Download The Atom - Wunder Chem

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
Transcript
CHEM I - TUES, 9/8/15

Do Now
Complete the worksheet as
review for your quiz!




Homework
MEAL paragraph if not finished
in class


Agenda
Matter Quiz
SigFig Review
Atomic Theory
Presentation
(Dimensional
Analysis)
MEAL paragraph
APPLIED CHEM - TUES, 9/8/15


Do Now
Write a brief paragraph to
describe what you felt was the
most difficult part of the
lab. How hard was it to write the
procedure on your own? Was
having group mates helpful? Did
your procedure work perfectly?
What flaws did you notice in the
procedure?
Homework
NA




Agenda
Review quiz
% Yield
String Thing
Atomic Theory
THE ATOM
DEFINITION TO START



Atom – smallest particle of an element that
retains its identity
They are tiny!
Electron microscope – allows us to observe
individual atoms
DEMOCRITUS THE PHILOSOPHER


460-370 BC
First credited with proposing the existence of an
atom

Indivisible and indestructible

Shortcomings?

Did Aristotle agree?
THEN CAME JOHN DALTON

1766-1844

Experimental methods -> scientific theory

Dalton’s atomic theory
Matter is composed of indivisible atoms
 Atoms of same element are identical
 Combine in whole number ratios to form compounds
 Rxns occur when atoms separate, bond, or rearrange.
Atoms of one element never become atoms of another
thru chemical rxns

JJ THOMSON’S EXPERIMENT

Cathode Ray Experiment




Gas filled glass tube fitted with electrodes
Electricity -> cathode ray (travels from cathode to
anode)
Conclusion: electrons - negatively charged subatomic
particles
Further tests:
Mass to charge ratio
 Different gases


Conclusion: Electrons are part of atoms of all
elements.
OTHER SUBATOMIC PARTICLES


But we don’t get shocked every time we touch
something…so where’s the positive?
Goldstein: Cathode ray (1886)
Detected rays traveling in the opposite direction
 Conclusion: protons – positively charged subatomic
particles



1840x mass of an electron
Chadwick (1932)
Neutrons – neutral subatomic particles
 ~same mass as proton

THOMSON’S MODEL TO RUTHERFORD’S
MODEL

Thomson – ‘plum pudding’ (1897)


Chocolate chips in cookie dough
Gold Foil Experiment (1911)
Alpha particles thru gold foil
 Predictions: only slight deflection
 Results:

Most: straight thru or slight deflection
 Some: large deflection or ‘bounced’ back
toward the source

RUTHERFORD MODEL/NUCLEAR MODEL

Atom is mostly empty space


explains why the alpha particles could pass straight
thru
All the positive charge and most of mass is
located in a small region
explains the large deflections
 Nucleus - protons and neutrons



Electrons are around the nucleus and account for
most of the volume
Still not quite right!
CHEM I - WED, 9/9/15


Do Now
Turn in MEAL paragraph
Start on Factor Label Sheet 1-4




Homework
Pages 1 and 2 of math packet

Wks 4.5
Agenda
Papers Back
Bohr
E- in the atom
IT’S ALL ABOUT COLOR…

In terms of atomic models, so far:




Dalton (1803) = Tiny, solid particle
Thomson (1897) = “Plum Pudding” model –
Electrons stuck on the outside of a big positive
charge
Rutherford (1911) = Positively-charged nucleus with
electrons moving around it
Rutherford’s model of the atom not quite right


Could not explain chemical properties of elements
Could not explain color changes when metal is
heated
BOHR MODEL OF THE ATOM

Niels Bohr’s model of the atom
Electron found only on specific, circular paths
around nucleus
 Each orbit has fixed energy level
 Hypothesis: When electrons are excited (added
energy), jump into higher energy levels. When they
moved back into lower energy levels - gave off light.
 Electrons do not exist between levels (think of rungs
on a ladder)
 Electrons absorb and emit only certain quanta
(amounts) of energy
 Quantum of energy = fixed amount of energy
required to move from one energy level to another
energy level

BOHR’S MODEL
Nucleus
Electron
Orbit
Energy Levels
Chapter 5
BOHR’S PLANETARY MODEL OF THE ATOM






Electrons must have enough energy
to keep moving around the nucleus
Electrons orbit nucleus in defined
energy levels, just like planets orbit
the sun
Each energy level assigned a
principal quantum number n.
Lowest energy level called ground
state (n=1)
Higher energy levels (n=2, 3, 4...)
excited states
Model worked OK for hydrogen but
not so good for other elements
Nucleus
n=1
n=2
BOHR’S MODEL

Fourth
Third
Second
First
Nucleus


Chapter 5
Increasing energy
Fifth
Further away from the
nucleus means more
energy.
There is no “in
between” energy
Energy Levels
Electron starts on
lowest energy level
(ground state)
Lowest energy level = ground state
Higher energy levels = excited states
Add energy
to electron –
moves to
excited state
Energy
levels are
not evenly
spaced
Energy
Level 3
Energy
Level 2
Energy
Level 1
Nucleus
Electron starts
on lowest
energy level
(ground state)
Lowest energy level = ground state
Higher energy levels = excited states
Add energy
to electron –
moves to
excited state
Energy
Energy
levels are
not evenly
spaced
Electron
returns to
lower state –
emits/gives off
quantum of
energy
Energy
Level 3
Energy
Level 2
Energy
Level 1
Nucleus
Chapter 5
Bohr used this
theory to explain
the lines in the
atomic emission
spectra for
hydrogen
434 nm
410 nm
656 nm
486 nm
Chapter 5
Each of these lines
corresponds to different
energy changes
WHAT CAN THE PERIODIC TABLE TELL US?

Atomic number – the number of protons in an
element


Elements are defined by their atomic number
Mass number – total number of neutrons and
protons
ISOTOPES!

Same number of protons

Different number of neutrons

Used to calculate the atomic weight of an element

Mass of an atom is tiny – so knowing the actual
mass is a bit impractical
ATOMIC MASS UNIT




Isotope Carbon 12 was assigned the mass of 12
atomic mass units.
So then, 1/12 of the mass of a carbon 12 atom is 1
amu.
So then helium 4 has 1/3 the mass of carbon 12.
Carbon has 6 protons and 6 neutrons…this
accounts for the bulk of the mass…so one proton
or 1 neutron has a mass of ~1 amu.
ATOMIC WEIGHT


Atomic weight – weighted average of the atomic
masses of the isotopes of an element in a
naturally occurring sample
Example problem….Grades!