THE ATOM AND THE PERIODIC TABLE
STATE STANDARD SPI Use the periodic table to determine the properties of an element.
OBJECTIVES I can identify the parts of an atom I can compare and contrast the relative masses of the different parts of an atom I can calculate atomic mass
REPRESENTATION OF AN ATOM
ELEMENT TILE
STATE STANDARD SPI Use the periodic table to determine the properties of an element.
OBJECTIVES I can calculate atomic mass correctly 8 out of 10
Calculating Atomic Mass APE Atomic# = #of Protons = #of Electrons For Oxygen, O, the atomic # is 8 So, O has 8 Protons and 8 Electrons.
Calculating Atomic Mass MAN (Mass #) - (Atomic#) = ( # of Neutrons)
Calculating Atomic Mass Oxygen has an Atomic # of 8 Therefore O has: 8 Protons 8 Electrons To calculate # of Neutrons: First round the atomic mass from to 16 Then subtract the number of Protons. 16 Mass # - 8 Atomic # 8 # Neutrons
ISOTOPES ISOTOPES are atoms that have the same number of protons but different number of neutrons.
ISOTOPES Isotopes of an element share the same chemical properties and most of the same physical properties.
STATE STANDARD SPI Use the periodic table to determine the properties of an element.
OBJECTIVE I CAN ACCURATELY DRAW THE BOHR ATOMIC MODEL FOR THE FIRST 20 ELEMENTS
BOHR’S MODEL OF THE ATOM Niels Bohr (1913): studied the light produced when atoms were excited by heat or electricity. Bohr proposed that electrons are in orbits & when excited jump to a higher orbit. When they fall back to the original they give off light.
BOHR’S MODEL OF THE ATOM
BOHR’S ATOMIC MODEL Bohr's model: -electrons orbit the nucleus like planets orbit the sun Each orbit can hold a specific maximum number of electrons ORBIT (n)MAX # OF ELECTRONS
BOHR ATOMIC MODEL FOR NEON