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1 Early Thoughts 2 • The earliest models of the atom were developed by the ancient Greek philosophers. Leucippus of Miletus (490-??? B.C.). First to introduce the idea of the atom, an indivisible unit of matter. This idea was later extended by his student, Democritus. Democritus (about 470-370 B.C.) thought that all forms of matter were made of tiny particles called “atoms” from the Greek “atomos” indivisible. 3 According to Democritus atoms are: • Unchangeable and indivisible. • Identical except for their size and shape. • Always in motion. 4 Democritus imagined that atoms of iron were shaped like coils, making iron rigid, strong, and malleable. Atoms of fire were sharp, lightweight, and yellow. 5 • Aristotle (384-322 B.C.) rejected the theory of Democritus and endorsed that of Empedocles that stated that matter was made of 4 elements: air, earth, fire , and water. 6 • Empedocles (492-432 B.C.) believed that these elements have always existed in fixed amounts, and that there two major forces which act upon these elements to both create and destroy: Love and Strife. According to legend, he died by falling into a volcano's crater after failing to become a god as he predicted. 7 – Aristotle’s influence dominated the thinking of scientists and philosophers until the beginning of the 17th century 8 9 Alchemical Symbols antimony copper arsenic gold bismuth iron 10 Alchemical Symbols magnesium mercury platinum potassium phosphorus silver 11 Alchemical Symbols sulfur tin zinc lead 12 Dalton’s Model of the Atom 13 2000 years after Aristotle, John Dalton, an English schoolmaster, proposed his model of the atom–which was based on experimentation. 14 15 Dalton’s Atomic Theory 1. Elements are composed of minute indivisible particles called atoms. 2. Atoms of the same element are alike in mass and size. 3. Atoms of different elements have different masses and sizes. Modernunder research has circumstances demonstrated that Atoms special can 4. Chemical compounds are formed by atoms are composed of subatomic be decomposed. the union of two or more atoms of particles. different elements. 16 Dalton’s Atomic Theory 5. Atoms combine to form compounds in simple numerical ratios, such as one to one, two to two, two to three, and so on. 6. Atoms of two elements may combine in different ratios to form more than one compound. 17 Dalton’s atoms were individual particles. Atoms of each element are alike in mass and size. 18 Dalton’s atoms were individual particles. Atoms of different elements are not alike in mass and size. 19 H 2 = O 1 H 1 = O 1 Daltons atoms combine in specific ratios to form compounds. 20 Composition of Compounds 21 The Law of Definite Composition A compound always contains two or more elements combined in a definite proportion by mass. 22 Composition of Water • Water always contains the same two elements: hydrogen and oxygen. • The percent by mass of hydrogen in water is 11.2%. • The percent by mass of oxygen in water is 88.8%. • Water always has these percentages. If the percentages were different the compound would not be water. 23 Composition of Hydrogen Peroxide • Hydrogen peroxide always contains the same two elements: hydrogen and oxygen. • The percent by mass of hydrogen in hydrogen peroxide is 5.9%. • The percent by mass of oxygen in hydrogen peroxide is 94.1%. • Hydrogen peroxide always has these percentages. If the percentages were different the compound would not be hydrogen peroxide. 24 The Law of Multiple Proportions Atoms of two or more elements may combine in different ratios to produce more than one compound. 25 Combining Masses of Hydrogen and Oxygen Mass Hydrogen(g) Mass Oxygen(g) Water 1.0 8.0 Hydrogen Peroxide 1.0 16.0 Hydrogen peroxide has peroxide twice as much mass of oxygen in hydrogen 16g 2 = =26 ¹ oxygen water. mass(by of mass) oxygenasindoes water 8g 1 Combining Ratios of Hydrogen and Oxygen • Hydrogen peroxide has twice as many oxygens per hydrogen atom as does water. • The formula for water is H2O. • The formula for hydrogen peroxide is H2O2. 27 The Nature of Electric Charge 28 Surrounding the atomic nucleus are electrons. The name electron comes from the Greek word for amber, a brownish-yellow fossil resin studied by the early Greeks. They found that when amber was rubbed by a piece of cloth, it attracted such things as bits of straw. This phenomenon, known as the amber effect, remained a mystery for almost 2000 years. In the late 1500s other materials that behaved like amber were called “electrics”. The concept of electric charge awaited experiments by Benjamin Franklin nearly two centuries later. Franklin experimented with electricity and postulated the existence of an electric fluid that could flow from place to place. An object with an excess of this fluid he called electrically positive, and one with a deficiency of the fluid he called electrically negative. The fluid was thought to attract ordinary matter but to repel itself. We still follow Franklin’s lead in how we define positive and negative electricity. Franklin’s 1752 experiment with the kite in the lightning storm showed that lightning is an electrical discharge between clouds and the ground. This discovery told him that electricity is not restricted to solid or liquid objects and that it can travel 29 through a gas. Ben Franklin (1746-52 ) flew kites to demonstrate that lightning is a form of static electricity (ESD). He would run a wire to the kite and produce sparks at the ground, or charge a Leyden jar. This led Franklin to invent the lightning rod. Franklin also made several electrostatic generators with rotating glass balls to experiment with. These experiments led him to formulate the single fluid (imponderable fluid) theory of electricity. Previous theories had held there were two electrical fluids and two magnetic fluids. Franklin theorized just one imponderable electrical fluid (a fluid under conservation) in the universe. The difference in electrical charges was explained by an excess ( + ) or defect ( - ) of the single electrical fluid. This is where the positive ( + ) and negative ( - ) symbols come from in electrical science. 30 Discovery of Ions 31 • Michael Faraday discovered that certain substances, when dissolved in water, conducted an electric current. • He found that atoms of some elements moved to the cathode (negative electrode) and some moved to the anode (positive electrode). • He concluded they were electrically charged and called them ions (Greek wanderer). 32 Michael Faraday 33 • Svante Arrhenius reasoned that an ion is an atom (or a group of atoms) carrying a positive or negative electric charge. • Arrhenius accounted for the electrical conduction of molten sodium chloride (NaCl) by proposing that melted NaCl dissociated into the charged ions Na+ and Cl-. Δ NaCl → Na+ + Cl34 NaCl → Na+ + Cl• In the melt the positive Na+ ions moved to the cathode (negative electrode). Thus positive ions are called cations. • In the melt the negative Cl- ions moved to the anode (positive electrode). Thus negative ions are called anions. 35 Svante Arrhenius 36 Subatomic Parts of the Atom 37 An atom is very Small 38 This The diameter is 1 to 5often anbillionths atom is 0.1oftoa meter. 0.5 nm. If Even the diameter smaller particles of this dot thanis atoms 1 mm exist. then 10 These million are hydrogen called subatomic atoms particles. would form a line across the dot. 39 Subatomic Particles 40 Electron 41 In 1875 Sir William Crookes invented the Crookes tube. 42 • Crookes tubes experiments led the way to an understanding of the subatomic structure of the atom. 43 • Crookes tube emissions are called cathode rays. • Below are Crookes cathode-ray tubes. The cathode-rays (streams of electrons) can be clearly seen. 44 "Maltese Cross" Crookes Tube Demonstrates that radiant matter is blocked by metal objects 45 Other Interesting Crookes Tubes May Be Found At the Sites Below: • http://www.sparkmuseum.com/GLASS.HTM • http://www.oneillselectronicmuseum.com/page9.html 46 In 1897 Sir Joseph Thomson demonstrated that cathode rays: • travel in straight lines. • are negative in charge. • are deflected by electric and magnetic fields. • produce sharp shadows • are capable of moving a small paddle wheel. 47 Paddle Wheel 48 Thomson’s Apparatus batteries 49 Thomson’s Lab 50 J.J. Thomson determined and is given credit for finding: • The charge to mass (e/m) ratio of the cathode ray. • The cathode ray was renamed the “electron”. • Thomson “discovered” the electron. http://www.aip.org/history/mod/fission/fission1/01.html 51 Can atoms be split apart? Does each atom have inner workings? Parts which can be separated? Parts which can perhaps be put to some use? These questions had already come to mind in 1898, when J. J. Thomson isolated the electron. That was the first solid proof that atoms are indeed built of much tinier pieces. Thomson speaks of the electron in this recorded passage... Could anything at first sight seem more impractical than a body which is so small that its mass is an insignificant fraction of the mass of an atom of hydrogen, which itself is so small that a crowd of these atoms equal in number to the population of the whole world would be too small to have been detected by any means then known to science. 52 Robert Millikan • Determined the charge of the electron. • Experiment called the Oil Drop Experiment. 53 Oil Drop Apparatus 54 Apparatus Used by Millikan 55 Modern Apparatus 56 Proton 57 • Eugen Goldstein, a German physicist, first observed protons in 1886: • Thomson determined the protons’ characteristics. • Thomson showed that atoms contained both positive and negative charges. • This disproved the Dalton model of the atom which held that atoms were indivisible. 58 Thomson’s Plum-Pudding Model of the Atom 59 Neutron 60 • James Chadwick discovered the neutron in 1932. • Its actual mass is slightly greater than the mass of a proton. 61 Electric charge and mass of electrons, protons, & neutrons Particle symbol Actual charge (coulombs) Relative charge Actual mass (g) Relative mass (amu) Electron e– –1.602 10–19 –1 9.11 10–28 0 Proton p +1.602 10–19 +1 1.67 10–24 1 Neutron n 0 1.68 10–24 1 0 Ions 63 • Positive ions were explained by assuming that a neutral atom loses electrons. • Negative ions were explained by assuming that extra electrons can be added to atoms. 64 When one or more electrons are lost from an atom, a cation is formed. 65 When one or more electrons are added to a neutral atom, an anion is formed. 66 The Nuclear Atom 67 X-rays were discovered by Wilhelm Röentgen in 1895 68 • Röentgen observed that a vacuum discharge tube enclosed in a thin, black cardboard box had caused a nearby piece of paper coated with the salt barium platinocyanide to phosphorescence. • From this and other experiments he concluded that certain rays, which he called X-rays, were emitted from the discharge tube, penetrated the box, and caused the salt to glow. 69 • Radioactivity was discovered by Henri Becquerel in 1896. 70 • Shortly after Röentgen’s discovery, Antoine Henri Becquerel attempted to show a relationship between X-rays and the phosphorescence of uranium salts. • Becquerel wrapped a photographic plate in black paper, sprinkled a sample of a uranium salt on it, and exposed it to sunlight. 71 • When Becquerel attempted to repeat the experiment the sunlight was intermittent. • He took the photographic plate wrapped in black paper with the uranium sample on it, and placed the whole setup in a drawer. 72 • Several days later he developed the film and was amazed to find an intense image of the uranium salt on the plate. • He repeated the experiment in total darkness with the same result. • This proved that the uranium salt emitted rays that affected the photographic plate, and that these rays were not a result of phosphorescence due to exposure to sunlight. 73 • Two years later, in 1898, Marie Curie coined the name radioactivity. Radioactivity is the spontaneous emission of particles and/or rays from the nucleus of an atom. 74 Marie Curie, in a classic experiment, proved that alpha and beta particles are oppositely charged. three types of radiation are Beta rays areare strongly deflected to radiation passes between Gamma rays not detected by deflected a the photographic thethe positive pole. poles of an electromagnet by magnet. plate Alpha rays are less strongly radioactive source deflected to the negativeapole. was placed inside a lead block 75 The Rutherford Experiment 76 Ernest Rutherford 77 • In 1899 Rutherford began to investigate the nature of the rays emitted by uranium. • He found two particles in the rays. He called them alpha and beta particles. 78 • Rutherford in 1911 performed experiments that shot a stream of alpha particles at a gold foil. • Most of the alpha particles passed through the foil with little or no deflection. • He found that a few were deflected at large angles and some alpha particles even bounced back. 79 Rutherford’s alpha particle scattering experiment. 80 • An electron with a mass of 1/1837 amu could not have deflected an alpha particle with a mass of 4 amu. • Rutherford knew that like charges repel. • Rutherford concluded that each gold atom contained a positively charged mass that occupied a tiny volume. He called this mass the nucleus. 81 • If a positive alpha particle approached close enough to the positive mass it was deflected. • Most of the alpha particles passed through the gold foil. This led Rutherford to conclude that a gold atom was mostly empty space. 82 • Because alpha particles have relatively high masses, the extent of the reflections led Rutherford to conclude that the nucleus was very heavy and dense. 83 Deflection Scattering Deflection and scattering of alpha particles by positive gold nuclei. 84 Ideas about the atom were refined by one of Thomson's students, Ernest Rutherford. He showed that the mass in an atom is not smeared out uniformly throughout the atom, but is concentrated in a tiny, inner kernel: the nucleus. Rutherford wanted to understand the nucleus, not for any practical purpose, but because he was attracted to the beauty of its simplicity. Fundamental things should be simple not complex. Here is how he explains himself in 1931... The bother is that a nucleus, as you know, is a very small thing, and we know very little about it. Now, I had the opinion for a long time, that's a personal conviction, that if we knew more about the nucleus, we'd find it was a much simpler thing than we suppose, that these fundamental things I think have got to be fairly simple. But it's the non-fundamental things that are very complex usually. I am always a believer in simplicity being a simple person myself. 85 • The gamma ray, a third type of emission from radioactive material, was discovered by Paul Villard in 1900. 86 Alpha, Beta, and Gamma Radiation Name Alpha Particle Symbol Mass (amu) Charge 4 +2 e 1 1837 –1 0 0 Nuclide Symbol 4 2 He Beta 0 -1 Gamma Ray 0 0 87 General Arrangement of Subatomic Particles 88 • Rutherford’s experiment showed that an atom had a dense, positively charged nucleus. • Chadwick’s work in 1932 demonstrated the atom contains neutrons. • Rutherford also noted that light, negatively charged electrons were present in an atom and offset the positive nuclear charge. 89 • Rutherford put forward a model of the atom in which a dense, positively charged nucleus is located at the atom’s center. • The negative electrons surround the nucleus. • The nucleus contains protons and neutrons 90 91 Atomic Numbers of the Elements 92 • The atomic number of an element is equal to the number of protons in the nucleus of that element. • The atomic number of an atom determines which element the atom is. 93 Every atom with an atomic number of 1 is a hydrogen atom. Every hydrogen atom contains 1 proton in its nucleus. 94 Every atom with an atomic number of 6 is a carbon atom. Every carbon atom contains 6 protons in its nucleus. 95 atomic number Every atom with an atomic number of 1 is a hydrogen atom. 1 proton in the nucleus 96 atomic number Every atom with an atomic number of 6 is a carbon atom. 6 protons in the nucleus 97 atomic number Every atom with an atomic number of 92 is a uranium atom. 92 protons in the nucleus 98 Isotopes of the Elements 99 • Atoms of the same element can have different masses. • They always have the same number of protons, but they can have different numbers of neutrons in their nuclei. • The difference in the number of neutrons accounts for the difference in mass. • These are isotopes of the same element. 100 Greek roots isos (equal) and topos (place). Hence: "the same place," meaning that different isotopes of a single element occupy the same position on the periodic table. Isotopes of the Same Element Have Equal numbers of protons Different numbers of neutrons 102 Isotopic Notation Mass number is also the number of nucleons in the nucleus. Nucleons = protons and/or neutrons 103 Relationship Between Mass Number and Atomic Number 104 The mass number minus the atomic number equals the number of neutrons in the nucleus. mass number atomic number 109 47 Ag atomic mass number number 109 47 = = number of neutrons 62 105 Isotopic Notation 8 protons + 8 neutrons 16 O 8 8 protons 106 Isotopic Notation 8 protons + 9 neutrons 17 O 8 8 protons 107 Isotopic Notation 8 protons + 10 neutrons 18 O 8 8 protons 108 Hydrogen has three isotopes 1 proton 1 proton 1 proton 0 neutrons 1 neutron 2 neutrons 109 Examples of Isotopes Element Protons Electrons Neutrons Symbol Hydrogen Hydrogen Hydrogen 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 2 1 1 2 1 3 1 Uranium Uranium 92 92 92 92 143 146 235 92 U 238 92 U Chlorine Chlorine 17 17 17 17 18 20 H H H 35 17 37 110 17 Cl Cl Atomic Weight 111 • The mass of a single atom is too small to measure on a balance. • Using a mass spectrometer, the mass of the hydrogen atom was determined. 112 A Modern Mass Spectrometer Positive ions formed from sample. Electrical field From the intensity and positions at slits A mass of the lines Deflection on the mass of accelerates spectrogram spectrogram, the different ions positive ions. positive is recorded. isotopes and their at relative occurs amounts can be determined. magnetic field. 113 A typical reading from a mass spectrometer. The two principal isotopes of copper are shown with the 114 abundance (%) given. Using a mass spectrometer, the mass of one hydrogen atom was determined to be 1.673 x 10-24 g 115 This number is very small. small small small small small small small small small small small small small small small small small small small 116 The mass of a hydrogen atom is very small. Numbers of this sizeproblem are too small for of To overcome this a system practical use. relative atomic weights using “atomic mass units” was devised to express the masses of elements using simple numbers. 1.673 x 10-24 g 117 The standard to which the masses of all other atoms are compared to was chosen to be the most abundant isotope of carbon. 12 6 C 118 A mass of exactly 12 atomic mass units (amu) was assigned to 12 6 C 119 1 1 amu is defined as exactly equal to 12 the mass of a carbon-12 atom 1 amu = 1.6606 x 10-24 g 12 6 C 120 Average atomic weight 1.00797 amu. H 121 Average atomic weight 39.098 amu. K 122 Average atomic weight 248.029 amu. U 123 Average Relative Atomic Weight 124 • Most elements occur as mixtures of isotopes. • Isotopes of the same element have different masses. • The listed atomic mass of an element is the average relative mass of the isotopes of that element compared to the mass of carbon-12 (exactly 12.0000…amu) 125 To calculate the atomic mass multiply the atomic mass of each isotope by its percent abundance and add the results. Isotope 63 29 Cu 65 29 Cu Isotopic mass (amu) Abundance (%) 62.9298 69.09 64.9278 30.91 Average atomic mass (amu) 63.55 (62.9298 amu) 0.6909 = 43.48 amu (64.9278 amu) 0.3091 = 20.07 amu 63.55 amu 126 Isotope Practice (Fill-in the Blanks) symbol O 2 16 8 Pt 195 Pt 78 P 30 3 30 –3 15 P atomic no mass no #e #n 8 16 10 8 78 195 78 30 18 53 15 117 15 #p 8 78 15 I 53 127 Kr 36 84 36 48 36 Se 34 79 34 45 34 20 20 127 53 84 36 79 34 Ca 40 2 40Ca+2 20 20 40 18 74 53 127 128