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Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of electrons of an element? 3.How do you find the number of neutrons of an element?
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Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

Dec 13, 2015

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Albert Horton
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Page 1: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

Wake-up

1. Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons.

2. How do you find the number of electrons of an element?

3. How do you find the number of neutrons of an element?

Page 2: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

Isotopes and Relative Abundance

What is an isotope?What is relative abundance?

Page 3: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

Examine the information of hydrogen below and answer the following questions. Do not

round the mass number!

Page 4: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

What element and chemical symbol is shown?

Hydrogen and H

Page 5: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

What is the atomic number for this element?

1

Page 6: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

What is the atomic mass for this element? Don’t round

1.00794

Page 7: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

List the number of protons, electrons, and neutrons (in that order)

1 p+, 1 e-, 0 n0

Page 8: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

What is an ISOTOPE?• Isotope = atoms that have the same number of

PROTONS but different number of NEUTRONS.• Chemically alike but with varying mass numbers

Page 9: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

APPLE VARITIES

Page 10: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

Examine the mass number of the various elements on the periodic table. Very few are even. This is

due to isotopes. The mass number is better known as the Atomic Mass or Atomic Unit. This number represents the AVERAGE mass of all the naturally

occurring isotopes of an element.

Page 11: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

Atomic MassAverage of the masses of an elements (atom)

naturally occurring isotopes

Page 12: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

Relative Abundance

The abundance isotopes of an element as naturally found on a planet (%)

Relative abundance of elements on

Earth’s surface

Page 13: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

Review NotationsHyphen notation: Write the element name and

the mass number

Hydrogen - 1

Page 14: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

Review NotationsNuclear notation: See diagram below

Page 15: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

In other words, all the isotopes of the same element (atom) have the SAME

but DIFFERENT

Atomic Number (p+ and e-)

Mass Number (specifically n0)

Page 16: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

Isotope: Hydrogen-1Name: Protium

(Most common isotope of Hydrogen has a 99.985% relative abundance)

Page 17: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

Isotope: Hydrogen-1

# of Protons: 1# of Electrons: 1# of Neutrons: 0

Page 18: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

Isotope: Hydrogen-2Name: Deuterium

(Relative Abundance: 0.015% of Hydrogen)

Page 19: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

Isotope: Hydrogen-2

# of Protons: 1# of Electrons: 1# of Neutrons: 1

Page 20: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

Isotope: Hydrogen-3Name: Tritium

(Relative Abundance: Very small amounts of Hydrogen)

Page 21: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

Isotope: Hydrogen-3

# of Protons: 1# of Electrons: 1# of Neutrons: 2

Page 22: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

Calculating Average Atomic MassFormula:

(% abundance #1)(Mass #1) + (% abundance #2)(Mass #2)100

Page 23: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

Calculating Average Atomic Mass #1

You have a box containing two sizes of marbles.

• 25% of the marbles have a mass of 2.0 g.

• 75% of the marbles have a mass of 3.0 g.

Calculate the average weight of the marble.

Page 24: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

Example #2: Rubidium has two common isotopes, 85Rb and 87Rb. If the abundance of 85Rb

is 72.2% and the abundance of 87Rb is 27.8%, what is the average atomic mass of rubidium?

Page 25: Wake-up 1.Explain the relationship between the following: atomic number, mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons. 2.How do you find the number of.

Example #3: The element boron has two stable isotopes. Boron-10 has an atomic mass

of 10.0129 and a percentage in nature of

19.78% The atomic mass of boron-11 is

11.0093 and its percentage in nature is

80.22% What is the average atomic mass

for boron?