic mass is magnesium, Mg.

Page 45: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Nuclear reactions

•The nucleus of the atoms actually change

•Nuclear stability is based on neutron/proton ratio

•Experience nuclear decay to become more stable

Page 46: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Alpha decay

Page 47: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Nuclear equation becomes

238 234 4 U Th + He92 90 2

Page 48: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Beta decay

Page 49: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Nuclear equation

14 0 15 N e + O 7 -1 8

Page 50: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Another example of Beta decay

Page 51: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Gamma radiation γ

•Electromagentic radiation •Has no charge •Often found along with Beta

or alpha radiation

Page 52: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Gamma radiation

Page 53: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

Fission of atoms

Page 54: Chapter 4 The structure of the atom

The end – for now!