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Download A quick summary about atoms: Atomic masses and/or hydrogen
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A quick summary about atoms: Atoms were used by John Dalton (1804) to explain the Law of Definite Proportions: if elements combine only in definite proportions by weight, the simplest explanation is that whole numbers of atoms combine into specific molecules. Atoms were considered to be indivisible, the smallest possible pieces of matter. Atoms were not considered real by many chemists for at least 50 years, but... Atomic masses and/or hydrogen Atomic masses were measured chemically in the 19th Century these are AVERAGE masses Atomic masses are nearly exact multiples of the mass of hydrogen William Prout (1815) suggested that all atomic weights are exact multiples of hydrogen and hydrogen is the basic stuff of matter 1 Sideshow: electrons in atoms occupy specific energy states Becquerel and luminescence (1890s) Luminescence: material glows for a time after exposure to light. Fluorescence: material glows while light shines on it. How to measure luminescence and fluorescence? 2 Becquerel and uranium (1890s) Certain uranium salts are phosphorescent Salts in a drawer with wrapped film Film shows fogging right through the wrapper! Only uranium shows this effect NOT linked to phosphorescence! Becquerel and radioactivity Types of radioactivity Alpha: massive, positively-charged particles Beta: light, negativelycharged particles Gamma: light, uncharged particles Nobel Prize, 1903 3 A quick summary about atoms: In 1899, J.J. Thomson discovered the electron (Nobel Prize, 1906) and proposed the “plum pudding model” of the atom, in which the atom has simpler structural components. In 1905 Albert Einstein proved that atoms must exist (he showed that Brownian Motion would look different if there weren't really atoms and molecules shoving particles around). This later won the Nobel Prize for Jean Perrin in 1926. The “Plum Pudding” Model of the atom Negative electrons scattered through positive “glue” Electrons are very small, light particles Electrons can be knocked out of atoms by Light Electric potential Particle impact e- e- e- e- e- ee- ee- 4 Ernest Rutherford’s Gold-Foil Experiment (1911) Ernest Rutherford discovers the atomic nucleus (1911) 5 Subatomic particles Electron: light, negatively charged Proton: heavy, positively charged Atomic masses, compared to numbers of electrons in atoms, lead to… Neutron: heavy, uncharged; mass ~equal to proton The Strong Nuclear Force Short-range force between nucleons Very powerful: must hold protons together! Shows itself as mass: 2 2H → 4He Helium weighs 0.05% less This means that one 4He needs less binding force than two 2H. 6 Talking about nuclei Atomic number The number of protons in the nucleus Defines chemical element Mass number Total mass of the nucleus Sum of protons + neutrons Mass number 12 6 often omitted Chemical symbol C Atomic number Isotopes Isotope = a particular combination of protons and neutrons An element must have a particular number of protons: Atomic Number defines element Any number of neutrons “within reason” Hydrogen: 1H, 2H, 3H Carbon: 11C, 12C, 13C, 14C 7 Types of Radioactivity Alpha-decay, 42 α 4 the nucleus sheds mass as 2 He Changes element to another, lighter one Effect: Beta-decay, β (three types) Effect: converts neutron to proton or vice versa Changes element to another of the same mass 0 Gamma-decay, 0 γ Effect: makes nucleon arrangement more stable Element remains the same Types of Beta-decay Beta-minus, 0 −1 β Changes neutron to proton Emits an electron Beta-plus, 1β 0 Changes proton to neutron Emits a positron Electron capture, EC Captures an inner-shell electron to change proton to neutron 8 Aspects of Radioactivity Radiometric Dating Half-life: 14C the time needed for ½ to decay (5700 yr) 40K/40Ar (1.3×109 yr) 238U/206Pb Where (4.5×109 yr) do radioisotopes come from? Cosmic rays Aspects of Radioactivity Health effects – penetrating power alpha beta gamma Radon! 9