Top Banner
Chapter 3 Atomic Structure
132

Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Apr 01, 2015

Download

Documents

Emilia Pashley
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Chapter 3

Atomic Structure

Page 2: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Objective:• You will explain why the model of

the atom changed throughout history.

Page 3: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

What is a model?

• Models are used to help us understand things that cannot be seen directly

• Models are used when something is too large, too small, or too dangerous to be studied directly.

Page 4: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Examples of Scientific Models

This model shows the alignment between the sun, moon, & earth. As it rotates, it shows the phases of the moon and how we measure a year.

This model is a mathematical representation of a sound wave. You cannot see sound, but you can see how it affects other objects with its vibrations.

Page 5: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Examples of Scientific Models

• What other examples can you think of?

• Are there other models present in this room?

Page 6: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

A good model…

• Must be based on observations and indirect experimentation.

• Must explain as many characteristics of the original object as possible.

• Should be as simple as possible.

Page 7: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

When do you change a model?

• All models have limitations —No model has ever been totally complete.

• A model changes when observations of a new situation do not agree with the current model.

Page 8: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Creating a Model

• The “Think Tube” is also a model for something you cannot see directly.

THINK TUBE ?

Page 9: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Creating a Model

• How many strings are on the inside?

• Make your own model showing how

the “Think Tube” works.

Page 10: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Atoms

• The atom has not changed over time, but our idea and model of the atom has.

Page 11: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Definition of Atom:

•the smallest particle of an element that retains the chemical properties of that element.

Page 12: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Democritus 400 BC

By convention there is color,By convention sweetness,By convention bitterness,But in reality there are atoms and space.   -Democritus (c. 400 BCE)

Convention means because we said so- doesn’t really exist

Page 13: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Democritus 400 BC• Democritus was smashing up sea shells one day and thought that you can break down the shell to tiny pieces, but it can not be completely destroyed.

Page 14: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Democritus 400 BCDemocritus 400 BC Looked at sand on the beach. Cut Looked at sand on the beach. Cut

sand in half and got fewer and fewer sand in half and got fewer and fewer grains of sand.grains of sand.

What was the smallest piece?What was the smallest piece?

He called it atomos = He called it atomos = greek word meaning cannot be greek word meaning cannot be

cutcut

Page 15: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.
Page 16: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

http://www.brl.ntt.co.jp/group/butsuden-g/img/redball.gif

16

Democritus 400 BC According to Democritus atoms are:

• Invisible• Indivisible• Solid• Eternal • Surrounded by an empty space

Page 17: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Democritus 400 BC continued:

• Have an infinite number of possible shapes. • Each type of atom had a different size.

Page 18: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

http://www.brl.ntt.co.jp/group/butsuden-g/img/redball.gif

18

Democritus 400 BC Atoms -

Page 19: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Aristotle’s Idea 300 BCAristotle’s Idea 300 BC

All substances are made of 4 All substances are made of 4 elements: Fire, Air, Earth, and elements: Fire, Air, Earth, and WaterWater

Page 20: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Aristotle’s Idea 300 BC

• There were also four qualities: dryness, hotness, coldness, and moistness.

• Fire was dry and hot, while water was moist and cold, etc.

• Each of these elements move naturally in a line to their "proper place," where it will be at rest.

Page 21: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.
Page 22: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Aristotle 300 BC

• Water sits on top of the earth, he explained, because it is lighter, yet air floats above the water because it is lighter still—and fire, lightest of all, rises highest. Furthermore, he claimed that the planets beyond Earth were made up of a "fifth element," or quintessence, of which little could be known.

Page 23: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Democritus vs Aristotle

• Ancient Greeks accepted Aristotle’s ideas and rejected Democritus.

• What holds the particles together?• Democritus could not answer this

question • Remained that way until the 17th

century

Page 24: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

• Law of Conservation of Mass • Law of Definite Proportions • Law of Multiple Proportions

Important DiscoveriesImportant Discoveries

Page 25: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Law of Conservation of Mass (Matter)

• In a chemical reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed.

•Lavosier measured the mass of chemicals before and after a chemical reaction and found that the weight did not change.

Page 26: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Law of Definite Proportions

•Also called Law of Constant Composition

•Proposed by Joseph Proust•Elements always react and

combine with one another in the same proportions.

Page 27: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

http://cwx.prenhall.com/bookbind/pubbooks/hillchem3/medialib/media_portfolio/text_images/CH02/FG02_01.JPG

27

Law of Definite Proportions

A chemical compound is always composed of the same combination of atoms -

copper carbonate CuCO3

Page 28: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Law of Definite Proportions

• Water has the formula H2O. This means that water in the ocean, lakes, or in our sinks always contains 2 atoms of Hydrogen for every 1 atom of Oxygen. What percent of water is Hydrogen and what percent is Oxygen?

H: 2g/18g = 11% O: 16g/18g = 89%

Page 29: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

http://cwx.prenhall.com/bookbind/pubbooks/hillchem3/medialib/media_portfolio/text_images/CH02/FG02_02.JPG

29

Law of Multiple Proportions

• If two elements form more than one compound between them, then the ratios of the weights of the two atoms will be ratios that can be reduced to small whole numbers.

Page 30: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Law of Multiple Proportions

Page 31: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

http://www.unit5.org/christjs/John_Dalton.htm

31

John Dalton 1766-1844

• English school teacher and public lecturer by the age of 12.

• As a Quaker, Dalton led a modest existence, although he received many honors later in life. In tribute, more than 40,000 people marched in his funeral procession.

Page 32: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

John Dalton’s Atomic Theory

• Dalton’s Theory was a return to the ideas of Democritus

• Dalton turned the idea into a scientific theory that could be tested

• Not all of Daltons ideas are still true today. Some ideas were modified.

Page 33: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

John Dalton’s Atomic Theory:

1. All matter is composed of atoms.2. Atoms of a particular element have

identical properties. Elements of a different element have different properties.

3. Atoms cannot be divided or destroyed.

4. Atoms combine to form compounds.5. During a chemical reaction atoms

are rearranged.

Page 34: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

John Dalton’s Atomic Theory:

1. All matter is composed of atoms.2. Atoms of a particular element have

identical properties. Elements of a different element have different properties.

3. Atoms cannot be divided or destroyed.

4. Atoms combine to form compounds.5. During a chemical reaction atoms

are rearranged.

Page 35: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

JJ Thomson 1856-1940

Excuse me... how can you discover a particle so small that nobody has ever seen one?

http://www.aip.org/history/electron/jjsound.htm

Page 36: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

J.J. Thompson’s Model

_

__

_

_

+ ++

+

+

Page 37: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Discovery of the Electron

JJ Thomson determined that:

• Atom is a sphere of positive matter that holds electrons in it.

• Also called the plum pudding model or the raisin dough model.

Page 38: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.
Page 39: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

His experiment

http://www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/on-line/electron/section2/shockwave2.asp

Page 40: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Thomson’s Experiment

Voltage source

+-

Vacuum tube

Metal Disks

Page 41: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Thomson’s ExperimentThomson’s Experiment

Voltage source

+-

Page 42: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Thomson’s ExperimentThomson’s Experiment

Voltage source

+-

Page 43: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Thomson’s ExperimentThomson’s Experiment

Voltage source

+-

Page 44: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Thomson’s ExperimentThomson’s Experiment

Voltage source

+-

Page 45: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Thomson’s ExperimentThomson’s Experiment

Voltage source

+-

Page 46: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Thomson’s ExperimentThomson’s Experiment

Voltage source

+-

Page 47: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

• The cathode ray travels from the cathode to the anode when current was passed through the tube.

Voltage source

+-

J.J. Thompson’s Cathode Ray Tube

Cathode Anode

Page 48: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Voltage source

Thomson’s ExperimentThomson’s Experiment

By adding an electric fieldBy adding an electric field

+

-

Page 49: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Voltage source

Thomson’s ExperimentThomson’s Experiment

By adding an electric fieldBy adding an electric field

+

-

Page 50: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Voltage source

Thomson’s ExperimentThomson’s Experiment

By adding an electric fieldBy adding an electric field

+

-

Page 51: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Voltage source

Thomson’s ExperimentThomson’s Experiment

By adding an electric fieldBy adding an electric field

+

-

Page 52: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Voltage source

Thomson’s ExperimentThomson’s Experiment

By adding an electric fieldBy adding an electric field

+

-

Page 53: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Voltage source

Thomson’s ExperimentThomson’s Experiment

By adding an electric field he found By adding an electric field he found that the moving pieces were negativethat the moving pieces were negative

+

-

Page 54: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Maltese Cross Tube

•Using a Maltese cross as the anode, this produced a shadow that glowed at the end of the tube. This showed that the cathode rays traveled in straight lines.

Page 55: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Paddle Wheel Discharge Tube

A paddle wheel placed in the path of the cathode rays turned. This proved that the cathode rays contained mass, and that they might be made of particles.

Page 56: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Thomson's “Plum Pudding Model"

http://www.broadeducation.com/htmlDemos/AbsorbChem/HistoryAtom/page.htmt

Page 57: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Thomson's “Plum Pudding Model"

http://molaire1.club.fr/e_histoire.html

Electrons are red.

Negative electrons

Are embedded in a

Blue positive atom.

Page 58: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

J.J. Thompson’s Model

1.Cathode rays are beams of negatively-charged particles called electrons.

2.All atoms contain electrons.3.Atoms also contain an equal

and opposite positive charge.

Page 59: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Ernest Rutherford 1871-1937

• "All science is either physics or stamp collecting."

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aso/databank/entries/bpruth.html

Page 60: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Ernest Rutherford’s Model

• He became a student of a teacher named Professor J J Thomson at Cambridge University in England

Page 61: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Ernest Rutherford’s Model

•Rutherford studied how gold atoms interacted with radioactivity.

Page 62: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Radioactivity

•Radioactivity is the processes by which

unstable atoms emit subatomic particles (radiation).

Page 63: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

• Made of 2 protons and 2 neutrons.• Charge of +2, and a mass of 4• Relatively slow and heavy.

Page 64: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

• Charge of minus 1• Mass is very small. • They are the same as an electron.• They are fast, and light.

Page 65: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

• Gamma rays are waves, not particles. • They have no mass and no charge.

Page 66: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Penetrating Power

•Alpha particles are easy to stop, gamma rays are hard to stop.

Page 67: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Lead block

Uranium

Gold Foil

Fluorescent Screen

Here’s how it looked.

Page 68: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

What he expected

Page 69: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Rutherford Expected:

• The alpha particles to pass through without changing direction.

• Because…?• …the positive charges were

thought to be spread out evenly. Alone they were not enough to stop the large alpha particles.

Page 70: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

What was expected:

Page 71: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

What he got

Page 72: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Rutherford’s Gold Foil Results

Page 73: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Rutherford said that having the alpha particle bounce off of the foil was equivalent to seeing a cannon ball bounce off of a piece of tissue paper.

Page 74: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

What Actually Happened…

+

-

--

--

-

Page 75: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

How he explained it:

+

• Atom is mostly empty.• It has a small • dense, positive piece

at center.• Alpha particles

are deflected bythe nucleus if they

get close enough.

---

-- -

Page 76: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Ernest Rutherford’s Results:

• Atom is mostly empty space.

• Suggests that an atom has a nucleus that holds most of

the mass of the atom.

+

---

-- -

Page 77: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

What Actually Happened

Page 78: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Rutherford’s Atom:A sea of electrons that surrounded a positively charged nucleus.

              

 

Page 79: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Rutherford’s Atom• His model of the atom was similar

to the solar system. Like planets, electrons orbited a central, sun-like nucleus.

http://www.broadeducation.com/htmlDemos/AbsorbChem/HistoryAtom/page.htmt

Page 80: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Rutherford’s Atom

              

 

PROTONS

+

Page 81: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Rutherford’s Atom

1. Most of the mass of an atom must be located in a small volume at the center of the atom (the nucleus).

2. The nucleus is made of positively charged particles called protons.

3. The electrons move in a large volume which is mostly empty space.

Page 82: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Problems with Rutherford’s Atom

• According to "classical" theory the electrons should lose energy by radiating electromagnetic radiation, as they are accelerated electric charges.

• They should spiral into the nucleus.

Page 83: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Problems with Rutherford’s Atom

Page 84: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

2 years after Rutherford…. Neils Bohr

1885 - 1962

Page 85: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Bohr Model of the Atom:

Page 86: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Bohr Model of the Atom:

• Electrons are a particular distance from the nucleus

• The energy of each electron is not the same

• Electrons close to center = low Energy

• Electrons farther away = high Energy

Page 87: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Neils Bohr’s Model• There are 2 electrons in the lowest

energy level, 8 electrons in the second energy level, and 18 in the third…

…this is the model of the atom we will use!

Page 88: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

James Chadwick

Page 89: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Chadwick

• In 1932, Chadwick proved the existence of neutrons - elementary particles devoid of any electrical charge.

• Located in the nucleus

(Rutherford also put out the idea that there could be a particle with mass but no charge)

Page 90: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Chadwicks Atom

Page 91: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Chadwick’s Atom Modern Atom

1. Most of the atom's volume is occupied by electrons.

2. The number and arrangement of electrons in an atom determine its chemical properties. 

Page 92: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Chadwick’s Atom

3. The identity of an element is determined by the number of protons in the nucleus.

4. Different isotopes of elements exist and differ only in the number of neutrons and hence the mass of the atom.

Page 93: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Modern Atom

• Electrons• Protons• Neutrons

Page 94: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Alpha & Beta particles

http://wps.prenhall.com/esm_brown_chemistry_9/0,4647,169289-,00.html

Page 95: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Electrons

•  Electrons are tiny particles which behave like clouds

• Electrons carry something called a negative electric charge.

• Electrons are responsible for the chemistry of the atom.

Page 96: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Electronshttp://education.jlab.org/atomtour/listofparticles.html

Page 97: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Atoms

- Atomic diameter ~ 1 to 5x10-8 cm

- Are about 10,000,000 in 1 mm- An H atom weighs 1.67x10-24 g- Note: (6.02x1023) x (1.67x10-24 g) = 1.00 g

- 6.02x1023 = Avogadro’s Number

Page 98: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Atoms are made up of three major parts:Part Found Mass Charge

Electrons Outside 9.1x10-28g (small) -1

Protons Nucleus 1.7x10-24g (1.0 AMU)+1

Neutrons Nucleus 1.7x10-24g (1.0 AMU) 0

Page 99: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Atomic Structure

1) Neutral atoms contain equal number of electrons and protons.

Page 100: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Atomic Structure

2) Atoms can loose or gain electrons to become charged = ions

Page 101: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Atomic Structure

3) Number protons determines the identity of the atom or ion.

Atomic Number

Page 102: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Atomic Structure

4) Mass Number = # Protons + # Neutrons

Page 103: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

• APE MANAtomic Number =Proton # =Electron #

Mass # -Atomic Number

= Neutron #

Page 104: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

SymbolMass Number

Atomic Number

Charge (if ion)

Page 105: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Atomic Mass-

An isotopes contribution is determined by its relative abundance.

Page 106: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

EXAMPLE

How many protons, neutrons and electrons are found in an atom of

13355 Cs

Atomic number = protons and electronsThere are 55 protons and 55 electrons

Mass number = sum of protons and neutrons133 – 55 = 78There are 78 neutrons

Page 107: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

HHydrogenHydrogen

1

1Atomic Mass

Atomic Number

Symbol

Page 108: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

HHydrogenHydrogen

1

1

Protons:Electrons:Neutrons:

Page 109: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

HHydrogenHydrogen

1

1

Protons: 1Electrons:Neutrons:

Page 110: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

HHydrogenHydrogen

1

1

Protons: 1Electrons:1Neutrons:

Page 111: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

HHydrogenHydrogen

1

1

Protons: 1Electrons:1Neutrons:0

Page 112: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

NaSodiumSodium

23

11

Protons:Neutrons: Electrons:

Page 113: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

NaSodiumSodium

23

11

Protons: 11Neutrons:Electrons:

Page 114: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

NaSodiumSodium

23

11

Protons: 11Neutrons:Electrons: 11

Page 115: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

NaSodiumSodium

23

11

Protons: 11Neutrons:Electrons: 11

12

12

Page 116: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

RheniumRhenium

Re186

75

Protons: Neutrons:Electrons:

75

75

111

111

Page 117: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Rhenium IsotopeRhenium Isotope

Re187

75

Protons: Neutrons:Electrons:

75

75

112

112

Page 118: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Re-111

Page 119: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

C-12C

12

6

Page 120: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Isotopes

• Atoms of a given element with differing numbers of neutrons are called isotopes.

Page 121: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Isotopes

• An atom is still the same element if it is missing an electron. The same goes for isotopes. They are still the same element. They are just a little different from every other atom of the same element.

Page 122: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Atomic Weight-

An isotopes contribution is determined by its relative abundance.

Page 123: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Atomic numbers are whole numbers

Mass numbers are whole numbers

The atomic mass is not a whole number.

Page 124: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Calculating Atomic Mass

atomic mass = (% abundance of isotope 1)(mass of isotope 1) +(% abundance of isotope 2)(mass of isotope 2) +

(% abundance of isotope 3)(mass of isotope 3)

+ ...

Page 125: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Calculating Atomic Mass

Answer the following questions:

"How many naturally occurring isotopes does carbon have?"

"What is the abundance of each of the isotopes?"

Page 126: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Isotope Atomic Mass Relative Abundance

C-12 12.00 98.93

C-13 13.00 1.07

The sum of all the fractions of abundance The sum of all the fractions of abundance of each naturally occurring isotopes of each naturally occurring isotopes

should equal 1.00 or 100%.should equal 1.00 or 100%.

Page 127: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

atomic mass of carbon =

(0.9893)(12.000 amu)

+(0.0107)(13.00 amu)

= 11.868 amu + 0.1391 amu

= 12.0107 amu

Page 128: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

What is the atomic mass of Lithium

Isotope Atomic Relative Mass Abundance

Li-6 6.015 7.59Li-7 7.016 92.41

Page 129: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

What is the atomic mass of Lithium

0.0759*6.015 = + 0.9241* 7.016 =

0.45650.45656.48286.4828

6.93936.9393

Page 130: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

What is the atomic mass of Oxygen?

Page 131: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

Isotope Atomic Mass Relative Abundance

O-16 16 99.757

O-17 17 0.038

O-18 18 0.205

Page 132: Chapter 3 Atomic Structure Objective: You will explain why the model of the atom changed throughout history.

What is the atomic mass of Oxygen 0.99757*16 =

+ 0.00038*17= + 0.00205*18=

15.9611215.96112

0.006460.00646+0.0369+0.0369

16.0044816.00448