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4.1 Defining the AtomEarly Models
Democritus (about 400BC)-
matter composed of tiny, indivisible particles
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Dalton (about 1800)- - used scientific method
transformed Democritus’ ideas into theory
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4.1 Defining the Atom
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Atoms of element A are identical
Atoms of element B are identical, but different than element A
Atoms of element A and B can be physically mixed together
A and B can be chemically combined as a compound
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Dalton Proposed1.All elements composed of tiny,
indivisible particles2. Atoms of an element are identical
& distinct from atoms of other elements
3. Atoms can form compounds, combining in simple whole-number ratios
4. Atoms can be rearranged (chemical reactions), but atoms of one element do not change into atoms of another element.
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Sizing Up the Atom5x10-11 - 2x10-10
Atoms cannot be seen with a light microscopeA tunnelling electron microscope can make images of atoms like this:
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Tunnelling Electron MicroscopeAtoms cannot be seen with a light microscope
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Chemistry Warm Up Chapter 4 Scavenger Hunt.1. Copy this table and fill in the missing information:
Name of Particle
Mass Relative to a Proton
Charge Location in the Atom
2. Given that 1 mile = 5280 feet,Use conversion factors and dimensional analysis to calculate the number of miles in 12 427 inches.Show all your work, conversion factors and proper cross-canceling of units.
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Chemistry Warm Up Chapter 7 Scavenger Hunt.1. Copy this table and fill in the missing information:
Name of Particle
Mass Relative to a Proton
Charge Location in the Atom
2. Given that 1 mile = 5280 feet,Use conversion factors and dimensional analysis to calculate the number of miles in 12 427 inches.Show all your work, conversion factors and proper cross-canceling of units.
Proton 1 1+ Nucleus
Neutron >1 0 Nucleus
Electron 1/1840 1-Around nucleus
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Chemistry WarmUp Copy ALL of these assignments into your binderIncluding dates, WarmUps, InClass assignments AND page numbers!
September 28-29WarmUp: Agenda / Isotope IntroductionInClass: The Black Box p108Demo: Observing Cathode Rays p105TEInClass Periodic Table 101Homework Key Concepts 4.2 and 4.3 DUE NEXT CLASSSeptember 30WarmUp: questions q21-24p116-117InClass: Dimensional Analysis PracticeHomework: Complete notes 5.1 answer q1-7p132 DUE NEXT CLASSOctober 1-2 WarmUp: Ms Lyall’s Periodic Table Scavenger HuntTest: Chapters 1-3InClass: The Wintergreen Lifesaver Effect. Urban Legend? We find out. InClass: Electron Configuration Worksheet Demo: Atomic Emission Spectra p137 (adapted)Homework: Complete notes 5.2 answer q8-9p135 DUE NEXT CLASSWhen you finish, read 4.2 and complete your notes.
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4.2 Structure of the Nuclear Atom
Subatomic Particles
Atoms not indivisible
Electrons
Protons
Neutrons
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Electrons
Used cathode ray tube to show electrons are negatively charged
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ElectronsDiscovered 1897 by J.J.Thomson
Used cathode ray tube to show electrons are negatively charged
Deflected by magnet
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ElectronsDiscovered 1897 by J.J.Thomson
Used cathode ray tube to show electrons are negatively charged
Deflected by electrical charge
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ElectronsDiscovered 1897 by J.J.Thomson
Calculated charge/mass ratio
The ratio of charge to mass was the same, regardless of gas in cathode tube.Conclusion? Electrons must be present and the same in all elements.
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Electrons
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ElectronsRobert A Millikan 1916 oil drop experiment
Millikan calculated the mass of an electronMass or electron = 1/1840 mass of a hydrogen atomCharge = -1
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ElectronsRobert A Millikan 1916 oil drop experiment
The actual apparatus used in the Millikan oil drop experiment
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Neutrons and ProtonsAtoms are neutralWhen charges do exist, they are always in simple multiples of the charge on an electron (no fractions)Eugen Goldstein 1886 found cathode ray evidence of protonsProton- charge of +1
mass 1840 times mass of electron
(1 atomic mass unit)
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Neutrons and ProtonsNeutronsNot discovered until 1932
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Neutrons have no chargehave a mass similar to proton
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Atomic Nucleus“Plum pudding,” modelElectron, “raisins,” stuck in a lump of positive, “dough.”
Disproved in 1911 by one of Thomson’s students, Ernest Rutherford
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Rutherford’s Gold Foil Experiment
Alpha particles shot at a thin piece of gold foil did not pass right through with slight deflection. Instead,
most passed straight through. Some bounced right back!
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Rutherford’s Gold Foil Experiment
Rutherford concluded that •Most of the atom is empty space•All of the positive charge
and almost all of the mass isConcentrated in the tiny core, “nucleus.”
composed of protons and neutrons.An idea of the size: Atom = football stadium
Nucleus = marble
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4.3 Distinguishing Atoms
Atomic number = number of protons
Defines the element!
Atoms are electrically neutral
therefore atomic number also is thenumber of electrons
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p111 problem 1515 complete the table:
Element Atomic # Protons Electrons
K 19 19
5
S 16
V 23
19
B 5 5
16 16
23 23
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p111 problem 1616 How many protons and electrons?
a.Fluorine
9
b. Calcium
20
c. Aluminium
13
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number of protons + number of neutrons
= mass number
Therefore
mass number - number of protons = number of neutrons
Helium with a mass number of 4 has 2 protons. How many neutrons does it have?
(Atomic) Mass Number
2 neutrons
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Au
Isotope Notation
197
79
mass number
atomic number
(number of protons+ neutrons)
(number of protons)
symbol
First letter always capitalizedSecond letter never capitalized
How many neutrons does an atom of gold-197 have?118 neutrons
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How many neutrons p112 q17
O16 8
a. b. S3216
c. Ag108 47
Br8035
d. e. Pb20782
8 neutrons 16 neutrons 61 neutrons
45 neutrons 125 neutrons
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Express in Isotope Notation p112 q18
C12 6a. Carbon-12
F19 9a. Fluorine-19
Be 9 4a. Beryllium-9
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Express in Isotope Notation p112 q18
C12 6a. Carbon-12
F19 9a. Fluorine-19
Be 9 4a. Beryllium-9
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Isotopes
Ne2110
Neon-20
Neon-21
Ne2010
Neon-22 Ne2210
10 neutrons
11 neutrons
12 neutrons
Isotopes have different # of neutrons,same # of protons and electrons
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Q19 p113
O16 8
Use isotope notation to showOxygen-16 Oxygen-17 Oxygen 18
O17 8 O18
8
Q12How many neutrons in each?(Chromium’s atomic number=24)Chromium-50 Chromium-52Chromium-5326 neutrons 28 neutrons 29 neutrons
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Atomic MassAtomic Mass Unit1/12 mass of an atom of carbon-12Since carbon 12 has 6 protons
and 6 neutrons,Mass of 1 proton is about 1amu
Why isn’t the atomic mass = atomic mass number?
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Atomic MassWeighted average of the mass of all naturally occurring isotopes. To find atomic mass, calculate(Mass of isotope)•(%abundance as decimal)For each isotopeAnd add the results together
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Atomic Mass
Carbon is98.89% Carbon-12 & 1.11% Carbon-13Its atomic mass would be(12amu•0.9889)+(13.03amu•0.0111) =
12.011 amu
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Chemistry Warm Upquestions q21-24p116-117You CAN do this. Work out the example if you are stuck. It’s like this:Carbon is made up of98.89% Carbon-12 & 1.11% Carbon-13Its atomic mass would be(12amu•0.9889)+(13.03amu•0.0111) =
12.011 amu
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Chemistry Warm Upquestions q22-24 p149Try to answer these without your notes or the book,then go back and check your answers against your notes or the book.When you finish, complete the second version of
Reading & Processing Information from the Periodic Table (worksheet)
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Periodic TableHorizontal row = periodAtomic number increases left to rightAtomic number increases as you go downProperties vary as you go across a periodVertical column = groupGroups have similar chemical properties