Title: Thomson Model of the Atom
1Thomson Model of the Atom
J. J. Thomson - English physicist. 1897 Made a
piece of equipment called a cathode ray tube. It
is a vacuum tube - all the air has been pumped
out.
2A Cathode Ray Tube
Zumdahl, Zumdahl, DeCoste, World of Chemistry
2002, page 58
3Background Information
- Cathode Rays
- Form when high voltage is applied across
electrodes in a partially evacuated tube. - Originate at the cathode (negative electrode) and
move to the anode (positive electrode) - Carry energy and can do work
- Travel in straight lines in the absence of an
external field
4A Cathode Ray Tube
Zumdahl, Zumdahl, DeCoste, World of Chemistry
2002, page 58
5Cathode Ray Experiment
- 1897 Experimentation
- Using a cathode ray tube, Thomson was able to
deflect cathode rays with an electrical field. - The rays bent towards the positive pole,
indicating that they are negatively charged.
6The Effect of an Electric Field on Cathode Rays
Dorin, Demmin, Gabel, Chemistry The Study of
Matter , 3rd Edition, 1990, page 117
7Thomsons Experiment
voltage source
-
vacuum tube
metal disks
8Thomsons Experiment
voltage source
-
vacuum tube
metal disks
9Thomsons Experiment
voltage source
ON
-
OFF
Passing an electric current makes a beam appear
to move from the negative to the positive end
10Thomsons Experiment
voltage source
ON
-
OFF
11Thomsons Experiment
voltage source
ON
-
OFF
By adding an electric field
he found that the moving pieces were negative.
12Cathode Ray Experiment
-
Displacement
Volts
Anodes / collimators
Cathode
Deflection region
Drift region
13Thomsons Calculations
Thomson PAPER
- Cathode Ray Experiment
- Thomson used magnetic and electric fields to
measure and calculate the ratio of the cathode
rays mass to its charge.
14Conclusions
- He compared the value with the mass/ charge ratio
for the lightest charged particle. - By comparison, Thomson estimated that the cathode
ray particle weighed 1/1000 as much as hydrogen,
the lightest atom. - He concluded that atoms do contain subatomic
particles - atoms are divisible into smaller
particles. - This conclusion contradicted Daltons postulate
and was not widely accepted by fellow physicists
and chemists of his day. - Since any electrode material produces an
identical ray, cathode ray particles are present
in all types of matter - a universal negatively
charged subatomic particle later named the
electron
15Conclusiones
- He comparado con el valor de la masa / carga más
ligera para la proporción de partículas cargadas.
- En comparación, Thomson calcula que las
partículas de rayos catódicos pesaba 1 / 1000
tanto como el hidrógeno, el átomo más ligero. - Él llegó a la conclusión de que los átomos
contienen partículas subatómicas, átomos de
dividirse en partículas más pequeñas. - Esta conclusión es contradicha Dalton postulado y
no fue ampliamente aceptada por sus compañeros
físicos y químicos de su época. - Dado que todo el material del electrodo produce
una idéntica de rayos, rayos catódicos partículas
están presentes en todos los tipos de materia,
universal negativamente cargado de partículas
subatómicas más tarde el nombre de electrón
16Cathode Rays
(A) The effect of an obstruction on cathode rays
shadow
source of high voltage
cathode
yellow-green fluorescence
- Cathode ray electron
- Electrons have a
- negative charge
(B) The effect of an electric field on cathode
rays
Dorin, Demmin, Gabel, Chemistry The Study of
Matter , 3rd Edition, 1990, pages 117-118
17J.J. Thomson
- He proved that atoms of any element can be made
to emit tiny negative particles. - From this he concluded that ALL atoms must
contain these negative particles. - He knew that atoms did not have a net negative
charge and so there must be balancing the
negative charge.
J.J. Thomson
18William Thomson (Lord Kelvin)
- In 1910 proposed the Plum Pudding model
- Negative electrons were embedded into a
positively charged spherical cloud.
Zumdahl, Zumdahl, DeCoste, World of Chemistry
2002, page 56
19Plum-Pudding Model
Zumdahl, Zumdahl, DeCoste, World of Chemistry
2002, page 56
20Thomson Model of the Atom
- J.J. Thomson discovered the electron and knew
that electrons could be emitted from matter
(1897). - William Thomson proposed that atoms consist of
small, negative electrons embedded in a massive,
positive sphere. - The electrons were like currants in a plum
pudding. - This is called the plum pudding model of the
atom.
electrons
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-
-
-
-
-
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21Other pieces
- Proton - positively charged pieces
- 1840 times heavier than the electron
- Neutron - no charge but the same mass as a
proton. - How were these pieces discovered?
- Where are the pieces?