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Models of Atomic Structure
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Page 1: Models of Atomic Structure. Dalton’s Small Dense Sphere.

Models of Atomic Structure

Page 2: Models of Atomic Structure. Dalton’s Small Dense Sphere.

Dalton’s Small Dense Sphere

Page 3: Models of Atomic Structure. Dalton’s Small Dense Sphere.

The Structure of the Atom

• The atom is defined as the smallest particle of an element that retains all the chemical properties of that element.

• In the late 1800’s, scientists believed that atoms were electrical in nature.

• Sir Crookes set out to prove the electrical nature of atoms by using a cathode-ray tube.

Page 4: Models of Atomic Structure. Dalton’s Small Dense Sphere.
Page 5: Models of Atomic Structure. Dalton’s Small Dense Sphere.

• In a cathode-ray tube, electrons travel as a ray through a gas at low pressure from the cathode (negative electrode) to the anode (positive electrode).

• Crookes attached the cathode and the anode to a power source. When he turned the power on, a glowing beam appeared between the electrodes.

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• He tested the glowing beam for magnetic effect by using a magnet. When the magnet was placed near the tube, the cathode ray was deflected the same way a wire carrying electric current would. Electric current was known to have a negative charge, so Crookes determined that the cathode ray was also negative .

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• Crookes also noticed a shadow behind the anode, which meant that the source of the ray was the cathode (the ray was coming from the negative electrode).

• He determined with certainty, that the ray must have a negative charge.

Page 9: Models of Atomic Structure. Dalton’s Small Dense Sphere.

Joseph John Thomson

• In 1897, J. J. Thomson performed a similar experiment. He used a cathode-ray tube with an anode and a cathode, but at one end he put a florescent screen. When the cathode ray hit the screen, the ray left a mark.

• When he used a heavier gas in the tube, the ray left an even bigger mark. He concluded the larger the mark on the screen, the larger the negative charge.

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• Thomson later discovered that beside the cathode ray was another ray. The second ray was positive. Thomson discovered positively charged particles.

• Thomson’s improved model of the atom had negative and positive particle. This atom was commonly referred to as the plum pudding model.

Page 11: Models of Atomic Structure. Dalton’s Small Dense Sphere.

Robert Millikan

• In 1909, Robert Millikan determined the mass of an electron to be 9.109 x 10-31 kg. His experiment also confirmed that the electron carried a negative charge.

• His experiment was called the oil drop experiment.

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Becquerel• In 1896, Becquerel was experimenting with

black photography paper and uranium. He would spread the uranium on the paper and expose the paper/uranium to sunlight.

• The paper would be overexposed as expected, but under the uranium was not exposed.

• More importantly, around the spots where the uranium was, there were rays.

• Becquerel discovered radioactivity.

Page 13: Models of Atomic Structure. Dalton’s Small Dense Sphere.

Ernest Rutherford

• In 1911, Rutherford took the research on radioactivity even further. He found alpha particles (high speed positively charged particles). He also found beta particles (high speed negatively charged particles).

• Rutherford’s experiment is called the gold foil experiment.

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• In the gold foil experiment, Rutherford shot alpha particles at a thin piece of gold foil. Surrounding the gold foil was a zinc sulfide screen.

• Each time an alpha particle hit the gold foil, a flash of light was produced. Some of the particles passed through the metal and hit the screen as expected. Some of the particles deflected a bit, which was also expected.

• What caught Rutherford’s eye was the particles that came back and hit the screen in front of the foil.

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• Rutherford rethought the model of the atom. He put a cluster of positive particles in the center of the atom (nucleus) and surrounded it with negative particles.

• When the emission hit the negative particles, it went straight through to the screen. When the emission came near the nucleus, it was deflected a bit. It was when the emission hit the nucleus that it bounced right back.

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• In 1932, Irene Joliet Curie and her husband, Frederic, bombarded Beryllium with alpha particles. A high powered beam was formed.

• Later in 1932, Sir James Chadwick tested Mme. Curie’s high powered penetrating beam. He put a magnet around the beam and found that it did not react. Chadwick discovered a neutral particle in the atom.

• The neutral particle is the neutron and it has relatively the same mass as the proton, but does not have a charge.