atoms: development of the atomic theory

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Atoms: Development of the Atomic Theory

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Atoms: Development of the Atomic Theory. Democritus. 460 BC - Greek philosopher proposes the existence of the atom He pounded materials until he made them into smaller and smaller parts He called them atoma which is Greek for “indivisible”. Democritus. His Theory: All atoms: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Atoms: Development of the Atomic Theory

Atoms:Development of

the Atomic Theory

Page 2: Atoms: Development of the Atomic Theory

Democritus

460 BC - Greek philosopher proposes the existence of the atom

He pounded materials until he made them into smaller and smaller parts

He called them atoma which is Greek for “indivisible”.

Page 3: Atoms: Development of the Atomic Theory

Democritus

His Theory:All atoms: Are small hard particles

Are made of a single material formed into different shapes and sizes

Are always moving, and they form different materials by joining together

Page 4: Atoms: Development of the Atomic Theory

John Dalton

1803 - British chemist; elements combine in specific proportions to form compounds

Solid Sphere Model or Bowling Ball Model

Proposed by John Dalton

Page 5: Atoms: Development of the Atomic Theory

John Dalton His Theory:

All substances are made of atoms that cannot be created, divided, or destroyed.

Atoms join with other atoms to make new substances.

Atoms of the same element are exactly alike, and atoms of different elements are different in mass and size.

Page 6: Atoms: Development of the Atomic Theory

J.J. Thomson

1897 - English chemist and physicist; discovered 1st subatomic particles

Plum Pudding Model or Raisin Bun Model

Proposed by J.J. Thomson

Page 7: Atoms: Development of the Atomic Theory

J.J. Thomson

His Theory: Atoms contain negatively charged

particles called electrons and positively charged matter.

Created a model to describe the atom as a sphere filled with positive matter with negative particles mixed in

Referred to it as the plum pudding model

Page 8: Atoms: Development of the Atomic Theory

Ernest Rutherford

1912 - New Zealand physicist discovered the nucleus

Nuclear ModelProposed by Ernest

Rutherford

Page 9: Atoms: Development of the Atomic Theory

Ernest Rutherford

His Theory: Small, dense, positively charged particle

present in nucleus called a proton

Electrons travel around the nucleus, but their exact places cannot be described.

Page 10: Atoms: Development of the Atomic Theory

Niels Bohr 1913 - Danish physicist; discovered

energy levels

Bohr Model or Planetary Model

Proposed by Niels Bohr

Page 11: Atoms: Development of the Atomic Theory

Niels Bohr

His Theory: Electrons travel around the nucleus in

definite paths and fixed distances.

Electrons can jump from one level to a path in another level.

Page 12: Atoms: Development of the Atomic Theory

Erwin Shrodinger

1924 - Austrian physicist; developed the electron cloud model

Electron Cloud Model

Proposed by Erwin Schrodinger

Page 13: Atoms: Development of the Atomic Theory

Erwin Shrodinger

His Theory: The exact path of electrons cannot be

predicted.

The region referred to as the electron cloud, is an area where electrons can likely be found.

Page 14: Atoms: Development of the Atomic Theory

James Chadwick

1932 - English physicist; discovered neutrons

His Theory: Neutrons have no electrical charge. Neutrons have a mass nearly equal to

the mass of a proton. Unit of measurement for subatomic

particles is the atomic mass unit (amu).

Page 15: Atoms: Development of the Atomic Theory

Modern Theory of the Atom

Atoms are composed of three main subatomic particles: the electron, proton, and neutron.

Most of the mass of the atom is concentrated in the nucleus of the atom.

Page 16: Atoms: Development of the Atomic Theory

Modern Theory of the Atom

The protons and neutrons are located within the nucleus, while the electrons exist outside of the nucleus.

In stable atoms, the number of protons is equal to the number of electrons.

Page 17: Atoms: Development of the Atomic Theory

Modern Theory of the Atom

The type of atom is determined by the number of protons it has.

The number of protons in an atom is equal to the atomic number.

Page 18: Atoms: Development of the Atomic Theory

Modern Theory of the Atom

The sum of the number of protons and neutrons in a particular atom is called the atomic mass.

Valence electrons are the outermost electrons.