1 / 28

Atomic Structure

Learn about subatomic particles and atomic structure in this informative guide. Explore topics such as atomic number, isotopes, ions, and more.

acody
Download Presentation

Atomic Structure

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Atomic Structure Subatomic Particles

  2. Henry Mosley - 1913 • Mosley used the cathode ray tube in a slightly different way. • Substituted a denser material in place of the glass and was able to get even higher radiation  X- Rays

  3. He tried 30 different metal targets!

  4. Atomic Number - 1913 • Mosley tried 30 different elements as “STOPPERS.” • Found that the greater the atomic weight of the “stopper,” the shorter the wavelength of the x-rays.

  5. What does any good scientist do? PLOTS THE DATA! • Moseley tried plotting the wavelength of the x-ray vs. the atomic mass of the stopper. Not so nice… • Then he tried correlating the wavelength of the x-ray with an integer, n. Got a very pretty graph.

  6. Mosley’s integer was the atomic number!

  7. Atomic Number • Size of nuclear charge. • Atomic number = # protons in nucleus. • Determines the identity of the element. • Used to order the periodic table. • For neutral atoms • atomic number (#p) = number of electrons.

  8. Henry Mosley Killed in WWI at the age of 28.

  9. What we knew by 1932: -1 1 1 0

  10. What is an a.m.u.? • atomic mass unit • Defined as 1/12th the mass of the C-12 atom • C-12 is used as the reference for atomic masses. • One atom of C-12 has a mass of exactly 12 amu Relative Mass

  11. Location of Subatomic Particles • Electrons located outside nucleus. • Protons & neutrons located inside nucleus. • Protons and neutrons combined are called: nucleons

  12. Mass Number • Mass number = # protons+# neutrons • Always a whole number (no decimals) • Mass number can be estimated from the atomic mass by rounding to the nearest integer. • REMEMBER: Only the # neutrons can vary for any given element. The number of protons must remain the same – it identifies the element!

  13. Isotopes • These are atoms of the same element with a different number of neutrons. The protons are the same! • So Dalton’s theory has been modified in a number of important ways. • The atom is divisible. • Atoms of the same element can be different.

  14. Isotopic Notation 12C 6 • The left superscript is the mass number. • The left subscript is the atomic number. • Sometimes both are given; sometimes only the mass number is given. (You can figure out the atomic number from the P.T.)

  15. Notation 12 = no. of protons + neutrons. 6 = no. of protons. 12C 6 How many neutrons in this atom? 12 – 6 = 6 neutrons

  16. 17O Mass number is ? Atomic number is ? # of neutrons is ? # of electrons in atom is? 17 8 8 17 – 8 = 9 8

  17. 15N Mass number is ? Atomic number is ? # of neutrons is ? # of electrons in atom is? 15 7 7 15 – 7 = 8 7

  18. 19F Mass number is ? Atomic number is ? # of neutrons is ? # of electrons in atom is? 19 9 19 – 9 = 10 9

  19. Hyphen Notation • Might also see C-12. The number following the symbol is the mass number! • You have to look up the atomic number.

  20. What’s the difference between H-1, H-2, and H-3? • All H’s have 1 proton. • H-1: mass # = 1. Has 1 proton, 0 neutrons. • H-2: mass # = 2. Has 1 proton, so it must have 1 neutron. • H-3: mass # = 3. Has 1 proton, so it must have 2 neutrons.

  21. Consider U-234, U-235, & U-238 92 • What’s the atomic number of U? • How many protons in U? • How many neutrons in U-234? • How many neutrons in U-235? • How many neutrons in U-238? • How many electrons in U? 92 234 – 92 = 142 235 – 92 = 143 238 – 92 = 146 92

  22. How many neutrons in Po-217? • What’s the atomic number? • How many protons? • So the neutrons are … 84 84 217 – 84 = 133 neutrons!

  23. IONS Charged Particles

  24. IONS • Atoms electrically neutral # of electrons = # of protons • IONS are atoms that have gained or lost electrons. • The protons and electrons don’t balance out anymore, so ions carry a charge.

  25. IONS • Chargeof ion = #protons - #electrons (We subtract the electrons since they’re negative.)

  26. IONS • If the atom loses electrons, it’s going to have more positive charge than negative. What kind of ion is it? • If the atom gains electrons, it’s going to have more negative charge than positive. What kind of ion is it? Positive (cation) Negative (anion)

  27. Charge of Ions • If we want to specify an ion, we write the charge as a right superscript. • Cl-1 a chloride ion with a charge of -1. • Na+1 a sodium ion with a charge of +1. • O-2 an oxide ion with a charge of -2. • If there’s no right superscript, it’s understood to be zero and a neutral atom.

  28. Putting it all together • How many protons, neutrons, & electrons in each of the following: 23Na+1 Got 1 Got 2 Lost 1 34S-2 19F-1 16 9 11 16 p, 18 n, 18 e 9 p, 10 n, 10 e 11 p, 12 n, 10 e Got 3 Lost 2 Lost 2 13N-3 64Zn+2 25Mg+2 30 7 12 7 p, 6 n, 10 e 30 p, 34 n, 28 e 12 p, 13 n, 10 e

More Related