* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Name
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Name____________________________ Atomic Theory Review Sheet Complete the following chart.. PARTICLE proton neutron electron CHARGE Positive Neutral Negative MASS 1 amu 1 amu 0 amu LOCATION Nucleus Nucleus Outside of the nucleus Define the following terms: 1. Atom – the smallest part of an element that still retains the properties of that element 2. Isotope – occurs when atoms of the same element have a different number of neutrons 3. Atomic number – determines the identity of an element, number of protons & electrons 4. Mass number – the total number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus of an atom Short Answer: 5. What is the charge of an atom and why? Atoms are neutral because the positive protons cancel the negative electrons. 6. Summarize the main concepts of Dalton’s Atomic Theory. 1. All elements are composed of tiny indivisible particles called atoms. 2. Atoms of the same element are identical AND atoms of different elements are different 3. Atoms of different elements can physically mix together or combine in simple whole number ratios. 4. Chemical reactions occur when atoms are separated, joined or rearranged, but atoms of one element are never changed into another element as a result of a reaction. 7. Which parts of Dalton’s theory are no longer accepted and why? divisible AND 2. atoms of the same element are identical 1. Atoms are now known to be 8. Experiments with a cathode ray tube led to the discovery of the _____electron____. 9. Explain how Rutherford’s gold foil experiment worked, and what it proved. Rutherford shot radioactive particles through gold foil onto photo paper. He expected all the particles to go straight through, but some bounced back. This told him that there was a positively charged, very dense center called the nucleus. 10. What determines the identity of an atom? The atomic number or number of protons identifies it. 11. Define the law of definite proportions. States that any sample of a compound always has the same composition. 12. Define the law of multiple proportions. States that elements always combine in simple whole number increments; ex) H2O & H2O2 13. Define the law of conservation of mass. States that mass can’t be created or destroyed; mass of reactants is EQUAL to mass of the reactants 14. What do isotopes of the same element have in common and what is different? Isotopes have the same atomic number, # of protons & # of electrons. Isotopes have different mass numbers and # of neutrons. 15. An element has 19 protons, 19 electrons and 20 neutrons. It has an atomic number of __19_ and a mass number of __39__? What is the identity of this element?___potassium_____ 16. An element has 8 protons, 8 electrons and 8 neutrons. It has an atomic number of __8_ and a mass number of __16__? What is the identity of this element? _____oxygen_____ 17. What is the number of protons, neutrons and electrons for: Chlorine-35 17 protons, 18 neutrons, 17 electrons Argon-40 18 protons, 22 neutrons, 18 electrons 67 30 Zn 28 14 Si 30 protons, 37 neutrons, 30 electrons 14 protons, 14 neutrons, 14 electrons 18. If Chlorine-35 has 18 neutrons, how many electrons does it have? 17 electrons 19. How do you find the following: A. Number of protons in an atom = atomic number B. Number of neutrons in an atom = mass # – atomic # C. Number of electrons in an atom = atomic number (same as protons) Symbol C Br P F Zn Atomic Number 6 35 15 9 30 Mass Number 14 80 31 19 95 Number of Protons 6 35 15 9 30 Number of Electrons 6 35 15 9 30 Number of Neutrons 8 45 16 10 65