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Atomic Theory and Structure

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Title: Atomic Theory and Structure


1
Atomic Theory and Structure
2
John Dalton
3
Leading to Discovery
  • Series of meteorological observations 1787 in
    Manchester area
  • Proved the validity of concept that rain is
    precipitated by a decrease in temperature
  • Interest in meteorology led to study a variety of
    phenomena and instruments

4
Discoveries leading up to model
  • Careful quantitative measurements-allowed precise
    measurements of compounds
  • Law of Definite ProportionsIn the early 1800s
    Dalton noted that oxygen and carbon combine to
    make two compounds. Each compound had twice as
    much oxygen as carbon
  • This led him to propose the Law of Simple
    Multiple Proportions

5
Daltons Atomic Theory
  • In an attempt to explain how and why elements
    would combine with one another in fixed ratios
    and sometimes also in multiples of those ratios,
    Dalton formulated his atomic theory.
  • Elements consisted of tiny particles called atoms
  • Atoms of the same element had the same mass
    atoms of different elements had different masses
  • Compounds consisted of atoms of different
    elements combined together
  • He also stated that chemical reactions involved
    the rearrangement of combinations of those atoms

6
Summary of Atomic Theory-1803
  • All matter is made of indivisible and
    indestructible atoms
  • All atoms of a given element are identical in
    their physical and chemical properties
  • Atoms of different elements differ in their
    physical and chemical properties
  • Atoms of different elements combine in simple
    whole-number ratios to form compounds
  • Chemical reactions consist of the combination,
    separation, or rearrangement of atoms

7
Daltons Model
  • Dalton's model was that the atoms were tiny,
    indivisible, indestructible particles and that
    each one had a certain mass, size, and chemical
    behavior that was determined by what kind of
    element they were

8
Daltons Model
9
Problems with Theory
  • assumed all gases were monoatomic, e.g. oxygen is
    O
  • assumed simplest compounds were binary, e.g.
    water is HO
  • his atomic weights were approximate
  • no knowledge of isotopes

10
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11
The Thomson Model
12
Discoveries Leading to the Model
  • Thomson Followed William Crookes experiments
    that proved that the rays in the magnetic field
    bent

13
Procedure
  • voltage applied to metal at each end of tube
    (electrodes)
  • Anode
  • Cathode
  • Magnet deflected
  • Beammust contain
  • Something negative

14
What is it?
Discovered by J.J. Thomson
In the year 1897
An Electron!
15
Theory and Model
Electron
Nicknamed the Plum Pudding model, it shows
electrons embedded in a positively charged ball
of matter.
Sphere of Positive Charge
16
Picture of Thomsons Model
17
Rutherford-Bohr Model
18
Discoveries Leading up to the Model
  • The scientists knew that the electron had a
    negative electrical charge. They also knew that
    atoms had no overall charge.
  • Scientists guessed that since electrons are
    extremely small, whatever this positive something
    was, it must be make up most of the mass of
    atoms, and be much larger

19
Rutherford
  • Since the Thomson model, Ernest Rutherford had
    discovered the nucleus of an atom in his gold
    foil experiment
  • He conducted experiments in which he shot large,
    charged particles (alpha particles) at a thin
    gold foil
  • Most particles passed through the foil, but some
    came off at odd angles (concluded an atom must
    contain a central mass that would deflect these
    particles)

20
The Model Itself
  • A New Zealand scientist, Ernest Rutherford, and a
    Danish scientist, Niels Bohr, developed a way of
    thinking about the structure of an atom in which
    an atom looks very much like our solar system.
    (electrons revolve around nucleus like planets
    around the Sun)
  • But Rutherford could not explain why the
    negatively charged electrons were not pulled into
    the positively charged nucleus as Coulombs law
    would suggest.

21
Bohr
  • Bohr had corrected a serious flaw by recognizing
    that electrons had to be in orbits (energy
    states).
  • But his analysis of the energy given off when an
    electron dropped from a higher energy orbit to a
    lower energy orbit didnt hold up for atoms
    bigger than hydrogen (the simplest atom, with
    only one proton and no neutrons)
  • More work needed to be done with the model

22
Rutherford-Bohr Model
  • -Ernest Rutherford-

23
Despite its technical flaws, however, the
Rutherford-Bohr model is still useful because it
is simple and helps people understand atomic
structure
24
The Quantum Theory
25
Discoveries leading up to
  • The Rutherford model describes electrons in terms
    of there energy state
  • Bohr postulated that electrons did not radiate
    energy while in orbit around the nucleus, but
    Bohrs model could not explain the spectra of
    larger atoms
  • In 1924, a French physicist named Louis de
    Broglie suggested that electrons could act as
    both particles and waves.
  • An Austrian physicist named Erwin Schrodinger
    derived a set of equations or wave functions in
    1926 for electrons
  • According to Schrodinger, electrons confined in
    their orbits would set up standing waves and you
    could describe only the probability of where an
    electron could be. The distributions of these
    probabilities formed regions of space about the
    nucleus were called orbitals.

26
The Quantum Theory
  • The present day quantum model postulates that
    electrons have the properties of both particles
    and waves.

27
Electrons n More
  • The wave-particle duality of quantum theory
    allows electrons to be described as waves, using
    the electrons de Broglie wavelength.

Louis de Broglie
28
Quantum Atom (Cont.)
  • Although the position of an electron is
    uncertain, quantum theory does not allow the
    electron from being at some places. The easiest
    way to describe the differences between the
    allowed and prohibited positions of electrons in
    an atom is to think of the electron as a wave.

29
Electron Cloud
  • In the quantum theory, electrons are located in
    orbitals, which are regions of space in which you
    can expect to find electrons of specific energy.
  • Despite the similar name, and orbital is
    different from and orbit. An orbital is a region
    of high probability for finding a particular
    electron. It is as if the electron were smeared
    into a cloud.
  • We use the quantum numbers to find where each
    electron is, but certain combinations of n, l,
    and m are not always permitted.

30
Quantum model
31
Additional concepts
  • Pauli exclusion principle- no more than two
    electron can occupy an orbital, and they would
    spin in opposite directions
  • Aufbau principle- electrons will fill lower
    energy positions first (build up from there

32
  • Hunds rule-orbitals of the same energy will half
    fill each of those orbitals first, and then go
    back and fill those orbitals

33
Quantum Numbers
  • Set of 4 numbers that describe the address of a
    particular electron
  • First is the Principle Quantum- states the main
    energy level n 1,2,3,4,,,
  • Second is the Azimuthal (or you can think shape
    l (0n-1)

34
  • 3rd is the magnetic quantum
  • m (-l0l)
  • 4th is the magnetic spin
  • ms 1/2 or -1/2

35
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36
5f
7s
6p
5d
4f
6s
5p
4d
5s
4p
3d
4s
3p
3s
2p
2s
1s
37
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