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Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom
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Page 1: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

Chapter 2

The Structure of the Atom

Page 2: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

2.1 Matter

• Matter: Anything that occupies space and has mass

• Based on theory: Matter is made up of tiny and discrete particles. There are spaces between these particles

• Types of particle:

Atoms

Molecules

Ions

Page 3: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

• Atom: The smallest particle of an element that can participate in a chemical reaction

• Molecule: A group of two or more atoms which are chemically bonded together

• Ion: A positively-charged or negatively-charged particle

Page 4: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

• Diffusion: Occurs when particles of a substance move in between the particles of another substance

• Diffusion of matter occurs most rapidly in gases, slower in liquids and slowest in solids → due to the different arrangement and movement of particles

• Observe this video

Page 5: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

Kinetic Theory of Matter

• Types of matter:

Solid

Liquid

Gas

Page 6: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

The arrangement and movement of particles in solid, liquid and gas are described in the kinetic theory of matter.

Page 7: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

The Change in The State of Matter

Sublimation

Sublimation

Condensation

Boiling / Evaporation

Melting

Freezing

Page 8: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

When solid is heated;

• The particles in the solid gain kinetic energy and vibrate more vigorously.

• The particles vibrate faster as the temperature increases until the energy they gained is able to overcome the forces that hold them at their fixed positions.

• At this point, the solid becomes a liquid. • This process called melting. • The temperature at which this happens is called

melting point.

Page 9: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

When liquid is heated;

• The particles in the liquid gain kinetic energy and move faster.

• The particles move faster as the temperature increases until the energy they gained is able to overcome the forces that hold them.

• At this point, the liquid becomes a gas.

• This process is called boiling.

• The temperature at which this happens is called boiling point.

Page 10: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

When liquid is cooled;

• The particles in the liquid lose energy and move slower.

• As the temperature decreases, the particles lose more energy until they did not have enough energy to move freely.

• At this point, the liquid changes into a solid.

• This process is called freezing.

• The temperature at which this happens is called freezing point.

Page 11: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

Definition:

• Melting point

The temperature at which a solid changes into a liquid at a particular pressure.

• Freezing point

The temperature at which a liquid changes into a solid at a particular pressure.

Page 12: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

The heating curve

Temperature (°C)

Time (min)

Melting point

A

B C

D

solid

begin to melt

liquid

solid-liquid

The temperature remains constant because: The heat energy absorbed is used to overcome the force attraction between particles so that solid can change into liquid

Heat energy is absorbed. Particles in solid gain kinetic energy and vibrate faster

Heat energy is absorbed. Particles in liquid gain kinetic energy and move faster

Page 13: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

The cooling curve

Temperature (°C)

Time (min)

Freezing point

E

F G

H

liquid

solid

liquid-solid

The temperature remains constant because: The heat loss to the surrounding is equal to the heat energy formed during particles attraction to form a solid

Heat energy is released. Particles in liquid lose kinetic energy and move slower

Heat energy is released. Particles in solid lose kinetic energy and vibrate slower

Page 14: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

2.2 The Atomic Structure

Historical development of atomic models Model Structure Characteristic

Dalton’s atomic model proposed by John Dalton in 1805

The atom was imagined as a small indivisible ball similar to a very tiny ball.

Thomson’s atomic model proposed by J.J. Thomson in 1897

J.J Thomson discovered electron, a negatively-charged particle. The atom was described as a sphere of positive charge embedded with electrons.

Page 15: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

Model Structure Characteristic

Rutherford’s atomic model proposed by Ernest Rutherford in 1911

Ernest Rutherford discovered proton, a positively-charged particle in an atom. The central region of atom has a very small positively-charged nucleus, which contains almost all the mass of the atom.

Bohr’s atomic model proposed by Neils Bohr in 1913

The electrons in an atom move in shells around the nucleus which contains protons.

Page 16: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

Model Structure Characteristic

Chadwick’s atomic model proposed by James Chadwick in 1932

Chadwick proved the existence of neutrons, the neutral particle in the nucleus. The nucleus of the atom contains protons & neutrons, and the nucleus is surrounded by electrons.

Page 17: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

Subatomic particles in atom

Proton

Neutron

Electron

Subatomic particles

Page 18: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

Relative electric charge: +1 Relative mass: 1

Relative electric charge: 0 Relative mass: 1

Properties of subatomic particles

Nucleus

Proton, p

Neutron, n

Relative electric charge: -1 Relative mass: ≈ 0.0005

Electron, e

Page 19: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

Proton number and nucleon number

Proton number:

The number of proton in its atom

** also shows the number of electrons in the atom

Nucleon number:

The total number of protons and neutrons in its atom

** also known as mass number

Page 20: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

What is the relationship??

Nucleon number

Proton number

Number of neutrons = +

Nucleon number

Number of protons

Number of neutrons = +

OR

Page 21: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

Reminder!!!

Proton number

Nucleon number

Neutron number

X Number of neutron

Page 22: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

Symbol of elements

X A

Z

Nucleon number

Proton number

Symbol of element

Page 23: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

2.3 Isotopes and Their Importance

Isotopes:

• Atoms of the same element with same number of proton but different number of neutrons.

OR

• Atoms of the same element with same proton number but different nucleon number.

Page 24: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

Example of elements with isotopes:

• Hydrogen

H 1

1 H 2

1 H 3

1

Hydrogen-1 Hydrogen-3 Hydrogen-2

Page 25: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

• Chlorine

Cl 35

17 Cl 37

17

Chlorine-35 Chlorine-37

Page 26: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

Uses of isotopes in our daily lives

In the medical field: • Cobalt-60 Used in radiotherapy for the treatment of cancer • Iodine-131 Treatment of thyroid gland In the argiculture field: • Phosphorus-32 Study the metabolism of phosphorus in plants • Gamma ray of cobalt-60 Used to destroy bacteria in food

Page 27: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

Uses of isotopes in our daily lives

In industrial field:

• Sodium-24

Used detect leakages in pipes

In archeology field:

• Carbon-14

To estimate the age of fossils and artifacts

Page 28: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

2.4 The Electronic Structure of an Atom

The first shell : 2 electrons

The second shell : 8 electrons

The third shell : 8 electrons

Nucleus

Page 29: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

Example:

Chlorine atom

• Proton number of 17

• Hence, chlorine atom has 17 electrons

• Electron arrangement:

2.8.7

Page 30: Chapter 2 The Structure of the Atom

Valence electrons

• The electrons in the outermost occupied shell

Outermost occupied shell

Valence electron