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History of the Atomic Model 2.1
Unit 2 History of the Atomic Model 2.1
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Atomic Structure
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Democritus 400 B.C.
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John Dalton 1808
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Dalton’s view of atoms of elements Can you see B. 1-4 in this picture?
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J.J. Thomson (1897) with the Cathode Ray Tube
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Discovery of the Electron
In 1897, J.J. Thomson used a cathode ray tube to deduce the presence of a negatively charged particle. Cathode ray tubes pass electricity through a gas that is contained at a very low pressure.
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Actual Cathode Ray in action
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Thomson’s Atomic Model
Thomson believed that the electrons were like plums embedded in a positively charged “pudding,” thus it was called the “plum pudding” model.
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Robert A. Millken 1909
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Millikan’s Oil Drop Experiment Helps to calculate the mass & charge of an electron
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How it worked inside
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Ernest Rutherford (1911) on New Zealand Money
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Hans Geiger (1911)
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Ernest Marsden (1911)
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Rutherford’s Gold Foil Experiment
Alpha () particles are helium nuclei Particles were fired at a thin sheet of gold foil Particle hits on the detecting screen (film) are recorded
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Rutherford’s 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: The nucleus is small The nucleus is dense The nucleus is positively charged
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Atomic Particles Particle Charge Mass # Location Electron -1
Electron cloud Proton +1 1 Nucleus Neutron
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Niels Bohr (1913) His comment on the structure of atoms
Niels Bohr (1913) His comment on the structure of atoms. (Which are mostly empty space.)
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Bohr Model of an Atom
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Dmitri Ivanenko (1930)
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Victor Ambartsumian (1930)
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Ivanenko & Ambartssumian Model of a Nucleus
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James Chadwick 1932
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His Experiment using alpha particle radiation
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