Title: Particle Theory of Matter
1Particle Theory of Matter
- Democritus 400 B.C. first to state that all
matter is made of small, hard particles called
atoms comes from the Greek word atomos
which means indivisible. - Aristotle did not agree, felt that all matter
was a flowing continuous material in which
everything in connected his theory was accepted
for 2000 years - Elements Earth, Wind, Fire, Water
- Properties Coldness, Hotness, Dryness, Moistness
- Neither theory was supported by experimental
evidence merely observation
2Alchemy/Phlogiston Theory of Fire
- Alchemy preceded modern chemistry
- Began in Egypt, Persia, and Mesopotamia
- Began as a mixture of magic, religion, and
science - In the Middle Ages, interested mainly in the
transmutation of metals turning lead into
gold - Alchemy lead to many important advances in
equipment, procedures, and specifically in the
areas of metallurgy, dyeing, glass-making and
medicine - Phlogiston Theory of Fire During the 1700s, it
was theorized that a substance called phlogiston
was contained in flammable substances When a
fire went out it was smothered with phlogiston
that was released when something burned.
3Foundations of Atomic Theory
- In the 1700s, the particle theory of matter was
becoming more accepted an element was a
substance that could not be broken down. - There was controversy over whether compounds were
made up of the same ratio of elements each time
they were formed. - In the 1770s, new technology allowed for better
quantitative measurements to establish the fact
that the ratios were the same every time. - Three new laws were established as a result of
the new technology the so-called Laws of Matter
4Law of Conservation of Mass
Mass is neither created nor destroyed during
chemical or physical reactions.
Total mass of reactants Total mass of products
Antoine Lavoisier
5Laws of Matter
- Law of Conservation of Matter
- When a chemical change (reaction) or physical
change takes place, matter is neither created nor
destroyed. (Massreactants Massproducts) - Law of Definite Proportions
- When two elements react to form a compound, the
resulting chemical compound contains the same
proportions of elements by mass regardless of the
size or source of the compound. - Â
- Law of Multiple Proportions
- When two elements (C and O) can combine to form
more than one compound (say, CO and CO2), then
for a fixed mass of C, the masses of O in the two
different compounds always form a whole number
ratio.
6Daltons Atomic Theory (1808)
- All matter is composed of extremely small
particles called atoms - Atoms of a given element are identical in size,
mass, and other properties atoms of different
elements differ in size, mass, and other
properties
John Dalton
- Atoms cannot be subdivided, created, or destroyed
- Atoms of different elements combine in simple
whole-number ratios to form chemical compounds - In chemical reactions, atoms are combined,
separated, or rearranged
7Modern Atomic Theory
Several changes have been made to Daltons theory.
Dalton said
Atoms of a given element are identical in size,
mass, and other properties atoms of different
elements differ in size, mass, and other
properties
Modern theory states
Atoms of an element have a characteristic average
mass which is unique to that element.
8Isotopes
Elements occur in nature as mixtures of
isotopes. Isotopes are atoms of the same element
that differ in the number of neutrons Isotopes
differ in mass but do not differ significantly in
chemical behavior
9Modern Atomic Theory 2
Dalton said
- Atoms cannot be subdivided, created, or destroyed
Modern theory states
- Atoms cannot be subdivided, created, or destroyed
in ordinary chemical reactions. However, these
changes CAN occur in nuclear reactions!
10Discovery of the Electron
In 1897, J.J. Thomsen used a cathode ray tube to
deduce the presence of a negatively charged
particle.
Cathode ray tubes pass electricity through a gas
that is contained at a very low pressure.
11Discovery of the Electron (cont.)
- Cathode rays deflected by the magnetic field and
by the negatively-charged source. - Proved the presence of negatively-charged
particles eventually called electrons - Calculated the ratio of the charge to the mass of
the electrons it was always the same ratio 11
12Some ModernCathode Ray Tubes
13Thomsens Atomic Model
Thomsen believed that the electrons were like
plums embedded in a positively charged pudding,
thus it was called the plum pudding model.
14Mass of the Electron
- 1909 Robert Millikan determines
- Presence of electrons in an atom
- Mass of the electron
- Neg. charge on an electron
- Atoms are divisible can be broken apart
The oil drop apparatus
Mass of the electron is 9.109 x 10-31 kg 1/1837
the mass of a proton
15Conclusions from the Study of the Electron
- Cathode rays have identical properties regardless
of the element used to produce them. All elements
must contain identically charged electrons. - Atoms are neutral, so there must be positive
particles in the atom to balance the negative
charge of the electrons - Electrons have so little mass that atoms must
contain other particles that account for most of
the mass
16Rutherfords Gold Foil Experiment
- Alpha particles are helium nuclei (nucleus w/no
electrons - Particles were fired at a thin sheet of gold foil
- Particle hits on the detecting screen (film) were
recorded
17Try it Yourself!
In the following pictures, there is a target
hidden by a cloud. To figure out the shape of the
target, we shot some beams into the cloud and
recorded where the beams came out. Can you figure
out the shape of the target?
18The Answers
Target 2
Target 1
19Rutherfords Findings
- Most of the particles passed right through
- A few particles were deflected
- VERY FEW were greatly deflected
Like howitzer shells bouncing off of tissue
paper!
Conclusions
- The nucleus is small
- The nucleus is dense and massive
- The nucleus is positively-charged
20Nuclear Structure
- Nucleus is held together by nuclear forces
between protons, neutrons, and each other when
these particles are close together they establish
strong attraction called the strong nuclear
force. - Atoms are electrically neutral so the proton is
equal in number but opposite in charge to the
electron. - Scientists could not explain the differences in
mass so they decided that there must be a neutral
particle with a mass similar to that of a proton
neutron. - James Chadwick discovered the neutron in 1932
21Atomic Particles
1 amu 1/12 the mass of a Carbon-12 atom
22The Atomic Scale
- Most of the mass of the atom is in the nucleus
(protons and neutrons) - Nuclear density is very high 2 X 108 metric
tons/cm3 - Electrons are found outside of the nucleus (the
electron cloud) - Most of the volume of the atom is empty space
- Atomic radii from 40 to 270 pm (10-12)
- Nuclear radii 0.001 pm
q is a particle called a quark
23About Quarks
Protons and neutrons are NOT fundamental
particles.
Protons are made of two up quarks and one
down quark.
Neutrons are made of one up quark and two
down quarks.
Quarks are held together by gluons
24Atomic Number
Atomic number (Z) of an element is the number of
protons in the nucleus of each atom of that
element.
25Isotopes
Isotopes are atoms of the same element having
different masses due to varying numbers of
neutrons. (Nuclide term used to
describe any isotope of any element)
26Mass Number
Mass number (A) is the number of protons and
neutrons in the nucleus of an isotope.
Mass p n0
8
8
18
18
Arsenic
75
33
75
Phosphorus
15
31
16
Nuclear Symbol A Z
Mass Atomic
X
27Bonds
- Chemical bond mutual chemical attraction
between the nuclei (protons) and the valence
electrons of different atoms that binds the atoms
together
- Ionic bonds bonding that results from the
electrical attraction of large numbers of cations
and anions (involves the transfer of electrons) - Covalent bonds bonding that results from the
sharing of electron pairs between atoms
28Ions
- Ion Atom that has lost or gained electrons to
take on a noble gas configuration (stable state) - Cation A positive ion (lost es)
- Mg2, NH4
- Anion A negative ion (gained es)
- Cl-, SO42-
- Ionic Solid (salt) solids composed of
oppositely-charged ions (NaCl) - Polyatomic ion Group of atoms covalently-bonded
together that have lost or gained es to exhibit
an overall charge.
29Periodic Table with Group Names
30Periodic Table
- Periods
- Period horizontal row on the PT
- Valence electrons electrons located in the
outside energy level - Tells us the energy level of the outside
(valence) electrons in an element (Principle
Quantum ) - Can be broken down into subdivisions that
correspond to the s, p, d, and f orbitals - Groups
- S-block, Groups 1 and 2
- Group 1 Alkali Metals
- 1 s electron (valence electron) in outside
energy level (willing to give up their electron -
1 ions) - Soft, silvery metals with low density and low
mps - Highly reactive, never found as an element in
nature, always in compounds (NaCl salt)
31Periodic Table
- Groups (cont.)
- Group 2 Alkaline Earth Metals
- 2 s electrons (valence electrons) in outside
energy level (willing to give up their electrons
- 2 ions) - Denser, harder, stronger, less reactive than
Group 1 - Abundant in the Earths Crust (found in
compounds) - D-block, Groups 3-12 Transition Metals
(Elements) - Shiny luster when polished, malleable, ductile,
typical metallic properties - High mps and bps, thermally and electrically
conductive - Valence electrons in the d-orbital
- Group sum of s and d electrons
32Periodic Table
- Groups (cont.)
- p-block, Groups 13-18
- Properties vary greatly
- Metals soft, less dense than d-block
metals/harder and more dense than s-block metals - Metalloids Brittle solids with some metallic
and nonmetallic properties semiconductors - B, Si, Ge, As, Sb, Te
- Nonmetals
- Halogens (Group 17) most reactive non-metals
- Gases F,Cl
- Liquid Br
- Solid I
- Noble Gases (Group 18) inert (unreactive)
gases full outside energy level
33Periodic Table
- Groups (cont.)
- F-block, Lanthanides and Actinides
- Lanthanides shiny metals similar in reactivity
to Group 2 - Actinides all radioactive, most are synthetic,
only Thorium and Uranium are found naturally
34Predicting Ionic Charges
Group 1
Lose 1 electron to form 1 ions
H
Li
Na
K
35Predicting Ionic Charges
Group 2
Loses 2 electrons to form 2 ions
Be2
Mg2
Ca2
Ba2
Sr2
36Predicting Ionic Charges
Group 13
Loses 3 electrons to form 3 ions
B3
Al3
Ga3
37Predicting Ionic Charges
Group 14
Lose 4 electrons or gain 4
electrons?
Neither! Group 13 elements rarely form ions.
38Predicting Ionic Charges
Nitride
N3-
Group 15
Gains 3 electrons to form 3- ions
P3-
Phosphide
As3-
Arsenide
39Predicting Ionic Charges
Oxide
O2-
Gains 2 electrons to form 2- ions
Group 16
S2-
Sulfide
Se2-
Selenide
40Predicting Ionic Charges
F1-
Br1-
Fluoride
Bromide
Group 17
Gains 1 electron to form 1- ions
Cl1-
Chloride
I1-
Iodide
41Predicting Ionic Charges
Group 18
Stable Noble gases do not form ions!
42Predicting Ionic Charges
Groups 3 - 12
Many transition elements
have more than one possible oxidation state.
Iron(II) Fe2
Iron(III) Fe3
43Predicting Ionic Charges
Groups 3 - 12
Some transition elements
have only one possible oxidation state.
Zinc Zn2
Silver Ag
Cadmium Cd2
44Oxidation Numbers
Oxidation s arbitrary number of charge
assigned to indicate the general distribution of
es among atoms in a covalent compound or
polyatomic ion Oxidation Number Rules (in
general) Elements 0 Alkali Metals
1 Alkaline Earth Metals 2 Aluminum,
Boron, Gallium 3 Halogens -1 Oxygen
Group -2 Nitrogen Group -3 Oxidation s
are useful in determining chemical formulas or in
balancing chemical reactions
45(No Transcript)
46Writing Ionic Compound Formulas
Example Barium nitrate
1. Write the formulas for the cation and anion,
including CHARGES!
( )
Ba2
2. Check to see if charges are balanced.
NO3-
2
Not balanced!
3. Balance charges , if necessary, using
subscripts. Use parentheses if you need more than
one of a polyatomic ion.
47Writing Ionic Compound Formulas
Example Ammonium sulfate
1. Write the formulas for the cation and anion,
including CHARGES!
( )
NH4
SO42-
2. Check to see if charges are balanced.
2
3. Balance charges , if necessary, using
subscripts. Use parentheses if you need more than
one of a polyatomic ion.
Not balanced!
48Writing Ionic Compound Formulas
Example Iron(III) chloride
1. Write the formulas for the cation and anion,
including CHARGES!
Fe3
Cl-
2. Check to see if charges are balanced.
3
3. Balance charges , if necessary, using
subscripts. Use parentheses if you need more than
one of a polyatomic ion.
Not balanced!
49Writing Ionic Compound Formulas
Example Aluminum sulfide
1. Write the formulas for the cation and anion,
including CHARGES!
Al3
S2-
2. Check to see if charges are balanced.
2
3
3. Balance charges , if necessary, using
subscripts. Use parentheses if you need more than
one of a polyatomic ion.
Not balanced!
50Writing Ionic Compound Formulas
Example Magnesium carbonate
1. Write the formulas for the cation and anion,
including CHARGES!
Mg2
CO32-
2. Check to see if charges are balanced.
They are balanced!
51Writing Ionic Compound Formulas
Example Zinc hydroxide
1. Write the formulas for the cation and anion,
including CHARGES!
( )
Zn2
OH-
2. Check to see if charges are balanced.
2
3. Balance charges , if necessary, using
subscripts. Use parentheses if you need more than
one of a polyatomic ion.
Not balanced!
52Writing Ionic Compound Formulas
Example Aluminum phosphate
1. Write the formulas for the cation and anion,
including CHARGES!
Al3
PO43-
2. Check to see if charges are balanced.
They ARE balanced!
53Naming Ionic Compounds
- 1. Cation first, then anion
- 2. Monatomic cation name of the element
- Ca2 calcium ion
- 3. Monatomic anion root -ide
- Cl- chloride
- CaCl2 calcium chloride
54Naming Ionic Compounds(continued)
Metals with multiple oxidation states
- - some metal forms more than one cation
- - use Roman numeral in name
- PbCl2
- Pb2 is cation
- PbCl2 lead(II) chloride
55Naming Binary Covalent Compounds
- - Compounds between two nonmetals
- - First element in the formula is named first
- - Second element is named as if it were an anion
(-ide ending) - - Use prefixes (see hand-out)
- - Use mono- on second element only
P2O5
diphosphorus pentoxide
CO2
carbon dioxide
CO
carbon monoxide
N2O
dinitrogen monoxide
56Naming Acids
- Acids are divided into two groups
-
- Binary - consist of two elements
- Oxyacids - consist of 3 elements, one of which is
oxygen.
57Naming Acids
- NAMING BINARY ACIDS
- The name of the binary acid consists of two
words. - The first word has three parts
- hydro prefix
- root of the nonmetal element
- ic ending
- The second word is always acid
- Examples
- HCl hydro chlor ic acid hydrochloric acid
- HBr hydro brom ic acid hydrobromic acid
- HF hydro fluor ic acid hydrofluoric acid
58Naming Acids
- NAMING OXYACIDS
- These are more difficult to name because these
acids have hydrogen, a nonmetal, and may have
varying numbers of oxygen atoms. - For example, H2SO5, H2SO4, H2SO3, and H2SO2 are
all acids. How do we name them? To begin, we need
a point of reference. Our reference point is
this - If the ion ends with ate, remove the ending and
add ic - If the Ion ends with ite, remove the ending and
add ous - If the ion end with ide, remove the ending and
add ic - The second word is always acid.
- Examples
- SO42- sulfate ion H2SO4 sulfuric acid
- NO2- nitrite ion HNO3 nitrous acid
- CN- cyanide ion HCN cyanic acid