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Published byArron Whitehead Modified over 9 years ago
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THE DEVELOPMENT OF ATOMIC THEORY Chemistry Rules!
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Philosophical Era (Ancient Greece) o Two ancient Greeks stand out in the advancement of chemistry. o Their ideas were purely based on reason, without experimental support (as was common in that time)
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Democritus (460-370 BCE) o The most well-known proponent of the idea that matter was made of small, indivisible particles o Called the small particles “atomos” meaning “that which cannot be divided” o Believed properties of matter came from the properties of the “atomos”
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Aristotle (384-322 BCE) o Famous philosopher of the ancient Greeks o Believed matter was comprised of four elements o Earth, Air, Fire, Water o These elements had a total of four properties o Dry, Moist, Hot, Cold o People liked him – so this idea stayed
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The “Dark Ages” of Chemistry where early chemists had to work in secret and encode their findings for fear of persecution Alchemical Era (300 BCE ~ 1400CE)
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o the closest thing to the study of chemistry for nearly two thousand years o based on the Aristotelian idea of the four elements of matter o If you change the properties, then you could change elements themselves – lead to gold and immortality o Very mystical study and experimentation with the elements and what was perceived as magic o Study was persecuted, findings hidden in code
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Procedures of Alchemy o Alchemy brought about many lab procedures o We use some of the same methods and the names developed in these dark ages of chemistry
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Elements in Alchemy o Alchemists studied many different materials, and their properties, in order to find a way to turn lead into gold and achieve immortality
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Alchemy had to be discussed in secret so that its students could avoid persecution Alchemical symbols for various materials
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Alchemists’ Persecution o Alchemy was tied to witchcraft and druids o it was perceived as heresy by the catholic church o Practitioners had to hide their trade or hobby o Information was passed in code o Coded messages were sent between friends o Symbols were used to avoid readable words o The growth of Chemistry was stunted by the oppression endured during this era (No such problems in the Far East –Hence gunpowder)
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The printing press heralds the widespread transfer and acquisition of knowledge The Classical Era (1400CE – 1987CE)
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Dalton Boyle Cavendish Priestley Gay-Lussac Newton Lavoisier Avagadro Mendeleev Proust
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The relatively quick discovery of things smaller than the once “indivisible” atom The Subatomic Era (1897CE – 1900CE)
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Thompson Rutherford Marie Curie Millikan Chadwick
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The Quark Era starts in 1964, but that advance can be regarded as outside the realm of chemistry – instead a part of nuclear physics The Modern Era (1900CE – Present)
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Plank Bohr Heisenburg DeBroglie Schrödinger
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