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Element s & Atoms
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Demokritos c. 460-370 BC “The material cause of all things that exist is the coming together of atoms and void. Atoms are too small to be perceived by the senses. They are eternal and have many different shapes, and they can cluster together … By aggregation they provide bulky objects that we can perceive with our sight and other senses… There is no void in atoms, so they cannot be divided.” “Atomos” = “indivisible” too small to see indivisible solid make up everything
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Aristotle 384-322 BC 4 “elementary” substances: earth, air, fire, and water Matter is continuous (no atoms)
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“Material objects are of two kinds: atoms and compounds of atoms. The atoms themselves cannot be swamped by any force, for they are preserved by their absolute solidity.” Re Rerum Natura 50 BC 99-55 BC few Greek or Roman atomists
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Robert Boyle 1627 --1691
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Boyle on Elements c. 1661 “true” elementary substances as proposed by Greeks and alchemists can’t be purified in the lab new operational definition of elements as “substances that cannot be simplified by physical or chemical means”
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John Dalton 1766--1844 Atoms are the smallest parts of elements. Atoms are indivisable. Atoms of each element have unique mass. Atoms of the same element are all identical. C. 1803
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JJ Thomson 1856-1940 studies engineering at Manchester University, but gets his BA in Mathematics at Cambridge, where he stays for the rest of his life holds Cavendish Chair in Experimental Physics at Cambridge from 1884 - 1918 wins Nobel Prize in Physics 1906
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Experiments with Crooks tubes and other apparatus in 1890s led to Thomson’s publication in 1897 of hypothesis that atoms are made of negatively charged “corpuscles” moving in a sea of positive charge. 1897
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Ernest Rutherford 1871-1937 doctoral student of Thomson 1895-1989 Physics Chair at McGill from 1898-1907 before returning to England and teaching at Manchester University wins Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1908 (for radioactivity work) takes over Cavendish Chair of Physics from Thomson in 1919
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Geiger-Marsden Experiment 1909 Interpreted by Rutherford: The Nucleus! Hans Geiger nucleus is very small nucleus contains all positive charge (p+) electrons are outside nucleus
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James Chadwick 1891-1974 1911 BS in Physics at Manchester University; gets MS under Rutherford in 1913 1913 travels to Germany to work with Hans Geiger; interned in Germany for WWI returns to England after WWI, works under Rutherford at Cambridge 1932 experimental evidence of neutrons, which Rutherford hypothesized would need to exist to counteract repulsion of protons within the nucleus 1935 Nobel Prize in Physics 1943-’46 Manhattan Project USA much easier to measure charged particles! neutrons have no charge neutrons account for “missing mass” in atoms
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Niels Bohr 1885-1963 1911 gets PhD in Physics in native Copenhagen University and comes to UK 1911 works with Thomson in Cambridge 1912 works with Rutherford in Manchester 1913 returns to Copenhagen University 1922 Nobel Prize in Physics 1920 becomes first head of Institute of Theoretical Physics in Copenhagen, remains head until 1962
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Bohr Model (also called “Bohr-Rutherford” model) Developed from work with Rutherford in 1912 and published in 1913 “planetary” model accounts for atomic spectra data FAILS for spectra after hydrogen
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Werner Heisenberg 1901- 1976 1923 PhD in Munich 1924-’25 works with Bohr in Copenhagen establishes “quantum mechanics” when only 23 years old in 1925 - includes Uncertainty Principle 1932 Nobel Prize in Physics 1941 director of Kaiser Wilhelm Institute in Berlin - captured by US troops at end of WWII & sent to England; returns to Germany after the war can’t know position and motion of an electron simultaneously electrons can’t be described with the particle math of Newton
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Prince Louis-Victor deBroglie 1892-1987 educated and worked in France - BA in 1913 & graduate work after serving for France in WWI his 1924 doctoral thesis introduced “wave mechanics” - the idea that the electron could be treated as a wave 1929 Nobel Prize in Physics
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Erwin Schrødinger 1887- 1961 educated in Vienna; serves in Austrian Army in WWI 1926 publishes “wave equation” model of electrons Goes to Germany in 1927 but leaves in 1933 with rise of Nazis; ends up in Austria in 1937; recants opposition to Nazis but is harassed and escapes in 1938 1933 Nobel Prize in Physics with Dirac 1940 establishes Institute for Advanced Studies in Dublin describes electron location with probabilities Bohr “orbits” Schrødinger “orbitals” new (math) model very difficult to visualize
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computer-generated images of “electron cloud” shapes generated by Schrødinger’s wave equation meta-synthesis (chem education co.)
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