Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAugustus Sharp Modified over 9 years ago
1
The Atom What is it made of???
2
Protons Positively charged Mass = 1 amu = 1.67 x10 -24 grams Located in the nucleus Gives an atoms its identity (atomic number)
3
Neutrons Neutral charge Mass = 1 amu =1.67 x10 -24 grams Located in the nucleus Different numbers of neutrons define isotopes
4
Electrons Negative charge Mass = 1/1840 amu = 9.11 x10 -28 grams Located outside the nucleus (energy levels, shells, orbitals) Equal to the number of protons in a neutral atom Loss or gain of electrons gives ions their charge
5
Atomic Number Gives an atom its identity # Protons The whole number in bold type in each element square (1) Cl 17 35.453 Chlorine
6
Atomic Mass The mass average of all naturally occuring isotopes of an element The number expressed as a decimal in each element square Na 11 22.990 Sodium
7
Determination of Atomic Mass There are three isotopes of oxygen; and their relative abundances: Oxygen -16 99.759 % Oxygen-170.037 % Oxygen-180.204 % Lets figure out the atomic weight of oxygen together!
8
Mass Number Sum of the protons + neutrons Always a whole number
9
Symbolic Representation of Isotopes Carbon-12 (6 protons and 6 neutrons) Carbon-14 (6 protons and 8 neutrons) C 12 6 14 6 C Mass Number Atomic Number
10
Electron Energy Levels 1 has a maximum of 2 electrons Both in the “s” sublevel 2 has a maximum of 8 electrons 2 in the “s” sublevel 6 in the “p” sublevel 3 has a maximum of 18 electrons 2 in the “s” sublevel 6 in the “p” sublevel 10 in the “d” sublevel
11
Electron Energy Levels (cont.) 4 has a maximum of 32 electrons 2 in the “s” sublevel 6 in the “p” sublevel 10 in the “d” sublevel 14 in the “f” sublevel
12
Electron Configurations Hydrogen – has only one electron in the first energy level and the first sublevel 1 H: 1s 1 Helium – has 2 electrons in the first energy level filling it to capacity 2 He: 1s 2
13
Electron Configurations (cont.) Lithium – has 2 electrons in the first energy level and one in the second 3 Li: 1s 2 2s 1 Be – has 2 e - in the first energy level and 2 in the second but they both go into the “s” sublevel 4 Be: 1s 2 2s 2
14
Electron Configurations (cont.) Carbon – has 2 electrons in the first energy level and four in the second 6 C : 1s 2 2s 2 2p 2 Fluorine – has 2 e - in the first energy level and 5 in the second but they go into both the “s” & “p” sublevels 9 F: 1s 2 2s 2 2p 5
15
Rules for Orbital Diagrams for an Atom Aufbau – electrons fill lowest energy levels first ( follow the diagonal rule) Pauli Exclusion Principle- There can only be 2 electrons in an orbital Hund’s Rule – electrons fill equal energy orbitals with one first before they pair
16
Orbital Diagram for A Nitrogen Atom N 1s 2s 2p 3s
17
Orbital Diagram for A Fluorine Atom F 1s 2s 2p 3s
18
Orbital Diagram for A Magnesium Atom Mg 1s 2s 2p 3s
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.