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The Atom Smallest unit of an element that can exist alone Greek for “uncuttable” Anatomy of an Atom: Electrons, Protons, Neutrons The Nucleus Proton Positive charge Determines the atomic number Number of Protons determines the number of Electrons Neutron No charge Atomic weight - # of Protons = # of Neutrons
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Electrons Negative charge Atomic number tells you the number of electrons Resides in the “shells”, orbits, or levels
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Organized representation of the chemical elements Dimitri Mendeleev February 17, 1869 63 elements 113 elements Row (Period) Left to right w/ increasing atomic number Number from 1 to 7 Columns (Family) Number of electrons in the outer orbit Groups A Group (Representative elements) B Group (Transition elements) Group VIIIA Noble or inert gases Metals, Semiconductors, & Nonmetals More on this later – stay tuned
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The Element Symbol Atomic number Total number of electrons Total number of protons Electrical charge Electrons – minus Protons – plus Neutrons – no charge Atomic weight (Nucleus) Protons + Neutrons = atomic weight
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Electron Configuration Energy Levels (Shells) Level I – 2 Level II – 8 Level III – 8 (first 20 elements) (18) Level IV – 32
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Putting it all together... Sodium Na Atomic # - 11 Level I (Shell) - 2 Level II - 8 Level III – 1
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Try this one... Chlorine Cl
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Atomic # 17 Level I – 2 Level II – 8 Level III – 7
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What does the Periodic Table Tell Us? Element symbol & name Atomic Number of the element Number of electrons Number of protons Number of neutrons Number of electrons in the outer shell Atomic weight
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Metals, Nonmetals, & Semiconductors 80% of the elements are metals Ion An element with an unbalanced electron charge – either plus or minus Positive ions – lose electrons Metals Negative ions – gain electrons Non-metals Remember – the number of protons determines the charge
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Ions When the number of protons is greater than the number electrons it is a positive (+) charged ion. When the number of electrons is greater than the number of protons it is a negative (-) charged ion.
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Metals Elements with 1 – 3 electrons to lose Positive ion Non-metals Elements with 1 -3 electrons to gain Negative ion
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Check this out... http://www.vanderkrogt.net/elements
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