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1 Chapter 4 – Atoms and Elements Atoms Protons, Neutrons, and Electrons Elements Periodic Table Ions Isotopes
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Chapter 4 – Atoms and Elements - feldwinn.comfeldwinn.com/Chem101/Overheads/Chapter_4/Slides.pdf · negatively charged particles. ... • Electrical charge is a fundamental property

Mar 11, 2018

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Page 1: Chapter 4 – Atoms and Elements - feldwinn.comfeldwinn.com/Chem101/Overheads/Chapter_4/Slides.pdf · negatively charged particles. ... • Electrical charge is a fundamental property

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Chapter 4 – Atoms and Elements

• Atoms• Protons, Neutrons, and Electrons• Elements• Periodic Table• Ions• Isotopes

Page 2: Chapter 4 – Atoms and Elements - feldwinn.comfeldwinn.com/Chem101/Overheads/Chapter_4/Slides.pdf · negatively charged particles. ... • Electrical charge is a fundamental property

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Atoms and ElementsAtoms

The e- was discovered while investigating cathode rays which are the rays that are emitted when a high potential difference (high voltage) is applied between two electrodes in a glass tube. J.J. Thomas showed that cathode rays are streams of negatively charged particles. He found that regardless of the material he used the same particles were found. He concluded that they are part of the makeup of all atoms we now call the electrons.

Page 3: Chapter 4 – Atoms and Elements - feldwinn.comfeldwinn.com/Chem101/Overheads/Chapter_4/Slides.pdf · negatively charged particles. ... • Electrical charge is a fundamental property

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Atoms and ElementsAtoms

Robert Millikan carried out experiments that enabled the charge of the electron to be calculated. Since each drop contained more than one electron he took the charge of the electron to be the smallest increment of charge between droplets. The modern value is - e with e = 1.602×10-19 C.

Page 4: Chapter 4 – Atoms and Elements - feldwinn.comfeldwinn.com/Chem101/Overheads/Chapter_4/Slides.pdf · negatively charged particles. ... • Electrical charge is a fundamental property

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Atoms and ElementsAtmos

Ernest Rutherford knew that some elements emitted positively charged particles which he called α particles. Rutherford took a beam of α particles and shot it at a piece of Pt foil that was only a few atoms thick. The experiment showed that almost all the α particles passed through and were deflected only very slightly but about 1 in 20,000 were deflected by more than 90º. Therefore, the jelly model for atoms was wrong.

Page 5: Chapter 4 – Atoms and Elements - feldwinn.comfeldwinn.com/Chem101/Overheads/Chapter_4/Slides.pdf · negatively charged particles. ... • Electrical charge is a fundamental property

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Atoms and Elements Protons, Neutron, and Electrons

1.675×10-27 Kg1.0087 amu

0nneutron

1.673×10-27 Kg1.0073 amu1.602×10-19pproton

9.109×10-31Kg0.00055 amu

-1.602×10-19e-electron

MassCharge, CSymbolParticle

Parts of an Atom

Atoms are made up of three types of elementary particles

Electron Cloud: Contains electrons (negatively charged, 10-9 m in diameter)

Nucleus: Contains protons and neutrons (positively charged, makes up most of the mass of the atom, ~10-14 m in diameter)

Page 6: Chapter 4 – Atoms and Elements - feldwinn.comfeldwinn.com/Chem101/Overheads/Chapter_4/Slides.pdf · negatively charged particles. ... • Electrical charge is a fundamental property

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Atoms and Elements Protons, Neutrons, and Electrons

Electrical Charge

• Electrical charge is a fundamental property of protons and electrons

• Positive and negative electrical charges attract each other• Positive-positive and negative-negative charges repel each other• Positive and negative charges cancel each other out so that a

proton and an electron, when paired, are charge neutral

Page 7: Chapter 4 – Atoms and Elements - feldwinn.comfeldwinn.com/Chem101/Overheads/Chapter_4/Slides.pdf · negatively charged particles. ... • Electrical charge is a fundamental property

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Atoms and ElementsElements

Elemental atoms are electrically neutral therefore they have the same number of protons and electrons

Atomic Number (Z) = The number of protons

Mass Number (A) = The number of protons plus the number of neutrons

Note: This is the number on the periodic table

Page 8: Chapter 4 – Atoms and Elements - feldwinn.comfeldwinn.com/Chem101/Overheads/Chapter_4/Slides.pdf · negatively charged particles. ... • Electrical charge is a fundamental property

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Atoms and ElementsPeriodic Table

• Elements are arranged by increasing atomic number• Vertical columns are called groups• Groups 1, 2 and 13-18 (main groups)• Horizontal rows are called period• The four rectangular regions of the periodic table are called (s, p, d, and f) bocks

Page 9: Chapter 4 – Atoms and Elements - feldwinn.comfeldwinn.com/Chem101/Overheads/Chapter_4/Slides.pdf · negatively charged particles. ... • Electrical charge is a fundamental property

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Atoms and ElementsPeriodic Table

Group 1 (Alkali Metals) Properties: soft, lustrous, metallic, low melting temperatures, and highly reactive

Group 2 (Alkaline Earth Metals)Properties: similar to group 1 metals however they react less vigorously

Transition Metals (The members of the d block minus group 12)Get their name because these elements are transitional in character between the vigorously reactive metals in the sblock and the less reactive metals on the left of the p block

Group 18 (Noble Gases)Properties: colorless, odorless, gasses, which are inert due to their full octets

Page 10: Chapter 4 – Atoms and Elements - feldwinn.comfeldwinn.com/Chem101/Overheads/Chapter_4/Slides.pdf · negatively charged particles. ... • Electrical charge is a fundamental property

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Atoms and ElementsPeriodic Table

Metal: conducts electricity, has a luster, is malleable, and is ductileNonmetal: does not conduct electricity and is neither malleable nor ductileMetalloid: Has the appearance and some properties of a metal but behaves

chemically like a nonmetal

Page 11: Chapter 4 – Atoms and Elements - feldwinn.comfeldwinn.com/Chem101/Overheads/Chapter_4/Slides.pdf · negatively charged particles. ... • Electrical charge is a fundamental property

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Atoms and ElementsIons

General Rule: Atoms lose or gain electrons until they have the same number of electrons as the nearest noble-gas atom

Cations:Elements in groups 1 and 2

Charge usually equal to the group numberd-block and heavier elements

Multiple possible charges

Anions:Forms a charge equal to its distance form the noble-gas group

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Atoms and ElementsIons

Typical cations and anions formed by select elements.