Title: Origin of the Chemical Elements
1Origin of the Chemical Elements
2Formation of First Atoms
- Following the Big Bang, nuclei of atoms and
electrons existed as a gas (plasma), primarily
H, He2, and e- - When Universe cooled sufficiently, 300000-500000
years, e- became associated with nuclei to form
atoms of H and He having electrons moving in
circles about nucleus
3Galaxies and Stars
- Gravity brought atoms of H and He together to
form galaxies of protostars - Gravity initiated nuclear reactions in stars
which produced heavier nuclei - When resulting plasma cooled, the neutral atoms
of the heavier elements were formed
4Origin of the Chemical Elements
Galaxies
5Stabilities of Nuclei
- Particles making up the nucleus are called
nucleons sum of the protons and neutrons Mass
Number, A - Mass of nucleus lt total mass of nucleons making
it up - Difference is called mass defect total mass of
nucleons in nucleus - actual mass of nucleus
6Nuclear Binding Energy
- Mass defect is the mass which is converted to
energy, E mc2 - This energy holds nucleus together nuclear
binding energy, NBE - NBE/A nuclear binding energy per nucleon
serves to measure stability - The larger NBE/A the more stable the nucleus
7http//www.courses.fas.harvard.edu/chem15/lecture
s/1_nuclear.pdf
8http//www.courses.fas.harvard.edu/chem15/lecture
s/1_nuclear.pdf
9http//www.courses.fas.harvard.edu/chem15/lecture
s/1_nuclear.pdf
10Stability of nucleus is measured by NBE/A 2.37
x 10-11 J /19 nucleons 12 x 10-13 J/nucleon
http//www.courses.fas.harvard.edu/chem15/lecture
s/1_nuclear.pdf
11Graph of Nuclear Binding Energy per Nucleon
http//www.courses.fas.harvard.edu/chem15/lecture
s/1_nuclear.pdf
12Stabilty of Nuclei and Fusion Reactions
Stability Increasing
Jones, "Chemistry, Man and Society", Saunders,
1972, 623
13Synthesis of the Chemical Elements in Stars
Olmstead, Chemistry, Mosby, St. Louis, MO,
1994, p. 960.
Olmstead, Chemistry, Mosby, St. Louis, MO,
1994, p. 960.
Olmstead, Chemistry, Mosby, St. Louis, MO,
1994, p. 960.
14Birk, ChemistryHoughton Mifflin, Boston,
MA,1994,p 880.
15Star Composition at Supernova
Cox, The Elements, Oxford, New York, NY, 1989,
p. 80
16Collapse of Star and Supernova
As Fe builds in core, core temperature drops
since Fe does not undergo fusion. The unbalanced
gravitational force causes star to collapse.
http//wine1.sb.fsu.edu/chm1046/notes/Nucleo/Nucle
o.htm
17Cosmic Dust
Coalescing
H-Burning
He-Burning
C-Burning
Silberberg, Chemistry Mosby,St. Louis, MO,
1996, p 965
Supernova
18Formation of Nuclides Heavier Than Iron
- Supernovas produce large amounts of neutrons
- Neutrons can react with atoms one at a time and
release electrons to produce elements heavier
than iron - Many neutrons can also react with one atom and
release electrons to produce elements heavier
than iron
19Reactions that Produce Nuclides Heavier than Iron
20(No Transcript)
21Abundances of the Chemical Elements in Universe
Heavier elements formed only in a supernova are
less abundant due to short time frame for
collisions with neutrons - only a small fraction
of lighter atoms converted in each supernova
Radel/Navidi, "Chemistry", West, NY,1990, 987
22Debris from supernova is recycled in a new star
making it possible to form heavier and heavier
nuclei but in decreasing amounts
http//www.howstuffworks.com/star5.htm
23Formation of Atoms of Heavier Elements
- As the debris from a supernova cools, the nuclei
will pick up electrons to form atoms - Electrons repel each other sufficiently to cause
groups of electrons to occupy shells at
ever-increasing distances from nucleus
24Electron Structures of Atoms
- Electrons move about the nucleus in spherical
shells designated as K,L,M... or 1,2,3 starting
nearest nucleus - Capacities of shells given by 2n2 where n shell
number (2,8,18, 32 ) - Order of filling of shells is in order of
increasing n except outermost shell (valence
shell) never exceeds 8e
25Elements 1-18
26Elements 19-20
When outermost shell reaches 8e, a new shell is
added which is occupied by the next two electrons
27Elements 21-30
After valence shell acquires 2e, the next ten
electrons are added to the third shell until its
reaches capacity of 18e
28Elements 31-36
Once 3rd shell is filled, the next electrons are
added to valence shell until it reaches 8e when
a new shell is added and pattern repeats
29Valence Electrons
30Periods and Families
31Main Group Transition Elements
Electrons add to inner shell
32Electron Structures of Atoms
33Metals and Non-Metals
34Relative Sizes of Atoms
35Periodic Table
- Periodic table provides the link between the real
world and the imaginary world - Elements in same family are observed to have
similar properties in real world - Explanation atoms of elements in the same family
have the same valence shell electron structure in
the imaginary world
36Valence Electrons and Chemical Reactions
- Valence shells of approaching atoms come in
contact first - Atoms having same numbers of e in valence shell
have similar reactions - Chemical reactions involve a rearrangement of
valence electrons
37A-Families of Periodic Table
1A 2A 3A 4A 5A 6A 7A 8A
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 Valence Electrons
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38Reactions of Selected 1A Elements with Water
Real World all 1A elements react with water
Imaginary World all 1A elements have 1 valence e
Real World speeds of reactions of 1A elements
with water are different
Imaginary World The larger the 1A atom, the
faster the reaction
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39Periodic Table(Symbolic World)
40B-Families of Periodic Table
3B 4B 5B 6B 7B 8
8 8 1B 2B
For Chem 83, disregard irregularities and assume
all have 2e in their valence shells
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