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1 2 3 • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WjjmzM -YV1s • Molar eclipse of the heart • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oIkC7S RqXP0 4 5 1. The process which a heavy nucleus is split into lighter nuclei is called __________. 1. The process of combining nuclei to form a bigger and heavier nucleus: ___________. 1. The bonus result of both reactions is ___, which is why we are VERY interested in them. 1. One problem with nuclear fission is ____. 6 Atoms: The Building Blocks of Nature ἄτομος As early as 400 BC Democritus had an idea of matter… But it couldn’t be tested. 8 18th Century… that’s when it all started to come together… 9 th 18 Century thinking… • Chemists accepted that an element couldn’t be broken down by ordinary chemical means. • They assumed that these elements combined to form compounds… • They just couldn’t figure out exactly how the different substances could combine with one another to form new ones… 10 • The foundation of modern chemistry dates to this time when scientists finally began to give rules to how matter interacts. 11 It all led to… • An emphasis on analysis of chemical reactions… • Improved equipment like balances so mass was more accurately … • The discovery of several basic laws. 12 Three basic laws… • Law of Conservation of Mass • Law of Definite Proportions • Law of Multiple Proportions 13 Law of Conservation of Mass Mass isn’t created or destroyed during ordinary chemical reactions or physical changes. Carbon + Oxygen = CO Mass x Mass y Mass x + Mass y 14 And the reverse holds true… CO = (Mass x + Mass y) Carbon + Oxygen Mass x Mass y 15 Law of Definite Proportions • A compound contains the same elements in exactly the same proportions by mass - no matter how much or how little there is of it. 16 And in simpler language: Every chemical compound has one and only one chemical formula. No matter what process you use to make water, the formula will always be H2O. 17 Basically The Law of Definite Proportions states that no matter how you make a chemical compound, it's got the same ratio of elements. 18 • An example: Whether you make H2O by combining H + O or by decomposing H2O2 (hydrogen peroxide), • the resulting H2O will still be 1 part by mass of H to eight parts by mass of O. 19 Sodium chloride - NaCl 20 • NaCl has a fixed proportion of elements. • It is always 39.43% by mass Sodium and 60.66% by mass Chlorine. The exact same proportions of Na and Cl must always be combined in order for salt to be created. 21 H2SO4 - Sulfuric Acid • Sulfuric acid is made up of the individual elements of H, S, and O. • The chemical compound is written H2SO4. • The same proportions of H, S, and O must be combined to create sulfuric acid. 22 Law of Multiple Proportions If two or more different compounds are composed of the same two elements, then the ratio of the masses of the second element combined with a certain mass of the first element is always a ratio of small whole numbers. 23 Once again, in a simpler way… If two elements can combine to form more than one chemical compound, the ratio of the mass of one element that combines with a fixed mass of the other element will be a whole number ratio for the compounds. And sense that doesn’t make any sense… 24 Basically… • The same two elements can combine in multiple ways to create different compounds. • Any time two elements can form more than one compound with each other, a particular ratio between the masses takes place. 25 For example… yes, please! C + O = CO Carbon monoxide molecules are always composed of 1 C and 1 O atom. C + O + O = CO2 Carbon dioxide molecules are always composed of 1 C and 2 O atoms. 26 Think about it like this: Definite Proportions means no matter how you make a compound – it’s always the same ratio of elements. Multiple Proportions has to do with the different compounds you get when you combine the . 27 And back to our story… 28 • So John Dalton, an English schoolteacher, in 1808, proposed an explanation that pulled together all these laws. • He reasoned that… 29 Dalton’s Atomic Theory (1803) 1. Elements are composed of extremely small particles called atoms. 2. All atoms of a given element are identical, having the same size, mass and chemical properties. The atoms of one element are different from the atoms of all other elements. 3. Atoms cannot be subdivided, created, or destroyed. 4. Compounds are composed of atoms of more than one element. In any compound, the ratio of the numbers of atoms of any two of the elements present is either an integer or a simple fraction. 5. A chemical reaction involves only the separation, combination, or rearrangement of atoms; it does not result in their creation or destruction. Or in other words… 1) Everything is made of atoms. (TRUE) 2) All atoms of an element are identical in every way (Not true due to isotopes) 3) Atoms of different elements are different (true) 4) Atoms can’t be broken (true for chemical reactions, but not for nuclear ones) 31 Atoms combine in whole number ratios to form compounds (i.e., you can’t have half an atom in a compound) This is true… 5) In chemical reactions, atoms are rearranged. (true) 32 • Not all aspects of Dalton’s atomic theory have proven to be correct. 1)Atoms ARE divisible into smaller particles called subatomic particle: protons, electrons & neutrons. 2)A given element can have atoms with different masses (isotopes). 33 Dalton’s Atomic Theory (1803) 1. Elements are composed of extremely small particles called atoms. 2. All atoms of a given element are identical, having the same size, mass and chemical properties. The atoms of one element are different from the atoms of all other elements. 3. Atoms cannot be subdivided, created, or destroyed. 4. Compounds are composed of atoms of more than one element. In any compound, the ratio of the numbers of atoms of any two of the elements present is either an integer or a simple fraction. 5. A chemical reaction involves only the separation, combination, or rearrangement of atoms; it does not result in their creation or destruction. Dalton turned Democritus’ idea into a scientific theory that could be tested by experiment. •But today we know that atoms are divisible into even smaller particles (protons, neutrons, electrons… quarks…leptons…) •We also know that a given element can have atoms with different masses. (isotopes) 35 The Law of Conservation of Mass still holds true! • Atomic theory hasn’t been discarded – only modified! 36 The important concepts of it: 1) All matter (elements) is composed of atoms 2) Atoms of any one element differ in properties from atoms of another element. 3) A chemical reaction involves separation, combination or rearrangement of atoms that are not created or destroyed. 37 Dalton’s Atomic Theory (1808) Law of Multiple Proportions 38 16 X + 8Y Law of Conservation of Mass 8 X2Y Can we see atoms?! . . . kind of . . . 42 Atomic force microscopy (AFM) 43 X-ray diffraction 44 In a nutshell • Law of Conservation of Mass: The amount of stuff you form in a reaction is equal to the amount of stuff you started with. 45 The Law of Definite Proportions Every chemical compound has one and only one chemical formula. For example, no matter what process you use to make water, the formula will always be H2O. 46 Law of Multiple Proportions • The same two elements can combine in multiple ways to create different compounds: • H2O and H2O2 • NO and NO2 • CO and CO2 47 H2O and H2O2 • In the first compound, the amount of O needed to combine with 2 g of H is 16 g. • In the second compound, the amount of O needed to combine with 2 g of H is 32 grams. • The ratio of 32:16 works out to a 2:1 ratio, it follows this law. 48 Bellwork #4 – 10/15 1. A chemical compound contains the same elements in exactly the same proportions by mass. Ibuprofen = C13H18O2. 2. H and O combine to form H2O. They also combine to form H2O2. 3. The amount of stuff you form in a reaction is equal to the stuff you started with. 49 Bellwork #5: 10/17 and check 1) Give 3 main concepts in Dalton’s atomic theory. 2) 180.18 g of glucose, C6H12O6, always contains 72.06 g C, 12.12 g H and 96.00 g O. What % of each of these elements is present in glucose? 50 • 1. CaO + CO2 CaCO3 where the mass of the reactants = mass of the products • • 2. N + O can form NO. • They can also form NO2. • • H + O can form H2O. • They can also form H2O2. • 51 3. To make table salt, 1 atom of Na will combine with 1 atom of Cl. Always. To make water, 2 atoms of H will combine with 1 atom of O. Always. 52 Bellwork #1 1. Law of Definite Proportions, any 2 samples of KCl have the same ratio of elements. 2. Law of Conservation of Mass: When Na, H and O form a compound, the mass of the compound is equal to the sum of the masses of the individual elements. 3. The ratio of O to C when 32 g of O 53 combine with 12 g of O = 2:1 Section 2: The Structure of the Atom 54 Main Ideas of S.2: 1) Atoms contain positive and negative particles. 2) Atoms have small, dense positivelycharged nuclei. 3) A nucleus contains protons and neutrons. 4) The radii of atoms are expressed in picometers. 55 Even when the pieces look different... 56 What I mean is… • Dalton thought atoms were indivisible, investigators in the late 1880s proved otherwise. • Atoms are actually composed of smaller particles and the number and arrangement of these particles determine the atom’s chemical properties. 57 We’ll get to this in a bit **Spoiler alert**: All atoms consist of 2 regions. The nucleus is a very small region located at the center of an atom. The nucleus contains at least one positively charged particle (the proton) and usually one or more neutral particles called neutrons. Surrounding the nucleus is a region occupied by negatively charged particles (electrons). 58 • So overall, people seemed pretty happy with Dalton’s laws. That is until his idea of what atoms are like was disproved by… 59 Mr. J.J. Thomson and his cathode ray tube! 60 This is what happened So… Thomson was experimenting with these cathode ray tubes. He found that when he connected these long hollow tubes to batteries, a beam of light would go from one end to another. 61 Since he had a lot of time on his hands… He decided to figure out what the deal was with the light. After all, if there was nothing in the tube to start with, where’d the light come from?? He figured it must come from the electrodes – since the electrodes were made of atoms… The atoms must be coming apart! 62 Then he put a magnet on it… When he did this, he found that the beam would bend toward the positive side of the magnet and away from the negative side. From this he figured that the beam must contain very small particles from the atom and that they must have negative charge. 63 • These experiments were carried out in glass tubes hooked up to a vacuum pump – and it is called a . 64 65 • Did you notice the difference between the flow of electrons (the cathode ray) and the conventional direction of electric current? 66 • This figure depicts a cathode ray, created by electrons, flowing from the negatively charge cathode to the positively charged anode. • The electric current flows from the anode to the cathode. 67 This is what they found… • When a current was passed through the tube, the surface of the tube directly opposite the cathode glowed. • The ray traveled from the cathode to the anode. 68 • Cathode rays were deflected by a magnetic field in the same way as a wire carrying electric current – which they knew to have a negative charge. <hmmm…> • The rays were deflected away from a negatively charged object… 69 Cathode Ray Tube 71 2+2=… The particles that compose cathode rays are negatively charged. …Thank you to Mr. J. J. Thomson! In 1897, this English physicist performed the experiments to measure the charge-to-mass ratio of an electron! 72 Pardon me, sir, but what does that mean? • He was able to measure the ratio of the charge of the cathode ray particles to their mass. • He found that this ratio was always the same, regardless of the metal used to make the cathode OR the nature of the gas inside the tube. 73 Conclusion, please: • All cathode rays must be composed of identical negatively charged particles, which were named 74 Charge and Mass of the Electron • It was concluded that electrons are present in atoms of all elements. • The ol’ cathode ray experiments provided evidence that atoms are divisible and that one of the atom’s basic components is the negatively charged electron. <whoa> 75 Once again… in plain speech, please. • Thomson’s experiment also revealed that the electron has a very large charge to mass ratio. • This means he didn’t know the charge and he didn’t know the mass, but he understood the ratio! 76 Cathode Ray Tube Experiment J.J. Thomson (1906 Nobel Prize in Physics) Proposed Plum Pudding Model of the atom Thomson’s Plum Pudding Model He believed that the negative electrons were spread evenly throughout the positive charge of the rest of the atom. Kind of like seeds in a watermelon. But the experiments continued… and . 78 Still… Ye olde Plum Pudding model was an important step forward in our modern understanding of the atom. It represents the first time scientists tried to incorporate the idea that atoms were not indivisible. 79 The next part of the story! Robert A. Millikan 80 American physicist Robert A. Millikan, 1909 His experiments around 1909 measured the charge of the electron. <amazing!!!> From this information, scientists were able to determine the mass of an electron! 81 Oil Drop Experiment • http://www.kentchemistry.com/links/Atomi cStructure/Millikan.htm • Let’s watch it… • It involved suspending oil drops between 2 charged plates. 82 The oil-drop experiment 83 • So it didn’t measure the mass of the electron directly but the charge of the electron. • Scientists used Thomson’s charge to mass ratio and the charge Millikan determined, and they were able to calculate the mass of an electron. 84 Oil Drop Experiment R. A. Millikan (1923 Nobel Prize in Physics) 1. Measured charge of e- 2. Calculated mass of e- Why is it necessary to use experiments such as those of J.J. Thomson and Robert A. Millikan to infer information about electrons? 86 It’s necessary to observe the behavior of electrons in experiments like these b/c electrons themselves are far too small to see. 87 And then… Two other inferences were made about atomic structure: 1) Because atoms are electrically , they must contain a positive charge to balance the negative electrons. 2) Because electrons have so much less mass than atoms, atoms must contain that account for most of their 88 mass! Crazy trivia time The ratio of the mass of an electron to that of a proton is roughly the same as the mass of a house cat to that of an elephant. 89 90 Lord Ernest Rutherford • Mr. Rutherford was a scientist who liked to play with radioactive stuff. • His favorite radioactive thing to play with was alpha particles (He nuclei). • One day he decided to shoot a bunch of alpha particles at a really thin piece of gold foil... 91 Atoms have small dense positively charged nuclei. • It was in 1911, in New Zealand. • Ernest Rutherford and his associates Hans Geiger and Ernest Marsden bombarded a thin piece of gold foil with fast-moving alpha particles (positively charged particles with about 4 times the mass of a hydrogen atom). 92 • They assumed that mass and charge were uniformly distrubuted throughout the atoms of the gold foil, like the plum pudding model. • They expected the alpha particles to pass through with only a slight deflection. • For the vast majority of the particles, this was the case. 93 HOWEVER… • When they checked for wide-angle deflections, they were shocked to find that roughly 1 in 8000 of the alpha particles had actually been deflected back toward the source! 94 Gold Foil Experiment Ernest Rutherford (1908 Nobel Prize in Chemistry) What in the world had happened? They finally came up with an explanation. Rutherford reasoned that the deflected alpha particles must have experienced some powerful force within the atom. He figured that the source of this force must occupy a very small amount of space (because so few of the particles had been affected). 96 • He concluded that the force must be caused by a very densely packed bundle of matter with a positive electric charge. Rutherford called this positive bundle of matter the nucleus. • And that the atom is mostly empty space. 97 • He had also discovered that the volume of a nucleus was very small compared with the total volume of an atom. • In fact, if the nucleus were the size of a marble, then the size of the atom would be about the size of a football field! 98 For this we will always know Rutherford as the man with the gold foil. And the bad model of the atom, because we now know that this model isn’t right. Either. 99 So where were the electrons?? • This questions wasn’t answered until Rutherford’s STUDENT, Niels Bohr, proposed a model in which electrons surrounded the positively charged nucleus as the planets surround the sun. • (We’ll discuss Bohr’s model a little later on…) 100 Gold Foil Experiment Ernest Rutherford (1908 Nobel Prize in Chemistry) 1. Nucleus positively charged center 2. Atom mostly empty space 3. Proton 1840 more massive than e- Gold Foil Experiment Ernest Rutherford (1908 Nobel Prize in Chemistry) 1. Nucleus positively charged center 2. Atom mostly empty space 3. Proton 1840 more massive than e“If the atom is the Houston Astrodome, then the nucleus is a marble on the 50-yard line.” - R. Chang atomic radius ~100 pm = 1 x 10-10 m nuclear radius ~0.005 pm = 5 x 10-15 m Random Interlude: In 1932, James Chadwick discovered the neutron, which has no charge at all, by doing some really complicated experiments that I don’t understand even a little bit. Don’t worry though – just remember that Chadwick discovered it. You’ll be fine! 103 Beryllium Experiment James Chadwick 1. Neutron is neutral 2. Mass p ≈ mass n ≈ 1840 x mass e-- (1935 Nobel Prize in Physics) a + 9Be 1n + 12C + energy A nucleus contains protons and neutrons All atomic nuclei are made of two kinds of particles: protons and neutrons. Atoms have small, dense positively charged nuclei. A proton has a positive charge equal in magnitude to the negative charge of an electron. 105 Pssssst… Atoms are electrically neutral because why?? 106 • Because they contain equal numbers of protons and electrons! • A neutron is electrically neutral. 107 Masses A proton has a mass of 1.673 x 10-27 kg. That is 1836 times greater than the mass of an electron! The mass of the neutron is is 1.675 x 10-27 kg – slightly larger than a proton. 108 Summary of Subatomic Particles Particle Symbol Electron e - Relative Charge Actual Mass (kg) -1 9.109 x 10-31 Discoverer Experiment JJ Thomson CRT/oil drop RA Millikan Proton p + +1 1.673 x 10-27 Rutherford Gold foil Neutron n 0 0 1.675 x 10-27 Chadwick Beryllium Protons determine an atom’s identity The nuclei of atoms of different elements differ in their number of protons and therefore on the amount of positive charge they possess which influences the pull they will have on electrons – and then combining with other elements. **Physicists have ID’d other subatomic particles but they have little effect on the chemical properties of matter. 110 • No two elements have the same number of protons. The number of protons is unique to that element alone. • Charge is determined by the difference of protons and electrons. Missing an electron? You have a +1 charged ion. 111 Forces in the nucleus Nuclear forces are the forces that hold a nucleus together. They are the proton-proton, proton-neutron and neutron-neutron forces. Which is weird because generally, particles that have the same electric charge repel each other! 112 However… • When 2 protons are extremely close to each other, there is a strong attraction between them. • A similar attraction exists when neutrons are very close to each other or when protons and neutrons are very close to each other. 113 The radii of atoms are expressed in picometers The radius of an atom is the distance from the center of the nucleus to the outer portion of the electron cloud. The electron cloud model is a convenient way to think of the region occupied by electrons. 114 Electron Cloud Model 115 116 SI Prefixes Prefix Symbol Multipli er Tera T 1012 1 Tm = 1 x 1012 m giga G 109 1 Gm = 1 x 109 m mega M 106 1 Mm = 1 x 106 m kilo k 103 1 km = 1 x 103 m 1m=1m 1 x 10-3 km = 1 m 1m=1m deci d 10-1 1 dm = 1 x 10-1 m 10 dm = 1 m centi c 10-2 1 cm = 1 x 10-2 m 100 cm = 1 m milli m 10-3 1 mm = 1 x 10-3 m 1000 mm = 1 m micro µ 10-6 1 µm = 1 x 10-6 m 1 x 106 = 1 m nano n 10-9 1 nm = 1 x 10-9 m 1 x 109 = 1 m pico pm 10-12 1 pm = 1 x 10-12 m 1 x 1012 = 1 m The picometer… Consider that 1 cm is the same fractional part of 1000 km (about 600 miles) as 100 pm is of 1 cm… Atomic radii range from about 40 to 270 pm. 118 • Nuclear forces are said to hold protons and neutrons together. What is it about the composition of the nucleus that requires the concept of nuclear forces?? 119 Rutherford holds the key Protons and neutrons are packed very close together. However, like-charged particles repel each other, so protons would not be expected to be close to other protons. The forces that prevent protons from repelling each other are the nuclear forces. 120 S.3: Counting Atoms We can use basic properties of atoms to count the number of atoms of an element in a sample with a known mass. We’ll also become familiar with the mole, a special unit used by chemists to count atoms and molecules. (Finally! It’s here!) 121 • All atoms contain the same particles… Yet all atoms are not the same. • What makes them different?? 122 • Atoms of different elements have different numbers of protons. • Atoms of the same element all have the same number of protons, but not neutrons. 123 • The atomic number (Z) of an element is the number of protons of each atom of that element. • Z = number of protons 124 Look at the periodic table… An element’s atomic number is usually above its symbol and the elements are placed in order of increasing atomic number. The atomic number identifies an element. So if the number of protons changes, that atom becomes a different element. 125 Atomic number 126 The identity of the atom is determined by the number of protons – not the number of electrons or neutrons. The number of electrons & neutrons can vary and the atom will still be the same element. But if the number of protons changes, then the atom becomes an atom of a different element. 127 Isotopes Isotopes are atoms of the same element that have different masses. The isotopes of a particular element all have the same number of protons and electrons but different numbers of neutrons. 128 Take hydrogen, for example All hydrogen atoms have 1 proton, but they can have different numbers of neutrons – or no neutrons at all! Protium is the most common (99.9885% of the H atoms found on Earth) Deuterium (0.0115% found on Earth) Tritium is radioactive and not very common. 129 Most elements… Most elements consist of mixtures of isotopes. Tin has 10! (That’s the most of any element) The atoms in any sample of an element will most likely be a mixture of several isotopes in various proportions. 130 Mass number The mass number (A) of an element is the total number of protons and neutrons that make up the nucleus of an isotope. We have to know the name or atomic number of the element and the mass of the isotope to identify the isotope. 131 Mass Number 132 Mass numbers of H isotopes Protium 1 proton + 0 neutrons =1 Deuterium 1 proton + 1 neutron = 2 Tritium 1 proton + 2 neutrons =3 133 The Isotopes of Hydrogen Designating Isotopes Hyphen notation = element (hyphen) mass number hydrogen-3 (tritium) uranium-235 Nuclear symbol: mass no. (A) atomic no. (Z) 235 92 U 135 Atomic number, Mass number and Isotopes A X Z Mass Number Atomic Number Element Symbol Nuclide symbol 12 C 6 14 C 6 Atomic number (Z) number of protons in nucleus Mass number (A) number of protons + number of neutrons (Z) + number of neutrons Isotopes are atoms of the same element (X) with different numbers of neutrons in their nuclei To find neutrons: Mass number – atomic number = number of neutrons 235 (protons + neutrons) -92 protons = 143 neutrons 137 Let’s practice this: • Write the nuclear symbol for oxygen -16 1) What 3 things do you need? 2) What is the order you write them? 138 Let’s try another one Tin-121 Write the Nuclide symbol, Atomic No. and Mass Number. List the number of protons, neutrons & electrons found in xenon-113. 139 121 50 Sn Xenon-113 p+ = 54 e- = 54 n0 = 59 140 How many protons, neutrons, and electrons? Draw good nuclide symbols. 6 protons, 8 neutrons, 6 electrons 6 protons, 5 neutrons, 6 electrons Quiz from Tuesday… While I hand it out – let’s see how you do with a little target practice… 142 Let’s work on some of these: Subatomic particle Sample problem A, pg. 75 Then do the practice questions, pg. 76: 1-3 143 Answers: 1. 35 p, 35 e-, 45 neutrons 1. 13 6 C 3. phosphorus-30 144 Let’s check… The only stable isotope of naturally occuring fluorine has a mass number of 19. How many p+, n0 and e- are in an atom of F? Write the isotope symbol. 145 19 F 9 146 In chemistry there are many different concepts of mass… We need to talk about 3 of them. 147 First, atomic mass… • Isotopes are atoms of the same element (and so with the same number of p+ and e-) but with different masses due to having different numbers of n0. Right? 148 • The mass of an atom is incredibly small and it doesn’t make sense to use units like grams to measure it… • It’s easier to measure it in atomic mass units. 149 Scientists like a standard… • Scientists set up a scale of atomic mass, one atom was arbitrarily chosen as the standard. Carbon-12 Chemists use this standard to compare units of atomic mass. It’s a relative scale… relative to C-12. 150 Atomic mass unit It is defined as the mass equal to 1/12th the mass of one C-12 atom. Or amu… (our textbook uses just plain “u”) 151 Atomic mass is the mass of an atom in atomic mass units (amu) By definition: 1 atom 12C “weighs” 12 amu On this scale 1H = 1.008 amu 16O = 16.00 amu Compare that to average atomic mass • The average atomic mass of an element is the weighted average of the masses of its isotopes on this scale… • Just like how your grades are weighted. 153 Average atomic mass This is the number you see on the periodic table. 154 Average atomic mass We have to consider that most elements occur naturally as a mixture of isotopes. Scientists determine the average mass of a sample of an element’s isotopes by determining the percentages of each of the isotopes and then giving the proper weight to each value. (Just like your grades!) 155 • Elements rarely occur as only one isotope. • They exist as mixtures of different isotopes of various masses. • This way, the less common isotopes are accounted for. 156 Don’t confuse mass number with average atomic mass. Mass number is the mass of one particular atom. Average atomic mass is the average mass of a group of atoms of the same element that takes into consideration all the isotopes. 157 • The average atomic mass of an element depends of both the mass and relative abundance of each of the element’s isotopes. 158 The average atomic mass is the weighted average of all of the naturally occurring isotopes of the element. Percent Isotope Abundance 12C 98.90% 13C 1.10% Isotopic Mass, amu 12.00000 13.00335 How do we find atomic mass? The average atomic mass of an element depends of both the mass and relative abundance of each of the element’s isotopes. 160 Copper consists of 69.15% copper-63, which has an atomic mass of 62.929 601 amu, and 30.85% copper-65, which has an atomic mass of 64.927 794 amu. Calculate the average atomic mass for Cu. Calculating average atomic mass Step 1: multiply the atomic mass of each isotope by its relative abundance. Step 2: add the results. 0.6915 x 62.929 amu + 0.3085 x 64.927 794 amu = 63.55 amu** *Our textbook is going to round to 2 decimal places. 162 Average Atomic Mass Oxygen has three naturally occurring isotopes in the following proportions: O-16 99.762 % (15.99491 amu); O-17 0.038000% (16.99913 amu); O-18 0.20000% (17.99916 amu). What is the average atomic mass of oxygen? Let’s take it to 2 decimal places 1) .99762 x 15.99491 = 15.957 2) .00038 x 16.99914 = .00646 3) .0020000 x 17.999 = .03599 15.99 amu 164 Next up… 165 Atoms are very, very small. For example, 1 atom of H weighs approximately 1.67 x 10-27 kg. 166 The Mole (mol): A unit to count numbers of particles Dozen = 12 Pair = 2 Ream of paper Baker’s dozen Gross Fortnight Googol Byte The Mole (mol): A unit to count numbers of particles Dozen = 12 Pair = 2 Baker’s dozen Gross Donkey power Fortnight Googol Mole = 6.0221367 x 1023 Micro World atoms and molecules Macro World grams • The answer is that moles give us a consistent method to convert between atoms/molecules and grams. It's simply a convenient unit to use when performing calculations. 170 The mole (mol) is the amount of a substance that contains as many particles as there are atoms in exactly 12.00 grams of 12C 1 mol = 6.0221367 x 1023 Avogadro’s number (NA) eggs Molar mass is the mass of 1 mole of shoes in grams cats • A mole of carbon atoms is 6.02x1023 carbon atoms. • A mole of chemistry teachers is 6.02x1023 chemistry teachers. 172 1 mole of M&Ms… 173 It's a lot easier to write the word 'mole' than to write '6.02x1023’ anytime you want to refer to a large number of things! •Basically, that's why this particular unit was invented. 174 • The abbreviation for mole is mol. • Molar mass is the weight of one mole of a chemical compound. • Molar mass is usually written in units g/mol. 175 Molar mass 1 mole 12C atoms = 6.022 x 1023 atoms = 12.00 g 1 12C atom = 12.00 amu For any element atomic mass (amu) = molar mass (grams) One Mole of: S C Hg Cu Fe 177 The molar mass of He is 4.00 g/mol. To find how many g of He there are in 2 moles of He, multiply by the molar mass. 2 .00 mol He x 4.00 g He = 8.00 g He 1 mol He Conversions with Avogadro’s Number • We use Avogadro’s number to find the number of atoms of an element in moles • Or • To find the amount of an element in moles from the number of atoms. 179 181 Chapter 3 What Section 3 Counting Atoms is the mass in grams of 3.50 mol of the element copper, Cu? Chapter 3 Sample The Section 3 Counting Atoms Problem B Solution, continued molar mass of copper from the periodic table is rounded to 63.55 g/mol. Chapter 3 Sample Section 3 Counting Atoms Problem C A chemist produced 11.9 g of aluminum, Al. How many moles of aluminum were produced? Chapter 3 Section 3 Counting Atoms Sample Problem C Solution Given: 11.9 g Al Unknown: amount of Al in moles Solution: grams Al ´ moles Al = moles Al grams Al The molar mass of aluminum from the periodic table is rounded to 26.98 g/mol. 1 mol Al 11.9 g Al ´ = 0.441 mol Al 26.98 g Al Chapter 3 Sample Section 3 Counting Atoms Problem D How many moles of silver, Ag, are in 3.01 1023 atoms of silver? Chapter 3 Section 3 Counting Atoms Sample Problem D Solution Given: 3.01 × 1023 atoms of Ag Unknown: amount of Ag in moles Solution: moles Ag Ag atoms ´ = moles Ag Avogadro's number of Ag atoms 3.01 ´ 10 23 1 mol Ag Ag atoms ´ = 23 6.022 ´ 10 Ag atoms 0.500 mol Ag Chapter 3 Sample Section 3 Counting Atoms Problem E What is the mass in grams of 1.20 108 atoms of copper, Cu? Chapter 3 Section 3 Counting Atoms Relating Mass to Numbers of Atoms, continued Sample Problem E Solution Given: 1.20 × 108 atoms of Cu Unknown: mass of Cu in grams Solution: moles Cu grams Cu Cu atoms ´ ´ = grams Cu Avogadro's number of Cu atoms moles Cu The molar mass of copper from the periodic table is rounded to 63.55 g/mol. Types of radioactivity uranium compound 190 Types of radioactivity The Bohr Model of the Atom Niels Bohr (1922 Nobel Prize in Physics) Thus one mole of ethyl alcohol, C2H6O, weighs 46.069 g. One mole of water weighs 18.015 g. If we mix 46.069 g of ethyl alcohol with 18.015 g of water, we can be assured that the mixture contains 1 molecule of ethyl alcohol per molecule of water. Further, we will know that there are 2 atoms of C and 8 atoms of H per each 2 atoms of O. Thus the mole allows us to weigh convenient amounts of material containing known numbers of atoms; i.e., it allows us to count atoms. 193