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History
of
Atomic Theory
RWF Chapter 3 Notes
Old Dead Greek Guys
Democritus—
matter is
made up of indivisible
particles
Aristotle—matter is
continuous
The Beginning of
Modern Chemistry
or
Old Dead Guys from the 18th
and 19th Centuries
Mme. Et M. Lavoisier
Antoine Lavoisier
The
Father of Modern
Chemistry
Law of Conservation of Matter
By conducting careful
experimentation discovered 33
substances that could not be
broken down. He called these
elements.
Joseph Louis Proust
Law
of Constant
Composition
John Dalton
John Dalton
An Early Wildcat
4
Postulates:
Matter is made up of tiny
particles called atoms.
All atoms of an element are
identical.
Atoms are neither created
nor destroyed.
John Dalton
An Early Wildcat
A
given compound always
has the same relative
numbers and kinds of atoms.
J. J. Thomson
J. J. Thomson
Cathode
Ray—radiation
emitted from the cathode in a
cathode ray tube
Cathode Ray Tube—Tube
containing no or little gas,
electrodes at each end.
J. J. Thomson
Put
charged plates above and
below the tube. Found that the
beam of radiation bends
toward the positively charged
plate, and away from the
negatively charged plate.
J. J. Thomson
Conclusion:
Cathode Rays are
made of negatively charged
particles called electrons.
Measured the ratio of the
electron’s mass to charge
Plum Pudding Model
Robert Millikan
Measured
experimentally the
charge of electrons.
Calculated from Thomson’s
work the mass of an
electron.
Earnest Rutherford
Gold
foil experiment
Found that atoms are made
up of dense nucleus with
empty space around it where
electrons whiz around
Rutherford Model
Niels Bohr
Bohr Model
Subatomic Particles
Protons
Neutrons
Electrons
Protons
Positive
electric charge
Mass of 1 amu (atomic
mass unit)
Live in the nucleus
Neutron
Electrically
neutral
Mass of 1 amu {Actually,
its mass is slightly more
than a proton}
Lives in the nucleus
Electrons
Negative
electric charge
Mass of zero*
Lives outside the nucleus in
“Electron Clouds”
Atomic Number
The
number of protons in
an atom
What makes one element
different from another
In a neutral atom, the
number of protons = the
number of electrons
Ions
Atoms
are usually electrically
neutral—that is they usually
have equal numbers of protons
and electrons
An ion is an atom that has a
positive or negative charge
Ions are formed when atoms
lose or gain electrons
Mass Number
The
number of protons +
neutrons (nucleons)
Isotopes
Atoms
of the same element
that have different numbers
of neutrons, different
masses.
Isotopes
Carbon-12:
6 protons, 6
neutrons, 6 electrons
Carbon-14: 6 protons, 8
neutrons, 6 electrons
Atomic Mass
Atomic
mass is the average
mass of all the isotopes of the
element
Weighted by abundances of
isotopes
Based on Carbon-12 isotope:
def’n of atomic mass unit
Radioactivity
Henri
Becquerel Accidentally
Discovered Radioactivity
Marie
and Pierre Curie Studied
radioactivity and discovered
other radioactive elements.
Nuclear Stability
Smaller
atoms: ratio of
protons to neutrons = 1:1
Larger atoms stable with
ratio of 2:3
Earnest Rutherford
Discovered
3 types of
radiation:
Alpha particles: two protons
and two neutrons, mass of
4amu, positive 2 charge.
42He, 42a
Earnest Rutherford
Beta
particles: made up of
electrons, negative 1 charge,
0
0
no mass. 1-e 1-b
Gamma radiation: made up of
electromagnetic radiation (like
x-rays). No particles, no
mass, no charge.
Radioactivity
Strong
Nuclear Force holds the
nucleus together.
If the nucleus is unstable, it breaks
apart.
It may emit an alpha particle (two
protons and two neutrons)
It may emit a beta particle (a neutron
breaks apart into a proton which stays
in the nucleus and a electron which
zings out)
Gamma
radiation is emitted
as a release of the strong
nuclear force.
It may break in two, making
two or more smaller atoms
Nuclear changes
Fission:
a large unstable
atom breaks apart into 2 or
more pieces, releasing
energy
Fusion: small atoms crunch
together to form larger atoms
Half-life
The
half-life of a radioactive
substance is the time it takes
for half of the sample of the
substance to decay. Half-life
can be in microseconds or in
thousands of years, depending
on the substance.
Half-life
For
example, if the half-life
of a substance is 2 days,
how much of a 12.0 gram
sample would you have left
after 2 days? After 4 days?
After 8 days? After 1 day?
Mass number
51
Cr
24
Atomic number
2+
51
Cr
24
16 2O
8
51
Cr
24
Chromium-51
Da Rules
Protons = atomic number
Neutrons = mass – protons
Mass = protons + neutrons
Electrons = protons - charge
Z = ATOMIC NUMBER
A = MASS NUMBER
Atomic
number
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
13
17
28
3
53
Mass
number
1
27
62
7
98
P = PROTONS
N = NEUTRONS
E = ELECTRONS
P
N
0
E
charge
0
3+
18
10
1+
66
0
55
0
144 93 0
Z = ATOMIC NUMBER
A = MASS NUMBER
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
P = PROTONS
N = NEUTRONS
E = ELECTRONS
Atomic
number
Mass
number
P
N
E
1
13
17
28
3
53
55
93
1
27
35
62
7
119
98
237
1
13
17
28
3
53
55
93
0
14
18
34
4
66
43
144
1
10 3+
18 128
2 1+
53
55
93
charge
Z = ATOMC NUMBER
A = MASS NUMBER
Atomic
number
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
93
92
8
28
4
Mass
number
32
237
40
61
23
P = PROTONS
N = NEUTRONS
E = ELECTRONS
P
N
16
E
charge
0
0
146
0
22+
5
0
12
0
31 28 0
Z = ATOMC NUMBER
A = MASS NUMBER
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
P = PROTONS
N = NEUTRONS
E = ELECTRONS
Atomic
number
Mass
number
P
N
E
16
93
92
8
28
4
12
28
32
237
238
40
61
9
23
59
16
93
92
8
28
4
12
28
16
144
146
32
33
5
11
31
16
93
92
10 226 2+
4
12
28
charge
Quiz
1. State the law of
conservation of
matter.
2. What are Dalton’s
postulates?
3. What will a cathode
ray do if a positive
electrode is placed
near the beam?
4. Which particle has
a positive charge?
5. Which particle has
a negative charge?
6. Which particle has
a neutral charge?
7. Which particle(s)
has a mass of one
amu?
8. Which particle(s)
has a mass of zero?
9. What is the atomic
number of lithium?
10. What is the atomic
mass of chlorine?
11. How many
electrons will a neutral
atom of iron have?
12. How many
neutrons will an atom
of fluorine have?
13. How many
electrons will a
sodium ion have if it
has a positive one
charge?
14. What are the three
types of radioactive
decay?
15. Which experiment
showed that an atom
has a dense nucleus
where most of the
mass is located?
16. In the following
diagram label A, B, and
C as Alpha, Beta, or
Gamma radiation.