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Atomic Structure & the Periodic Table
Objectives

   Identify important developments in the history of atomic theory.
   Summarize Dalton’s atomic theory.
   Describe the size of an atom.
   Distinguish among protons, electrons, and neutrons in terms of
    relative mass and change.
   Describe the structure of an atom, including the location of the
    protons, electrons, and neutrons with respect to the nucleus.
   Explain how the atomic number identifies an element.
   Use the atomic number and mass number of an element to find the
    number of protons, electrons, and neutrons.
   Explain how isotopes differ and why the atomic masses of elements
    are not whole numbers.
   Calculate the average atomic mass of an element from isotope data.


    TEKS:
    2A, 2B, 2C, 2D, 2E, 3A, 3C, 3E, 4A, 4C,4D, 5A, 6A, 6B, 6C, 8A, 9B,
    10A, 11A
Early Models of the Atom

400 B.C. – Democritus proposed the existence of
fundamental particles of matter that were indivisible and
indestructible - “atomos”.

Aristotle thought all matter was continuous; he did not
believe in atoms.

Neither idea was supported by any experimental
evidence – speculation only.
Foundations of Atomic Theory
 The late 1700’s –definitions and basic laws had
  been discovered and accepted by chemists.

   Element – substance that cannot be broken down by
    ordinary chemical means.

   Chemical Reaction – transformation of substance or
    substances into one or more new substances.
 Law of Conservation of Mass – mass cannot be created or
  destroyed just changed from one form to another. (Antoine
  Lavosier)

 Law of Definite Proportions – a chemical compound contains
  exactly the same elements in the same proportion regardless of
  sample size. (Joseph Proust from work of Gay-Lussac &
  Amadeo Avogadro – 1802/1804)

 Law of Multiple Proportions – If two or more different
  compounds are composed of the same two elements, then the
  ratio of the masses of those elements will always exist as a ratio
  of small whole numbers. (John Dalton - 1808)
Dalton’s Atomic Theory

 All elements are composed of tiny indivisible particles
  called atoms.
 Atoms of the same element are identical. The atoms of
  one element are different from the atoms of another
  element.
 Atoms combine in simple whole-number ratios.
 Atoms are separated, joined or rearranged in chemical
  reactions. Atoms of one element are never changed into
  atoms of another element as a result of a chemical
  reaction.
Discovery of Electrons

 1897 – J.J. Thomson – “Cathode Ray Tube Experiment”

    Showed existence of first know sub-atomic particle

    Determined charge to mass ratio of the electron

 1909 – Robert Millikan found the charge of the electron –
  “Millikan’s Oil Drop Experiment”
Cathode Ray Tube
                              High Voltage

      Gas at very low
      pressure


                                             Metal disk
                                             (anode)
Metal disk                    Cathode Ray
(cathode)                     (electrons)
Cathode Ray Tube
                                         High Voltage

      Gas at very low
                                  Negative plate
      pressure


                                                        Metal disk
                                                        (anode)
Metal disk              Positive plate   Cathode Ray
(cathode)                                (electrons)
Rutherford’s Gold Foil Experiment

 Rutherford, Geiger & Marsden (1912) -showed that
  most of the atom was empty space, but that atoms
  had a solid, positive core.



               Alpha Particles

Lead
shield
              Radioactive
              source
Discovery of Protons

 1919 -J.J. Thomson & James Chadwick–
 discovered particles traveling opposite of the
 cathode rays.

   Determined existence, mass and charge of protons

   Idea had actually been previously proposed by
    Goldstein in 1886.
Cathode Ray Tube
                                    High Voltage
Gas at very
low pressure
                   Negative plate
protons


                                                   Metal disk
                                                   (anode)
  Metal disk
             Positive plate         Cathode Ray
  (cathode)                         (electrons)
Neutrons

 James Chadwick 1932 - confirmed the existence of the
  neutron. Neutrons are subatomic particles with no
  charge but with a mass nearly equal to that of a proton.


 Walter Bothe had first reasoned the existence of a third
  subatomic particle in 1930.


 Bothe’s work was based in part on that of Henry Mosely
  who showed by X-ray analysis that not all atoms of the
  same element were identical. (Isotopes – 1907)
Counting Particles
 Atomic Number = number of protons

 Mass Number = number of protons and
 neutrons

 Atomic Mass = average mass of the
 isotopes
 (also known as atomic weight)
Periodic Table


                     atomic number # of protons

mass number      8

-atomic number         O            round to 16 - mass
                                    number ( # protons
# of neutrons                       & neutrons)
                      15.999
                                     unrounded –mass
                                     number (average
                                     mass of the
                                     isotopes)
Masses of Atoms

 A scale designed for atoms gives their small atomic
  masses in atomic mass units (amu)
 An atom of 12C was assigned an exact mass of 12.00
  amu
 Relative masses of all other atoms was determined
  by comparing each to the mass of 12C
 An atom twice as heavy has a mass of 24.00 amu.
  An atom half as heavy is 6.00 amu.
Atomic Mass

 Listed on the periodic table

 Gives the mass of “average” atom of each element
  compared to 12C

 Average atom based on all the
  isotopes and their abundance %.

 Atomic mass is not a whole number
                                           Na
  due to isotopes.
                                          22.99
Isotopes

 Isotopes – atoms of the same element with different
     numbers of neutrons.

     Oxygen-16       Oxygen-17         Oxygen-18
      16              17                18
        8               8                8

p+       ‗‗‗‗               ‗‗‗‗            ‗‗‗‗

e-       ‗‗‗‗               ‗‗‗‗            ‗‗‗‗

nº       ‗‗‗‗               ‗‗‗‗            ‗‗‗‗
Calculating Average Atomic Mass

 Percent(%) abundance of isotopes
 Mass of each isotope of that element
 Weighted average =
  mass isotope1(%) + mass isotope2(%) + …
      100                  100
Atomic Mass of Magnesium

  Isotopes Mass of Isotope        Abundance
  24Mg     =    24.0 amu            78.70%
  25Mg     =     25.0 amu           10.13%
 26Mg      =     26.0 amu           11.17%
Atomic mass (average mass) Mg = 24.3 amu



     Mg
     24.3
#16 The element copper has naturally occurring isotopes
with mass numbers of 63 and 65. The relative abundance
and atomic masses are 69.2% for mass = 63.0 amu, and
30.8% for mass = 65.0 amu. Calculate the average
atomic mass of copper.
 Finding An Isotopic Mass

 Naturally occurring boron is 80.20% boron-
 11 (atomic mass 11.0 amu) and 19.80% of a
 different isotope of boron. What must the
 mass of this isotope be if the average atomic
 mass of boron is 10.81 amu?
Radioactivity
 Mosely’s X-ray analysis of atoms was an attempt to
  explain radioactivity.

 1896 – Henri Becquerel – Uranium spontaneously emits
  energy.

 1898 – Marie & Pierre Curie – first isolated a radioactive
  element - Radium
Properties of Subatomic Particles
Particles   Symbol   Charge   Relative        Mass
                              Mass
Electron     e-       1-      1/1840 amu   9.11 x 10-28 g

Proton       p+       1+      1 amu        1.67 x 10-24 g

Neutron      nº       0       1 amu        1.67 x 10-24 g
“Planetary” Model of the Atom

 Niels Bohr (1913) – developed the “planetary” model of
  the atom based upon the following:

    Rutherford’s Gold Foil Experiment

    E = mc2 – Albert Einstein (1905)

    Quantum Theory – Max Planck (1910)
Atom
            10-13 cm
electrons

                       protons
                       neutrons


            nucleus




  10-8 cm
Size of the Atom
 Aluminum Atom
       150 m
                       e-
1 mm           Outside
               edge of Al     e-               e-
               atom                      stands
                                                                 e-
                 e-
                            goal post

                                                                       e-
                                         nucleus - size
               e-                        of a marble


                                                               e-
                       e-
                                        e-                Texas Memorial Stadium @ UT

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Atomic Theory

  • 1. Atomic Structure & the Periodic Table
  • 2. Objectives  Identify important developments in the history of atomic theory.  Summarize Dalton’s atomic theory.  Describe the size of an atom.  Distinguish among protons, electrons, and neutrons in terms of relative mass and change.  Describe the structure of an atom, including the location of the protons, electrons, and neutrons with respect to the nucleus.  Explain how the atomic number identifies an element.  Use the atomic number and mass number of an element to find the number of protons, electrons, and neutrons.  Explain how isotopes differ and why the atomic masses of elements are not whole numbers.  Calculate the average atomic mass of an element from isotope data. TEKS: 2A, 2B, 2C, 2D, 2E, 3A, 3C, 3E, 4A, 4C,4D, 5A, 6A, 6B, 6C, 8A, 9B, 10A, 11A
  • 3. Early Models of the Atom 400 B.C. – Democritus proposed the existence of fundamental particles of matter that were indivisible and indestructible - “atomos”. Aristotle thought all matter was continuous; he did not believe in atoms. Neither idea was supported by any experimental evidence – speculation only.
  • 4. Foundations of Atomic Theory  The late 1700’s –definitions and basic laws had been discovered and accepted by chemists.  Element – substance that cannot be broken down by ordinary chemical means.  Chemical Reaction – transformation of substance or substances into one or more new substances.
  • 5.  Law of Conservation of Mass – mass cannot be created or destroyed just changed from one form to another. (Antoine Lavosier)  Law of Definite Proportions – a chemical compound contains exactly the same elements in the same proportion regardless of sample size. (Joseph Proust from work of Gay-Lussac & Amadeo Avogadro – 1802/1804)  Law of Multiple Proportions – If two or more different compounds are composed of the same two elements, then the ratio of the masses of those elements will always exist as a ratio of small whole numbers. (John Dalton - 1808)
  • 6. Dalton’s Atomic Theory  All elements are composed of tiny indivisible particles called atoms.  Atoms of the same element are identical. The atoms of one element are different from the atoms of another element.  Atoms combine in simple whole-number ratios.  Atoms are separated, joined or rearranged in chemical reactions. Atoms of one element are never changed into atoms of another element as a result of a chemical reaction.
  • 7. Discovery of Electrons  1897 – J.J. Thomson – “Cathode Ray Tube Experiment”  Showed existence of first know sub-atomic particle  Determined charge to mass ratio of the electron  1909 – Robert Millikan found the charge of the electron – “Millikan’s Oil Drop Experiment”
  • 8. Cathode Ray Tube High Voltage Gas at very low pressure Metal disk (anode) Metal disk Cathode Ray (cathode) (electrons)
  • 9. Cathode Ray Tube High Voltage Gas at very low Negative plate pressure Metal disk (anode) Metal disk Positive plate Cathode Ray (cathode) (electrons)
  • 10. Rutherford’s Gold Foil Experiment  Rutherford, Geiger & Marsden (1912) -showed that most of the atom was empty space, but that atoms had a solid, positive core. Alpha Particles Lead shield Radioactive source
  • 11. Discovery of Protons  1919 -J.J. Thomson & James Chadwick– discovered particles traveling opposite of the cathode rays.  Determined existence, mass and charge of protons  Idea had actually been previously proposed by Goldstein in 1886.
  • 12. Cathode Ray Tube High Voltage Gas at very low pressure Negative plate protons Metal disk (anode) Metal disk Positive plate Cathode Ray (cathode) (electrons)
  • 13. Neutrons  James Chadwick 1932 - confirmed the existence of the neutron. Neutrons are subatomic particles with no charge but with a mass nearly equal to that of a proton.  Walter Bothe had first reasoned the existence of a third subatomic particle in 1930.  Bothe’s work was based in part on that of Henry Mosely who showed by X-ray analysis that not all atoms of the same element were identical. (Isotopes – 1907)
  • 14. Counting Particles  Atomic Number = number of protons  Mass Number = number of protons and neutrons  Atomic Mass = average mass of the isotopes (also known as atomic weight)
  • 15. Periodic Table atomic number # of protons mass number 8 -atomic number O round to 16 - mass number ( # protons # of neutrons & neutrons) 15.999 unrounded –mass number (average mass of the isotopes)
  • 16. Masses of Atoms  A scale designed for atoms gives their small atomic masses in atomic mass units (amu)  An atom of 12C was assigned an exact mass of 12.00 amu  Relative masses of all other atoms was determined by comparing each to the mass of 12C  An atom twice as heavy has a mass of 24.00 amu. An atom half as heavy is 6.00 amu.
  • 17. Atomic Mass  Listed on the periodic table  Gives the mass of “average” atom of each element compared to 12C  Average atom based on all the isotopes and their abundance %.  Atomic mass is not a whole number Na due to isotopes. 22.99
  • 18. Isotopes  Isotopes – atoms of the same element with different numbers of neutrons. Oxygen-16 Oxygen-17 Oxygen-18 16 17 18 8 8 8 p+ ‗‗‗‗ ‗‗‗‗ ‗‗‗‗ e- ‗‗‗‗ ‗‗‗‗ ‗‗‗‗ nº ‗‗‗‗ ‗‗‗‗ ‗‗‗‗
  • 19. Calculating Average Atomic Mass  Percent(%) abundance of isotopes  Mass of each isotope of that element  Weighted average = mass isotope1(%) + mass isotope2(%) + … 100 100
  • 20. Atomic Mass of Magnesium Isotopes Mass of Isotope Abundance 24Mg = 24.0 amu 78.70% 25Mg = 25.0 amu 10.13% 26Mg = 26.0 amu 11.17% Atomic mass (average mass) Mg = 24.3 amu Mg 24.3
  • 21. #16 The element copper has naturally occurring isotopes with mass numbers of 63 and 65. The relative abundance and atomic masses are 69.2% for mass = 63.0 amu, and 30.8% for mass = 65.0 amu. Calculate the average atomic mass of copper.
  • 22.  Finding An Isotopic Mass Naturally occurring boron is 80.20% boron- 11 (atomic mass 11.0 amu) and 19.80% of a different isotope of boron. What must the mass of this isotope be if the average atomic mass of boron is 10.81 amu?
  • 23. Radioactivity  Mosely’s X-ray analysis of atoms was an attempt to explain radioactivity.  1896 – Henri Becquerel – Uranium spontaneously emits energy.  1898 – Marie & Pierre Curie – first isolated a radioactive element - Radium
  • 24. Properties of Subatomic Particles Particles Symbol Charge Relative Mass Mass Electron e- 1- 1/1840 amu 9.11 x 10-28 g Proton p+ 1+ 1 amu 1.67 x 10-24 g Neutron nº 0 1 amu 1.67 x 10-24 g
  • 25. “Planetary” Model of the Atom  Niels Bohr (1913) – developed the “planetary” model of the atom based upon the following:  Rutherford’s Gold Foil Experiment  E = mc2 – Albert Einstein (1905)  Quantum Theory – Max Planck (1910)
  • 26. Atom 10-13 cm electrons protons neutrons nucleus 10-8 cm
  • 27. Size of the Atom Aluminum Atom 150 m e- 1 mm Outside edge of Al e- e- atom stands e- e- goal post e- nucleus - size e- of a marble e- e- e- Texas Memorial Stadium @ UT