Title: Atoms and their structure
1Atoms and their structure
2The Modern Model
- The modern atom is composed of two regions
- 1. Electron cloud- Most of the volume of an
atom and is the region where the electron can be
found (extranuclear) - 2. The nucleus with protons and neutrons so
that it has a Positive charge and almost all the
mass
3Major Subatomic Particles
Name Symbol Charge Relative Mass (amu) Actual Mass (g)
Electron e- -1 1/1840 9.11x10-28
Proton p 1 1 1.67x10-24
Neutron no 0 1 1.67x10-24
- Atoms are measured in picometers, 10-12 meters
- Hydrogen atom, 32 pm radius
- Nucleus is tiny compared to atom
- If the atom were a stadium, the nucleus would be
a marble - Radius of the nucleus is on the order of 10-15 m
- Density within the atom is near 1014 g/cm3
4Nuclear Symbols
- Every element is given a corresponding symbol
which is composed of 1 or 2 letters (first letter
upper case, second lower), as well as the mass
number and atomic number
5Locations on periodic table
- Atomic Number number of protons (p) in the
nucleus - Determines the type of atom
- Li atoms always have 3 protons in the nucleus,
Hg always 80 - Mass Number number of protons neutrons
- Electrons have a negligible contribution to
overall mass - In a neutral atom there is the same number of
electrons (e-) and protons (atomic number)
6- Find the
- number of protons
- number of neutrons
- number of electrons
- atomic number
- mass number
7- If an element has an atomic number of 34 and a
mass number of 78 what is the - number of protons in the atom?
- number of neutrons in the atom?
- number of electrons in the atom?
- complete symbol of the atom?
- If an element has 91 protons and 140 neutrons
what is the - atomic number?
- mass number?
- number of electrons?
- complete symbol?
8Isotopes
- Atoms of the same element can have different
numbers of neutrons and therefore have different
mass numbers - The atoms of the same element that differ in the
number of neutrons are called isotopes of that
element
9Naming Isotopes
- When naming, write the mass number after the name
of the element - Examples
- carbon- 12
- carbon -14
- uranium-235
10Average Atomic Mass
- Did you ever notice that the mass number on the
periodic table is not a whole number? - There are the decimal numbers on the periodic
table. - This is because it is an average mass for all
the isotopes of each atom
11How heavy is an atom of oxygen?
- There are different kinds of oxygen atoms
(different isotopes) - 16O, 17O, 18O
- We are more concerned with average atomic
masses, rather than exact ones - Based on abundance of each isotope found in
nature - We cant use grams as the unit of measure
because the numbers would be too small - Instead we use Atomic Mass Units (amu)
- Standard amu is 1/12 the mass of a carbon-12
atom - Each isotope has its own atomic mass
12Calculating Averages
- You have five rocks, four with a mass of 50 g,
and one with a mass of 60 g. What is the average
mass of the rocks? - Total mass 4 x 50 g 1 x 60 g 260 g
- Average mass (4 x 50 g 1 x 60 g)/5 (260
g)/5 -
- 52 g
13Calculating Averages when given
80 of the rocks were 50 grams 20 of the rocks
were 60 grams What is the average mass of the
rocks? Average mass 0.8 x 50 0.2 x 60
40 12 52 g Average ( as decimal) x
(mass1) ( as decimal) x (mass2)
( as decimal) x (mass3)
14EXAMPLES
- Calculate the av atomic mass of copper if copper
has two isotopes - 69.1 has a mass of 62.93 amu
- The rest (30.9) has a mass of 64.93 amu
- Magnesium has three isotopes
- 78.99 magnesium 24 with a mass of 23.9850 amu
- 10.00 magnesium 25 with a mass of 24.9858 amu
- The rest magnesium 26 with a mass of 25.9826 amu
- What is the atomic mass of magnesium?
15Average Atomic Masses
- If not told otherwise, the mass of the isotope is
the mass number in amu - The average atomic masses are not whole numbers
because they are an average mass value - Remember, the atomic masses the decimal numbers
on the periodic table
16To do ?
- Page 45
- Questions 1, 2, 3, 4
- Page 46
- Questions 2, 3, 4, 5a