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The Atom Chapter 5 and 14 Development of the Atom The Hellenic Market Fire ~ Water Earth Air A Brief History of Chemistry • In fourth century B.C., ancient Greeks proposed that matter consisted of fundamental particles called atoms. • Over the next two millennia, major advances in chemistry were achieved by alchemists. Their major goal was to convert certain elements into others by a process called transmutation. Copyright © 2007 Pearson Benjamin Cummings. All rights reserved. The Greeks History of the Atom • Not the history of atom, but the idea of the atom • In 400 B.C the Greeks tried to understand matter (chemicals) and broke them down into earth, wind, fire, and air. • ~ ~ Democritus and Leucippus Greek philosophers Greek Model “To understand the very large, we must understand the very small.” Democritus • Greek philosopher • Idea of ‘democracy’ • Idea of ‘atomos’ – Atomos = ‘indivisible’ – ‘Atom’ is derived • No experiments to support idea • Continuous vs. discontinuous theory of matter Democritus’s model of atom No protons, electrons, or neutrons Solid and INDESTRUCTABLE Democritus DEMOCRITUS (400 BC) – First Atomic Hypothesis Atomos: Greek for “uncuttable”. Chop up a piece of matter until you reach the atomos. Properties of atoms: • indestructible. • changeable, however, into different forms. • an infinite number of kinds so there are an infinite number of elements. • hard substances have rough, prickly atoms that stick together. • liquids have round, smooth atoms that slide over one another. • smell is caused by atoms interacting with the nose – rough atoms hurt. • sleep is caused by atoms escaping the brain. • death – too many escaped or didn’t return. • the heart is the center of anger. • the brain is the center of thought. • the liver is the seat of desire. “Nothing exists but atoms and space, all else is opinion”. Four Element Theory FIRE • Plato was an atomist • Thought all matter was composed of 4 elements: – – – – – Earth (cool, heavy) Water (wet) Fire (hot) Air (light) Ether (close to heaven) Hot AIR Dry EARTH ‘MATTER’ Wet Cold WATER Relation of the four elements and the four qualities Blend these “elements” in different proportions to get all substances Some Early Ideas on Matter Anaxagoras (Greek, born 500 B.C.) –Suggested every substance had its own kind of “seeds” that clustered together to make the substance, much as our atoms cluster to make molecules. Empedocles (Greek, born in Sicily, 490 B.C.) –Suggested there were only four basic seeds – earth, air, fire, and water. The elementary substances (atoms to us) combined in various ways to make everything. Democritus (Thracian, born 470 B.C.) –Actually proposed the word atom (indivisible) because he believed that all matter consisted of such tiny units with voids between, an idea quite similar to our own beliefs. It was rejected by Aristotle and thus lost for 2000 years. Aristotle (Greek, born 384 B.C.) –Added the idea of “qualities” – heat, cold, dryness, moisture – as basic elements which combined as shown in the diagram (previous page). Hot + dry made fire; hot + wet made air, and so on. O’Connor Davis, MacNab, McClellan, CHEMISTRY Experiments and Principles 1982, page 26, Alchemy • After that chemistry was ruled by alchemy. • They believed that that could take any cheap metals and turn them into gold. • Alchemists were almost like magicians. – elixirs, physical immortality Alchemy Alchemical symbols for substances… .. . .. .......... GOLD SILVER COPPER IRON SAND transmutation: changing one substance into another D In ordinary chemistry, we cannot transmute elements. Contributions of alchemists: Information about elements - the elements mercury, sulfur, and antimony were discovered - properties of some elements Develop lab apparatus / procedures / experimental techniques - alchemists learned how to prepare acids. - developed several alloys - new glassware Early Ideas on Elements Robert Boyle stated... – A substance was an element unless it could be broken down to two or more simpler substances. – Air therefore could not be an element because it could be broken down in to many pure substances. Robert Boyle Timeline Greeks (Democritus ~450 BC) Discontinuous theory of matter 400 BC Greeks (Aristotle ~350 BC)) Continuous theory of matter ALCHEMY 300 AD 1000 Issac Newton (1642 - 1727) 2000 American Independence (1776) The Atomic Theory of Matter • In 1803, Dalton proposed that elements consist of individual particles called atoms. • His atomic theory of matter contains four hypotheses: 1. All matter is composed of tiny particles called atoms. 2. All atoms of an element are identical in mass and fundamental chemical properties. 3. A chemical compound is a substance that always contains the same atoms in the same ratio. 4. In chemical reactions, atoms from one or more compounds or elements redistribute or rearrange in relation to other atoms to form one or more new compounds. Atoms themselves do not undergo a change of identity in chemical reactions. Copyright © 2007 Pearson Benjamin Cummings. All rights reserved. Daltons Atomic Theory • Dalton stated that elements consisted of tiny particles called atoms • He also called the elements pure substances because all atoms of an element were identical and that in particular they had the same mass. Dalton’s Atomic Theory 1. All matter consists of tiny particles. Dalton, like the Greeks, called these particles “atoms”. 2. Atoms of one element can neither be subdivided nor changed into atoms of any other element. 3. Atoms can neither be created nor destroyed. 4. All atoms of the same element are identical in mass, size, and other properties. 5. Atoms of one element differ in mass and other properties from atoms of other elements. 6. In compounds, atoms of different elements combine in simple, whole number ratios. Dalton’s Symbols John Dalton 1808 Daltons’ Models of Atoms Carbon dioxide, CO2 Water, H2O Methane, CH4 Structure of Atoms • Scientist began to wonder what an atom was like. • Was it solid throughout with no internal structure or was it made up of smaller, subatomic particles? • It was not until the late 1800’s that evidence became available that atoms were composed of smaller parts. Discovery of the electron 1807 Davy suggested that electrical forces held compound together. 1833 Faraday related atomic mass and the electricity needed to free an element during electrolysis experiments. 1891 Stoney proposed that electricity exists in units he called electrons. 1897 Thomson first quantitatively measured the properties of electrons. Other pieces • Proton - positively charged pieces – 1840 times heavier than the electron • Neutron - no charge but the same mass as a proton. • How were these pieces discovered? • Where are the pieces? Rutherford Ernest Rutherford (1871-1937) PAPE R • Learned physics in J.J. Thomson’ lab. • Noticed that ‘alpha’ particles were sometime deflected by something in the air. • Gold-foil experiment Animation by Raymond Chang – All rights reserved. Evidence for Particles In 1886, Goldstein, using equipment similar to cathode ray tube, discovered particles with charge equal and opposite to that of electron, but much larger mass. Rutherford later (1911) found these particles to be identical to hydrogen atoms minus one electron - named these particles protons Chadwick (1932) discovered particles with similar mass to proton but zero charge. - discovered neutrons Thomson Model of the Atom • J.J. Thomson discovered the electron and knew that electrons could be emitted from matter (1897). • William Thomson proposed that atoms consist of small, negative electrons embedded in a massive, positive sphere. • The electrons were like currants in a plum pudding. • This is called the ‘plum pudding’ model of the atom. - - electrons - - - - The Rutherford Atom - - p+ - - - Zumdahl, Zumdahl, DeCoste, World of Chemistry 2002, page 57 Bohr Atom The Planetary Model of the Atom Bohr Model of Atom Increasing energy of orbits n=3 e- n=2 e- n=1 ee- e- e- e- e- e- e- eA photon is emitted with energy E = hf The Bohr model of the atom, like many ideas in the history of science, was at first prompted by and later partially disproved by experimentation. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Chemistry Bohr’s Bohr’sModel Model Nucleus Electron Orbit Energy Levels Modern View • The atom is mostly empty space • Two regions – Nucleus • protons and neutrons – Electron cloud • region where you might find an electron Dalton proposes the indivisible unit of an element is the atom. Review Models of the Atom Thomson discovers electrons, believed to reside within a sphere of uniform positive charge (the “plum-pudding model). Rutherford demonstrates the existence of a positively charged nucleus that contains nearly all the mass of an atom. Bohr proposes fixed circular orbits around the nucleus for electrons. In the current model of the atom, electrons occupy regions of space (orbitals) around the nucleus determined by their energies. Copyright © 2007 Pearson Benjamin Cummings. All rights reserved.