Title: Chapter 4
1Chapter 4Atomic Structure
2Section 4.1 Defining the Atom
- Greek philosopher Democritus
- (460 B.C. 370 B.C.) suggested
- existence of atoms (Greek word
- atomos)
- Believed atoms were indivisible and
indestructible - His ideas agreed with later scientific theory,
but didnt explain chemical behavior - was not
based on scientific methods only philosophy
3Daltons Atomic Theory (experiment based!)
- All elements composed of tiny indivisible
particles called atoms - Atoms of same element identical. Atoms of any
one element are different from all other
elements.
John Dalton (1766 1844)
- Atoms of different elements combine in simple
whole-number ratios to form chemical compounds - In chemical reactions, atoms are combined,
separated, or rearranged but never changed into
atoms of another element.
4Sizing up the Atom
- Elements subdivided into smaller particles
called atoms, and they still have properties of
that element - 1.0 x 108 copper atoms in a single file, they
would be approximately 1 cm long - individual atoms are observable with instruments
such as scanning tunneling (electron) microscopes
5Section 4.2Structure of the Nuclear Atom
- One change to Daltons atomic theory - atoms are
divisible into subatomic particles - Electrons, protons, and neutrons
6Discovery of Electron
1897 - J.J. Thomson used cathode ray tube to
deduce presence of negatively charged
particle.the electron
7Modern Cathode Ray Tubes
Television
Computer Monitor
- CRTs pass electricity through gas contained -
very low pressure.
8Mass of the Electron
Mass of the electron is 9.11 x 10-28 g
The oil drop apparatus
1916 Robert Millikan determines mass of
electron 1/1840 the mass of hydrogen atom has
one unit of negative charge
9Conclusions from the Study of the Electron
- Cathode rays have identical properties regardless
of element used to produce them. All elements
must contain identically charged electrons. - Atoms are neutral, so there must be positive
particles in atom to balance negative charge of
electrons - Electrons have so little mass that atoms must
contain other particles that account for most of
mass
10Conclusions from the Study of the Electron
- Eugen Goldstein in 1886 observed what is now
called the proton - particles with a positive
charge, and a relative mass of 1 (or 1840 times
that of an electron) - 1932 James Chadwick confirmed the existence of
neutron particle with no charge, but mass
nearly equal to proton
11Subatomic Particles
Particle Charge Mass (g) Location
Electron (e-) -1 9.11 x 10-28 Electron cloud
Proton (p) 1 1.67 x 10-24 Nucleus
Neutron (no) 0 1.67 x 10-24 Nucleus
12Thomsons Atomic Model
J. J. Thomson
Believed electrons were like plums embedded in
charged pudding, called plum pudding model.
13Ernest RutherfordsGold Foil Experiment - 1911
- Alpha particles - helium nuclei w/ charge -
The alpha particles were fired at thin sheet of
gold foil - Particles that hit on the detecting screen
(film) were recorded
14Rutherfords problem
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?
Target 2
Target 1
15The Answers
Target 2
Target 1
16Rutherfords Findings
- Most particles passed through
- Few deflected
- VERY FEW greatly deflected
Like howitzer shells bouncing off of tissue
paper!
Conclusions
- Small nucleus
- Dense nucleus
- charge nucleus
The Atom Song
Atoms song - Mark Rosengarten
17The Rutherford Atomic Model
- His experimental evidence
- atom mostly empty space
- All positive charge, almost all mass in small
center. Nucleus - protons and neutrons make nucleus!
- electrons distributed around nucleusoccupy most
volume - His model called nuclear model
Rutherfords Atom 308
18Section 4.3Atomic Number
- All atoms composed of identical protons,
neutrons, and electrons - How then are atoms of one element different from
another element? - Elements different b/c they contain different
of PROTONS - atomic number of element is number of protons
in nucleus - protons in atom electrons
19Atomic Number
Atomic number (Z) of element is of protons in
nucleus of each atom of that element.
Element of protons Atomic (Z)
Carbon 6 6
Phosphorus 15 15
Gold 79 79
20Mass Number
Mass number is of protons and neutrons in
nucleus of an isotope
Mass p n0
Nuclide p n0 e- Mass
Oxygen - 10
- 33 42
- 31 15
18
8
8
18
Arsenic
75
33
75
Phosphorus
16
15
31
21Complete Symbols
- Contain symbol of element, mass number atomic
number.
Mass number
X
Superscript ?
Atomic number
Subscript ?
22Symbols
- Find each of these
- number of protons
- number of neutrons
- number of electrons
- Atomic number
- Mass Number
80
Br
35
23Symbols
- If an element has an atomic number of 34 and a
mass number of 78, what is the - number of protons
- number of neutrons
- number of electrons
- complete symbol
24Symbols
- If an element has 91 protons and 140 neutrons
what is the - Atomic number
- Mass number
- number of electrons
- complete symbol
25Symbols
- If an element has 78 electrons and 117 neutrons
what is the - Atomic number
- Mass number
- number of protons
- complete symbol
26Isotopes
- Dalton was wrong about elements of same type
being identical - Atoms of same element can have different numbers
of neutrons. - different mass numbers
- isotopes
27Isotopes
- Frederick Soddy (1877-1956) proposed idea of
isotopes in 1912 - Isotopes - atoms of same element with different
masses, b/c varying s of neutrons - Won 1921 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- has a small crater named for him on the far side
of the Moon.
28Naming Isotopes
- We can also put mass number after name of the
element - carbon-12
- carbon-14
- uranium-235
29Isotope Protons Electrons Neutrons Nucleus
Hydrogen1 (protium) 1 1 0
Hydrogen-2 (deuterium) 1 1 1
Hydrogen-3 (tritium) 1 1 2
30Isotopes
Elements occur in nature as mixtures of isotopes.
31Atomic Mass
- How heavy is an oxygen atom?
- Depends, b/c different kinds of oxygen atoms
exist. - Were more concerned with average atomic mass.
- Based on abundance () of each variety of that
element in nature. - Dont use grams - numbers tooooo small.
32Measuring Atomic Mass
- Atomic Mass Unit (amu)
- one-twelfth mass of a carbon-12 atom.
- Carbon-12 chosen b/c of its isotope purity.
- Each isotope has own atomic mass
- we determine average from abundance.
33To calculate the average
- Multiply atomic mass of each isotope by abundance
(decimal), then add results. - If not told otherwise, mass of isotope expressed
in atomic mass units (amu)
34Atomic Masses
Atomic mass is average of all naturally occurring
isotopes of that element.
Atomic mass (amu)
12
13.00
14.00
Isotope Symbol Composition of the nucleus in nature
Carbon-12 12C 6 protons 6 neutrons 98.89
Carbon-13 13C 6 protons 7 neutrons 1.11
Carbon-14 14C 6 protons 8 neutrons lt0.01
What is the average atomic mass of Carbon?
12.01
35 - Page 117
Question
Knowns and Unknown
Solution
Answer
36End of Chapter 4