Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Atomic Theory History of the Discoveries Related to the Atom Mr. Kendall.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Atomic Theory History of the Discoveries Related to the Atom Mr. Kendall."— Presentation transcript:

1 Atomic Theory History of the Discoveries Related to the Atom Mr. Kendall

2 Main Contributors To Atomic Theory 450 BC 1800 1897 1901 1910 1911 1913 Democritus: Matter made of tiny things called ATOMS Dalton: Wrote an Atomic Theory with 4 main ideas Thompson negative charge in the atom Planck: Quanta, predictable packets of energy Millikan: Charge on the electron of -1 Rutherford: atoms have a nucleus Bohr: Proposed a model of an atom 1924 1926 1926 1932 1962 Debroglie: Matter has a wave-like nature Schrödinger: E- travel in waves Heisenberg: E- are waves and particles Chadwick: neutrons Gell-Mann: Quarks

3 Timeline of Atomic Theory 450 BC 1800’s _________________________________________________________ Democritus: http://www.fortbend.k12.tx.us/campuses/documents/ Teacher/2008/teacher_20081003_1616.doc matter was made of “atoms” Dalton: http://www.iun.edu/~cpanhd/C101webnotes/co mposition/dalton.html proposed 4 components to an Atomic Theory.

4 Dalton’s Theory: Foundation of Future Investigations All matter consists of tiny particles. Atoms are indestructible and unchangeable (Has been modified with recent discoveries in nuclear chemistry) Elements are characterized by the mass of their atoms. When elements react, their atoms combine in simple, whole-number ratios. Their atoms sometimes combine in more than one simple, whole-number ratio. http://web.visionlearning.com/dalton_playhouse/ad_loader.ht ml Click the link at home to explore more about experiments related to Dalton’s theory.

5 Atomic Theory 1897-1920 ___________________________________ Thomson http://highered.mcgraw- hill.com/sites/0072512644/student_vi ew0/chapter2/animations_center.htm l negative charge in the atom 1897 Planck http://www.science.u waterloo.ca/~cchieh/ cact/c120/emwave.ht ml Quanta 1901 Rutherford http://www.mhhe.com/phys sci/chemistry/essentialche mistry/flash/ruther14.swf nucleus 1911 Bohr http://www.wwnorton.com/college/ch emistry/gilbert/tutorials/ch3.htm#top http://www.chempractice.com/drills/j ava_Bohr.php quantum model 1913 Millikan http://highered.mcgraw- hill.com/sites/0072512644/stude nt_view0/chapter2/animations_c enter.html charge on e- 1910

6 Contributions to Modern Atomic Theory _____________________________________ De Broglie Wave nature of matter 1924 Schrodinger e- orbits as a wave 1926 Heisenberg e- is a wave and a particle 1926 Chadwick neutron 1932 Gell-Mann Quarks 1962

7 3 Basic Parts of the Atom.

8 Types of Quarks Determine Charge http://nobelprize.org/educational_games/physics/matter/1.html http://nobelprize.org/educational_games/physics/matter/1.html Quarks = up (+2/3) and down (-1/3) p+ = 2ups and 1 down n 0 = 2 down and 1 up +2 +2 -1 = +1 -1 -1 +2 = 0 3 3 3 3 3 3 Gluon forces between quarks

9 Electrons travel in waves

10 Electrons are Particles / Photons Electrons travel in discreet packets called photons. To describe these unique packets or quantities of energy the term “quanta” is used. Every element on the periodic table is made up of atoms with a unique signature of spectral lines http://phys.educ.ksu.edu/vqm/html/emission.html

11 Predicting the Location of an Electron in an Atom: Bohr proposed 4 characteristics to consider to predict the location of an electron. –l = the distance from the nucleus –m = the shape of the orbital in which the e- occupies. (s,p,d,f) –n = axis the orbital occupies. (x, y, z) –s =spin of the e- (+1/2, -1/2)

12 Distance from the nucleus: Levels 1-7: When looking at the periodic table, can be determined by the period number. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

13 Shape of the Orbital on the x,y,z Axis The number of electrons in a particular region determines the shape. s shape 2e- p shape 6e-

14 Shape of the Orbital on the x,y,z Axis d shape 10e- f shape 14e-

15 Atom with overlapping orbitals

16 Spin of the Electron http://www.colorado.edu/physics/2000/applets/a2.html

17 Do Electrons behave as a particle or as wave? Definition of Light: –http://chemmovies.unl.edu/C hemAnime/DEFLITD/DEFLIT D.htmlhttp://chemmovies.unl.edu/C hemAnime/DEFLITD/DEFLIT D.html

18 Einstein vs Bohr Einstein: causalityBohr: Predictability If you know all the initial conditions of your system and you know the laws of physics, you can figure out exactly what’s going to happen If you know the initial conditions and you know the laws of physics, you can figure out the probability of various outcomes happening, but you can never know which one will definitely occur until after it’s over.

19 Electron behavior as it moves to other energy levels. This emitted energy is equal to the difference between the high and low energy levels, and may be seen as light. Light emission tutorial http://www2.wwnorton.com/college/chemistry/gilbert/tut orials/ch3.htm http://www2.wwnorton.com/college/chemistry/gilbert/tut orials/ch3.htm

20 Electrons exhibit particle and wave like behavior “Duality”

21 Particles of the Atom to date: Nucleus –Protons = p+ = 3 quarks –Neutrons= n 0 = 3 quarks Electron Cloud –Electrons =e- (particle/wave) Held together by a force called : Gluon


Download ppt "Atomic Theory History of the Discoveries Related to the Atom Mr. Kendall."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google