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Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle
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Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

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Page 1: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Atomic Theories- Part I

Chemistry

Mrs. Coyle

Page 2: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

A) Early Atomic Theories

Page 3: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Atom

The word atom comes from the Greek and means “indivisible”.

Page 4: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Atom

The smallest particle in an element that retains its identity in a chemical reaction.

Page 5: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Democritus – Greek philosopher 4th Century BC

First to come up with “atom”

Matter is composed of tiny particles called atoms

These atoms are invisible, indestructible fundamental units of matter

Page 6: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Democritus’s ideas were opposed by Aristotle and Plato.

Page 7: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Antoine Lavoisier (France 1782)

Law of Conservation of Mass

In a chemical reaction mass is conserved.

Page 8: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Joseph Proust (France 1799)

Law of Definite Proportions:

The elements that comprise a compound are always in a certain proportion by mass.

Page 9: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

John Dalton (England 1766-1844)

School teacherStudied the ratios in

which elements combine in chemical reactions

Formulated first modern Atomic Theory

Page 10: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Dalton’s Atomic Theory

1. All matter is made of atoms.

2. Atoms of the same element are identical. The atoms of any one element are different from those of any other element.

Page 11: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Dalton’s Atomic Theory

3. Atoms of different elements can chemically combine in simple whole number ratios to form compounds.

Example: CO2

Page 12: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Dalton’s Atomic Theory4. Chemical reactions occur when

atoms are rearranged.

Chemical reactions do not change atoms of one element to another.

Page 13: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Dalton’s Atomic Model

Page 14: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Atomic Theory

Much of Dalton’s theory still holds today

However, we now know that

atoms are not indivisible

Page 15: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Scanning Tunneling Microscope

Page 16: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Scanning Tunneling Microscope

Page 17: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Iron Atom Arrangement - STM

Page 18: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

The Size of the Atom

If you placed 100,000,000 Cu atoms side by side they would form a line only 1 cm long.

Radius of most atoms is about 5x10-11 to 2x10-10m.

Page 19: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

B) The Discovery of the Electron and the Proton

Page 20: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

History

Electron means “amber” in GreekProperties discovered by the Greek

Thales of Miletos 600 BC. Rubbed the mineral amber with cat fur and attracted feathers.

Page 21: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Benjamin Franklin (America 1740’s)

Law of conservation of charge.

Saw electricity as a flowing fluid and called the flow direction positive.

Page 22: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Law of Charges

Like charges repelOpposite charges attract

Page 23: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

J(oseph) J(ohn) Thomson (England 1897)

He discovered the electron while experimenting with cathode rays.

Page 24: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Cathode Ray

Page 25: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Deflection of Cathode Ray

Page 26: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Cathode Ray Tube

Page 27: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

JJ Thomson with the CRT

Page 28: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Thomson’s Discovery

He determined that the cathode ray was made of negatively charged particles – electrons.

Page 29: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Cathode Rays

Thomson also was able to estimate that the mass of the electron was equal to about 1/1840 of the mass of a hydrogen atom.

His discovery of the electron won the Nobel Prize in 1906.

Page 30: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Cathode Rays

Thompson showed that the production of the cathode ray was not dependent on the type of gas in the tube, or the type of metal used for the electrodes.

He concluded that these particles were part of every atom.

Page 31: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Charge of the Electron

Charge of Electron

1.6 x 10-19 C (coulombs)

Mass of Electron

9.11 x 10-28 g

Page 32: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Atoms have no net electric charge.

Page 33: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Ions

Positively charge atom (cation) Atom lost electrons.

Negatively charged atom (anion) Object gained electrons.

Page 34: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Electron is the basic quantity of charge.

Electric charges always exist in whole number multiples of a single basic unit, the electron.

Page 35: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

A particle with a positive charge must be present in the atom to balance each negatively charge electron.

Page 36: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Plum Pudding Model (Thomson)

Page 37: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Application of the CRT

Page 38: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Why is watching television potentially unsafe?

Page 39: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

The Discovery of the Proton

Discovered by Eugen Goldstein (German) in 1886.

He observed “Canal rays” and found that they are composed of positive particles – protons.

Page 40: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Canal Rays

Canal Rays passed through holes, or channels, in the reverse direction as the cathode ray. 

Page 41: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Canal Rays

Page 42: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

c) Discovery of the Nucleus

Page 43: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Ernest Rutherford (Born in New Zealand 1871-1937)

University of Manchester, England

Tested Thomson’s theory of atomic structure with the “gold foil” experiment in 1910.

Page 44: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Gold Foil Experiment

Bombarded thin gold foil with a beam of ‘alpha’ particles.

If the positive charge was evenly spread out, the beam should have easily passed through.

Page 45: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Rutherford's Gold Foil Experiment

Rutherford and coworkers aimed a beam of alpha particles at a sheet of gold foil surrounded by a florescent screen.

Page 46: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Rutherford

Expected

Found

Page 47: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Rutherford's Experiment

Most particles passed through with no deflection, while some were highly deflectedRutherford concluded that most particles passed through because the atom is mostly empty space.

Page 48: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Rutherford’s Conclusions

All of the positive charge, and most of the mass of an atom are concentrated in a small core, called the nucleus.

Page 49: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Size of Nucleus Compared to the Atom is as a Ball Compares to a Football Field.

Page 50: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.
Page 51: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

The Discovery of the Neutron

Discovered in 1932 by James Chadwick (England 1891-1974).

Page 52: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

The Discovery of the Neutron

Chadwick bombarded alpha particles(helium nuclei) at Beryllium.

Neutrons were emitted and in turn hit parafin and ejected protons from the parafin.

Page 53: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Discovery of the Neutron

Page 54: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Neutrons

Neutrons have mass similar to protons.

No electrical charge.

Page 55: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Properties of Subatomic ParticlesParticle Symbol Relative

ChargeMass Relative to the Proton

Mass (g)

Electron

e- 1- 1/1840 9.11 x 10-28 g

Proton p+ 1+ 1 1.67 x 10-24g

Neutron n0 0 1 1.67 x 10-24g

Page 56: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Progression of Models

Page 57: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Dalton’s Atomic Model

Page 58: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.

Plum Pudding Model (Thomson)

Page 59: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.
Page 60: Atomic Theories- Part I Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. A) Early Atomic Theories.