Chapter 4: Section 1. The Atom is the smallest particle of an element.

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Introduction to Atoms Chapter 4: Section 1

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 The Atomic theory grew as a series of models that developed from experimental evidence. As more evidence was collected, the theory and models were revised.

Transcript of Chapter 4: Section 1. The Atom is the smallest particle of an element.

Page 1: Chapter 4: Section 1.  The Atom is the smallest particle of an element.

Introduction to Atoms

Chapter 4: Section 1

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The Atom is the smallest particle of an element

Atomic Models

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The Atomic theory grew as a series of models that developed from experimental evidence. As more evidence was collected, the theory and models were revised.

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All elements are composed of atoms that cannot be divided

Dalton’s Theory:

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All atoms of the same element are exactly alike and have the same mass. Atoms of different elements are different and have different masses

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An atom of one element cannot be changed into an atom of another element.

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Atoms cannot be created or destroyed in any chemical change, only rearranged

◦Law of ____________ __ ____

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Every compound is composed of atoms of different elements, combined in a specific ratio

 

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Discovered that atoms had negatively charged particles and reasoned that the atom had to contain positively charged particles because the atom is electrically neutral

 

Thomson:

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Inferred that an atom’s positive charge must be clustered in a tiny region in its center called a nucleus

Rutherford:

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Electrons moved around the nucleus

He also named protons

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Theory came from Gold foil experiment. (see figure 4 & 5, pages 104 & 105)

some of the alpha particles had run into massive concentrations of positive charge and, since like charges repel, had been hurled straight back by them

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Showed that electrons could only have specific amounts of energy, leading them to move in certain orbits around the nucleus

Bohr:

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Electrons do not orbit the nucleus like planets, but can be anywhere in a cloud like region around the nucleus

Electron Cloud

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An electron’s movement is related to its energy level. The specific amount of energy the electron

has

Electrons of different energy levels are found in different places.

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James Chadwick discovered the neutrons, which are found in the nucleus, they have no charge and almost as much mass as the protons

Modern Atomic Model

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The model consists of an atom made up of a nucleus which contains the protons and neutrons surrounded by a cloudlike region of moving electrons contained in energy levels

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Protons are shown by a plus sign(1+), AMU = 1

Particle Charges

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Electrons are shown by a minus sign(1-), AMU = 1/ 1, 836

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◦Neutrons are shown by a zero sign(0), ◦ AMU = 1

 

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Every atom of an element has the same number of protons

Atomic Number

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The atomic number identifies the element

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Since an element is electrically neutral, the atomic number also equals the number of electrons.

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The number of neutrons in an atom can vary.

Isotopes and Mass Number

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◦Atoms with the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons are called isotopes.

◦ Figure 10, page 108

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An isotope is identified by its mass number

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The sum of protons and neutrons in the nucleus

Mass Number

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◦ Number of neutrons can be found by subtracting the atomic number FROM the Mass number.

  Mass number minus Atomic number = Neutron

number