Title: Atoms: Dalton to J'J' Thomson
1Atoms Dalton to J.J. Thomson
2Start of the Modern Era of Chemistry
- Daltons Atomic Hypothesis (1808)
- 1. All matter is made of atoms. Atoms are
indivisible and indestructible. - 2. All atoms of a given element are identical in
mass and properties different elements
different properties - 3. Compounds are formed by a combination of two
or more different kinds of atoms. - 4. A chemical reaction occurs when atoms are
rearranged or combined to form molecules.
3Daltons Ideas Atoms to Compounds
- Based on Atomic Hypothesis and assumption that
atoms of same element repel - Elements and compounds have definite arrangements
of atoms. - Atoms combine in ratio of small whole numbers to
form compound molecules. -
- Rule of greatest simplicity used to determine
the atomic structure of compounds
4Rule of Greatest Simplicity
- Dalton suggested a rule of greatest simplicity
-
- - if two elements form only one compound, assume
the compound atom has only one atom of each
element (XO) - - if two elements form two compounds, assume
- XO and X20 or XO2
- - if two elements form three compounds, assume
- XO and X20 and XO2
5Rule of greatest simplicity and relative atomic
weights
1 atom O 1 atom N ? 127100 127 units by
weight of oxygen to 100 units of nitrogen implies
atoms of oxygen outweigh nitrogen atoms by ratio
of 1.271
6Rule of greatest simplicity and relative atomic
weights
1 atom O 1 atom N ? 58? 5850 58 units by
weight of oxygen to 100 units of nitrogen implies
atoms of oxygen outweigh nitrogen atoms by a
ratio of 1.161
7Rule of greatest simplicity and relative atomic
weights
1 atom O 1 atom N ? 100 ? 119.5100 239
units by weight of oxygen to 100 units of
nitrogen implies atoms of oxygen outweigh
nitrogen atoms by a ratio of 1.1951
8Rule of greatest simplicity and relative atomic
weights
- weight of oxygen relative to nitrogen 1.151
- Daltons calculations (1.21) reflect imprecision
in measurement of weight at that time
9Significance of Daltons Atomic Ideas
- Continued to break down earlier views of
elements - Found way to calculate the first relative atomic
weights - - by assuming many compounds were binary (11),
and - - by knowing reacting weight proportions of
elements. - (bridge gap between laboratory data and
hypothetical atom)
10Significance of Daltons Atomic Ideas
- Explained observation all samples of a compound
are made of same weight proportions of its
elements. - 1799 Prousts Law of Constant
Proportions - Proportions by weight of the two elements would
reveal the relative weights of the atoms of the 2
elements - 18th - early 19th centuries ratios determined by
synthesis of compounds from pure elements - Reinforced Law of Mass Conservation
- - Start mass of reaction End mass of
reaction - - B/c only reorganizing unchangeable atoms
11Gay-Lussacs supporting observations using
volumes of gases
- Studied combining volumes of reacting gases
- Ratios of volumes were always small whole numbers
- (at constant T and P)
Gay-Lussac (1778 1850)
12Gay-Lussac - combining nitrogen oxygen
Expect 2 volumes N 1 volume O ? 1 volume N2O
But got 2 volumes N2O
13Amedeo Avogadro (1776 - 1856)
- Distinction atoms molecules
- Explained Gay-Lussac with Daltons theory
- Equal volumes (same T P) same number of
molecule - Compound gases produced have same number of
molecules per volume as gases from which they are
made. (i.e., same volumes)
14Amedeo Avogadro (1776 - 1856)
- Explains
- 2 vol nitrogen 1 vol oxygen gives 2 (not 1!)
vol N2O -
- - if N is actually N2 and O is actually O2
-
- - then 2 parts N2 1 part O2 gives 2 parts N2O
-
- (4 atoms N and 2 atoms O at start and end)
15Avogadros Solution 2 Vol N2 1 Vol O2 ? 2 Vol
N2O
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16On Dalton some inconsistencies found
- The basic state of an element one atom?
- Perhaps basic natural state of an element
- may be a molecule made of 2 or more
atoms. - Dalton Thou knowsno man can split the atom.
- No, split in 1932 radioactivity,
atomic particles. - Atoms of given element have same mass and
properties? - Nearly so different-mass isotopes
exist. - Todays elements consist of unique atoms, but are
- substances that cannot be broken down
into simpler substances by a chemical reaction.
17Meanwhile . . . New elements were being
identified 36 between 1735-1843!
- How identified?
- Physical properties
- Chemical properties types of reactions?
- Relative atomic weights
- more reliable values
- Flame test for solids/solutions
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19How to make sense of all these elements?
Scientists like a place for everything, and
everything in its place.
And no more places and things than necessary.
20- Dmitri
- Mendeleev
- (1834-1907)
- Creator of the
- Periodic Table
- (but there were earlier attempts by Dobereiner
and Newlands, and Meyer probably formulated the - periodic idea at same time as Mendeleev)
21Mendeleev
- Properties of elements are periodic functions of
atomic weight (rows) - Resulted in properties repeated in series of
periodic intervals (columns) - Left gaps for undiscovered elements
- Used to predict existence of new elements (of ten
found 7 other 3 do not exist)
22Prediction of the properties of an unknown Group
4 element below Silicon
eka one beyond
23News flash atoms arent fundamental
- J. J. Thomson (1897)
- experimented with cathode rays
- and then... made a bold speculative leap.
Cathode rays are not only material particles, he
suggested, but in fact the building blocks of the
atom they are the long-sought basic unit of all
matter in the universe. - (http//www.aip.org/history/electron/
jjrays.htm)
Schematic of actual 1897 apparatus (vacuum
inside)
24Cathode-Ray Tubes ever seen one?
25Thomsons conclusions
- We have, in the cathode rays, matter in a new
state...a state in which all matter...is of one
and the same kind this matter being the
substance from which all the chemical elements
are built up."
- I can see no escape from the conclusion that
cathode rays are charges of electricity carried
by particles of matter. - but...
- What are these particles? Are they atoms, or
molecules, or matter in a still finer state of
subdivision? - J. J. Thomson
26- Thomsons plum pudding atom model
- Cathode rays (electrons) are...
-
- tiny corpuscles of negative charge
- surrounded by a sort of cloud of positive charge
27If electrons exist, how big are they?
- Thomson calculated the mass-to-charge ratio for
cathode ray particles it was over 1000 times
smaller than for a charged hydrogen atom - This fact suggested - either cathode rays
carried a huge charge, - or they had very small
mass
28Answer very, very small
- Robert Millikan measured the charge of a cathode
ray particle in 1910. - From that Thompsons mass-to-charge ratio, he
could calculate the mass 1800 times lighter
than a hydrogen atom