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Chapter 4 Atomic Structure
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4.1 Atoms Democritus (460 BC – 370 BC)
first suggested the idea of atoms Indivisible and indestructible
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Atoms The first model of the atoms was Dalton’s
“All mater is made up of individual particles , which are indivisible”
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Dalton’s Atomic Theory
1. All matter is made of atoms. Atoms are indivisible and indestructible.
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Dalton’s Atomic Theory
2. All atoms of a given element are identical in mass and properties
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Dalton’s Atomic Theory
3. Compounds are formed by a combination of two or more different kinds of atoms.
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Dalton’s Atomic Theory
4. A chemical reaction is a rearrangement of atoms
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Thomson’s Model Discovered electrons
Often called the “Plum-Pudding” Model No mention of amount of electrons or their arrangement around the nucleus Revised Dalton’s theory to account for subatomic particles
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Rutherford Model Discovered nucleus
All of an atom’s positive charge is concentrated in its nucleus Electrons surround a dense nucleus Rest of the atom is empty space
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Rutherford Model Known as the nuclear model
The protons are located in the nucleus The electrons are around the nucleus The electrons occupy most of the volume of the nucleus
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The Atom The smallest part of an element VERY SMALL
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Atomic Structure Atoms can be broken down Protons Neutrons Electrons
Every Element is different based on the number of each (individual personality)
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Protons (p+) Positively Charged Each has a “+1” charge
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Electrons (e-) Negatively charged Each has a “-1” charge
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Neutrons (n0) No charge or “neutral” Mass = mass of proton
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The Atomic Nucleus Most of the mass, little volume
The central core of an atom Made of p+ and n0 Most of the mass, little volume Nucleus has a positive charge
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The Atomic Nucleus Electrons orbit around nucleus like planets in the solar system Called the “electron cloud” Very little mass, lots of volume
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How do we know the number of each elements p+ , e- , n0
Periodic Table is arranged by the element’s numbers
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Hydrogen Name of Element
Atomic Number Mass Number (round to the nearest whole number) H Nuclear Symbol Hydrogen Name of Element
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Atomic Number Amount of protons from one element to the next
Ex: Oxygen atomic number = 8 because it has 8 protons
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Atomic Number Since all elements start off as neutral ….
The number of protons = number of electrons!
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Mass Number Mass Number = protons + neutrons
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Composition of an Element
Use atomic number and mass number to determine composition # p+ = atomic # # e- = atomic # # n0 = mass # – atomic #
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What can change in an atom
Protons: can never change Electrons: if the number changes, then an ion is formed Neutrons: If the number changes, then an isotope is formed
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IF the proton number changes…
Then you have an entirely different atom
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If the neutron number changes…
Called an Isotope Mass number changes
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If an atom gains electrons, then…
The atom becomes negatively charged If an atom loses an electron, then… It becomes positively charged
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Isotopes of Elements Protons never change, but the number of neutrons may vary
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Isotopes Isotopes of the same element are the same except for # of n0
# of n0 vary so mass number changes
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Isotopes Carbon-12, Carbon-14, Carbon-16
How many protons in each version of carbon? How many neutrons in each version of carbon?
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Hydrogen Hydrogen has three known isotopes
Hydrogen-1 (one proton, no neutrons) Hydrogen-2 (one proton, 1 neutron) Hydrogen-3 (one proton, 2 neutron)
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4.3 Bohr’s Model Electrons arranged in circular paths around nucleus
Orbit like planets n = energy level Only a certain amount of electrons can fit in each energy level
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Bohr’s Model Electrons are located in energy levels with a fixed amount of energy
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Energy Levels Each energy level can only hold 2 electrons
Each energy level has “X” number of orbitals that can hold 2 electrons each Pauli Exclusion Principle Each orbital holds 2 electrons that spin in opposite directions
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Maximum number of Electrons
Energy Levels How many electrons fit in the 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th energy levels? Energy Level Number of Orbitals Maximum number of Electrons 1 2 4 8 3 9 18 16 32
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Hund’s Rule When electrons occupy orbitals, one electron enters each orbital until all orbitals contain their max amount
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Hund’s Rule Partially filled orbitals are much more stable than empty orbitals Example: Carbon has 6e- has 2e- in first orbital has 4e- in second orbital
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Orbitals simplified Each energy level can hold 8 electrons except the first which holds 2 Fill in each level until
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