Title: Chemistry I Chapter 3 Introduction to Atoms
1Chemistry I Chapter 3Introduction to Atoms
2How small is an atom?
- http//micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/java/scienceopt
icsu/powersof10/
3Atoms
4Atoms vs. Hyle
- Atom - the smallest particle of an element. It
can exist alone, or combined with other atoms. - Atoms were first suggested by Democritus (Greek
philosopher, 400B.C.). - People that supported Democritus view were called
Atomists. - Aristotle(300B.C.) did not support the idea of
atoms. He believed that all matter was a
continuous substance called hyle. Hyle was
composed of earth, air, fire and water.
5Democritus vs. Aristotle
6John Dalton.THE MAN!
- John Dalton-(English school teacher) first to
explain the existence of atoms and disspelling
Aristotles theory of matter.
7John Dalton
- Formulates Atomic Theory
- Each element is made up of tiny indivisible
particles called atoms. - The atoms of a given element are identical, atoms
of different elements are different. - Chemical compounds are formed when atoms come
together, in simple whole number ratios. - Chemical reactions involve the reorganization of
the atoms combined, separated or rearranged.
81903 J.J. THOMSON
- Discovers the electron, using his famous Cathode
Ray Tube (CRT), which turns out to be a primitive
TV or computer monitor.
9Discovery of the Electron
In 1897, J.J. Thomson used a cathode ray tube to
deduce the presence of a negatively charged
particle, the electron.
Cathode ray tubes pass electricity through a gas
that is contained at a very low pressure.
10CRT and TV
111911 Ernest Rutherford
- Rutherford discovers the nucleus of an atom,
using his famous gold foil experiment.
12Rutherfords Gold Foil Experiment
13Rutherfords Gold Foil Experiment
14Rutherfords Gold Foil Experiment
- Alpha (?) particles are helium nuclei
- Particles were fired at a thin sheet of gold
foil - Particle hits on the detecting screen (film) are
recorded
15Rutherfords Gold Foil Experiment
16How big is an atom?
17Characteristics of sub-atomic particles
- Particle symbol charge location mass
- Proton p 1 nucleus 1 amu
- Neutron no 0 nucleus 1 amu
- Electron e- -1 orbital 1/1840 amu
- amu atomic mass unit, unit used to mass very
- small objects. (1 amu 1/12 the mass
of a - carbon-12
nucleus) - Orbital the 3-dimensional space around the
nucleus of an atom, where electrons are found
most of the time.
18Atomic Structure
19Atomic Models
- JJ Thomson model(Plum pudding model) electrons
are scattered throughout the atom, like raisins
in plum pudding. - Rutherford Model-The atom has a central dense
core, but is mostly empty space. - Bohr Model(Planetary model)Electrons orbit the
nucleus in circular paths, called energy levels - Quantum Model (Modern, Shrodinger model)-
Electrons move randomly in spaces called
orbitals, around the nucleus.
20Thomsons Atomic Model
Thomson believed that the electrons were like
plums embedded in a positively charged pudding,
thus it was called the plum pudding model.
21Rutherfords 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
- The nucleus is positively charged
22The Bohr Model of the Atom
I pictured electrons orbiting the nucleus much
like planets orbiting the sun.
But I was wrong! Theyre more like bees around a
hive.
Neils Bohr
23Quantum MechanicalModel of the Atom
Mathematical laws can identify the regions
outside of the nucleus where electrons are most
likely to be found.
24Important definitions about atoms
- atomic number number of protons in the nucleus
of an atom. The number of protons determines the
element of an atom. - atomic mass number mass of the atom in amu, it
includes the number of protons and neutrons. - (electrons are not counted)
- Isotopes atoms of the same element, with a
different number of neutrons in the nucleus.
Isotopes of each element have the same atomic
number, but different mass numbers.
25TAKS QUESTION
26Isotopes
27Boron isotopes
28(No Transcript)
29Find the number of protons, neutrons and
electrons in each
- Carbon-14
- Nitrogen-15
- U-235
- Hydrogen-3
- Carbon-13
- Helium-3
- B-11
- Cu-64
30Periodic Table Families
31List the Element Family
- Element Family Element Family
- Br Fe
- K U
- Sr Si
- Ce C
- Ar Cs
32- Orbital- the 3-d space around the nucleus of an
atom where an electron is found most of the time.
Each orbital can hold up to 2 electrons of
opposite spin.
33Orbitals have different shapes
- Orbital shape
- s spherical
- p dumbbell
- d clover or
- dumbbell/donut
- f too complex
34Energy sublevels around an atom
- energy electron
- sublevels of orbitals capacity
- s 1 2
- p 3 6
- d 5 10
- f 7 14
- g 9 18
- orbitals exist, but not used most of the time.
35Aufbau Order- Energy levels orbital types
around the atom
- Aufbau order- Electrons fill orbitals closest to
the nucleus first. - 1s, 2s, 2p, 3s, 3p, 4s, 3d, 4p, 5s, 4d, 5p,6s,
4f, 5d, 6p, 7s, 5f, 6d, 7p
36Orbital notation
37Electron configuration
38Valence Electrons/Lewis Dot Notation
39How to calculate average atomic mass
40Pre AP Chemistry Nuclear Equations
- Nuclear Reactions(transmutation reactions) are
represented with Nuclear Equations. - Transmutation reactions a reaction where one
nucleus changes element. - ( of protons)
41Nuclear equations
42Half-life the amount of time it takes for ½ of
a sample to react or decay.
- The half life of Ti-48 is 47 hrs. How much of a
250 gram sample remains after 94 hrs? - A 100gram sample of Cd-114 decays until only 12.5
grams remain in a total of 41years. What is the
half-life for this isotope?
43TAKS QUESTION
44Electron orbitals
- Orbital a 3-dimensional space around the
nucleus which can hold up to 2 electrons, with
opposite spin. - electrons are found in their orbitals 99.9 of
the time. - Orbitals have different shapes s, p, d, f
45Orbitals have different shapes
- Orbital shape
- s spherical
- p dumbbell
- d clover or
- dumbbell/donut
- f too complex
46s-orbitals spheres
47p-orbitals dumbbell
48d-orbitals clover (double dumbbell) or
dumbbell/donut
49f-orbitals complex
50Energy sublevels around an atom
- energy electron
- sublevels of orbitals capacity
- s 1 2
- p 3 6
- d 5 10
- f 7 14
- g 9 18
- orbitals exist, but not used most of the time.
51Orbital Notation
- Aufbau Order
- (Nucleus)1s, 2s, 2p, 3s, 3p, 4s, 3d, 4p, 5s, 4d,
5p, 6s, 4f, 5d, 6p, 7s, 5f - This is the order in which electrons
fill!!!!! - You must learn the order!! Dont worry there is
always an easier way to memorize these things.
For the Aufbau Order there are 2 ways With
arrows or with the periodic table! Smartboard
activate!
52Electron Configurations and the Periodic Table
Figure 8.7
53Orbital Notation
- Write the orbital notation for each atom
- Nitrogen, N(7 electrons)
- Sodium, Na(11 e-)
- Iron, Fe(__ e-)
- Antimony, Sb(__ e-)
- Gold, Au(__ e-)