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Atomic Structure
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Atoms True or False: An atom is the smallest particle of an element that retains its identity in a chemical reaction. True False
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Sorry. That is incorrect.
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Atoms Atoms – the smallest particle of an element
- retains its identity in a chemical reaction
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Early Models of the Atom
Democritus’s Atomic Philosophy - was one of the first to suggest existence of atoms - believed that atoms were indivisible and indestructible - ideas challenged by Plato and Aristotle
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Dalton’s Atomic Theory
Dalton transformed Democritus’s ideas on atoms into a scientific theory - studied ratios in which elements combine in chemical reactions
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Dalton’s Atomic Theory
All elements composed of tiny indivisible particles called atoms. Atoms of same element are identical. (Each element has a different type of atom.) Atoms of different elements can physically mix together or form compounds in whole-number ratios. Chemical reactions occur when atoms are separated, joined, or rearranged. Atoms of one element never change into atoms of another element due to chemical reactions.
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Sizing up the Atom Radii of most atoms fall within range of
5 X 10-11m to 2 X 10-10m Atoms can still be observed - by scanning tunneling microscopes - atomic scale = “nanoscale”
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Sizing up the Atom
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Subatomic Particles Most of Dalton’s atomic theory is still accepted today - the major change is that atoms are known to be divisible - divide into electrons, protons and neutrons
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Subatomic Particles
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Electrons Electron – negatively charged subatomic particles
- discovered by J.J Thomson in 1897 - passed electric current through gas at low pressure - he sealed gas in tubes with electrodes at both ends - anode = positive charge - cathode = negative charge - cathode ray - glowing beam that traveled from cathode to anode
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Electrons Thomson noted that cathode ray is deflected by a magnet
Positive charge = attracts cathode ray Negative charge = repels Opposite charges attract and like repel Hypothesized cathode ray is a stream of tiny negatively charged particles - originally called corpuscles - now called electrons
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J.J. Thomson and cathode ray
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Robert A. Millikan Discovered electron has one unit of negative charge
- also discovered mass is of electron is 1/1840 of that of a Hydrogen atom
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Protons and Neutrons If cathode rays are electrons given off by atoms, what remains of atoms that have lost the electrons? What is left? Atoms have no net electric charge Electric charges carried by particles of matter Electric charges always exist in whole-number multiples of single base unit Neutral particles occur when equal number of positive charges combine with equal numbers of negative charges
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Protons Protons – positively charged subatomic particles
- has a mass of 1840 times that of electron - discovered by Eugen Goldstein after observing a cathode-ray tube - found rays traveling in direction opposite to that of cathode rays - concluded these to be positive
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Neutrons Neutrons – subatomic particles with no charge
- mass nearly equal to that of a proton - discovered by English physicist James Chadwick in 1932
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Protons and Neutrons
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Atomic Nucleus Thomson’s model was “plum pudding model”
- thought electrons were evenly distributed with positive charge particles - model was short lived
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Ernest Rutherford Ernest Rutherford – disproved “plum pudding model”
- used “gold-foil experiment
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Atomic Nucleus “Gold-foil experiment”
- directed beam of positively charged alpha particles at thin gold foil - most particles passed through - only a few deflected - discovered positive charges in dense core of atom - nucleus – tiny central core of an atom that is composed of protons and neutrons - electrons surround nucleus in electron cloud - 10,000 times small than radius of overall atom
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Gold-foil Experiment
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Atomic Number Elements differ because they contain different numbers of protons Atomic Number – number of protons in nucleus of an atom of that element - identifies an element - number of protons = number of electrons - electrically neutral
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Atomic Number Atomic Number
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Mass Number Most of an atoms mass is concentrated in its nucleus
Mass Number – total number of protons and neutrons in an atom Number of neutrons in an atom is difference between mass number and atomic number # neutrons=mass number - atomic number
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Number of Neutrons Example: Carbon: - mass number = 12
- atomic number = 6 Number of neutrons= 12 – 6 = 6 neutrons Mass Number
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Examples Atomic # Mass # Beryllium (Be) 4 9 Neon (Ne) 10 20
Sodium (Na) How many electrons, protons, and neutrons in each? Be = 4e, 4p, 5n Ne = 10e, 10p, 10n Na = 11e, 11p, 12n
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Isotopes Isotopes – atoms that have same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons - also have different mass numbers Example: Carbon -12, Carbon-13, and Carbon-14
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Isotopes
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Atomic Mass Unit (amu) Carbon -12 is a standard reference isotope
Atomic Mass Unit (amu) – one twelfth of the mass of a carbon-12 atom Carbon-12 atoms have 6 protons and 6 neutrons in it’s nucleus - set as 12 amu
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Atomic Mass Unit
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Atomic Mass Mass of atoms depends on number of protons and neutrons in nucleus - in most cases atomic mass is not a whole number - most elements occur as a mixture of two or more isotopes Atomic Mass – weighted average mass of atoms in a naturally occurring sample of the element - reflects both mass and relative abundance of isotopes as occur in nature
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Calculating Average Atomic Mass
To calculate amu: multiply mass of each isotope by its natural abundance (expressed as a decimal) Add the products
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Example of Average Atomic Mass calculation
Carbon -12 has natural abundance of 98.89% Carbon-13 has a natural abundance of 1.11% Carbon -12 mass is amu Carbon-13 is amu Atomic mass of carbon = ( amu X ) + ( amu X ) = amu
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Practice calculating atomic mass
Copper has 2 isotopes Copper-63 and Copper-65 Copper-63 has an abundance of 69.2% and an amu of 62.93 Copper-65 has an abundance of 30.8% and an amu of 64.93 Calculate the average atomic mass Answer = amu
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Periodic Table Preview
Periodic Table – arrangement of elements in which elements - separated into groups based on set of repeating properties - allows you to compare properties of one element to another Period – each horizontal row Group – each vertical column
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Periodic Table of Elements
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