1 / 69

The Atom

The Atom. C = Carbon N = Nitrogen O = Oxygen Cl = Chlorine Ba = Barium. U = ? Cf = ? Bk = ? Md = ? Es = ?. Elements and Symbols. K = Pb = W = Sb =. Co = Cu = Cr = Mg = Mn =. Atom : basic unit of matter

deshawn
Download Presentation

The Atom

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. The Atom

  2. C = Carbon N = Nitrogen O = Oxygen Cl = Chlorine Ba = Barium U = ? Cf = ? Bk = ? Md = ? Es = ? Elements and Symbols

  3. K = Pb = W = Sb = Co = Cu = Cr = Mg = Mn =

  4. Atom: basic unit of matter • Smallest unit of matter that individually retains the chemical characteristics of an element • Consists of a dense central region, called a nucleus, surrounded by a negatively charged cloud • Contains three types of subatomic particles: • Proton • Neutron • Electron

  5. The Proton • Charge = + 1.602×10−19  C • Called “+1” for clarity • Located in nucleus of atom • Mass = 1.672 x 10–24 g • Approx. 1 unified atomic mass unit (u) • 1 u = 1.66 x 10–24 g • 1/12 the weight of a Carbon-12 atom

  6. The Neutron • No charge (0 C) • Located in nucleus • Mass = 1.675 x 10–24 g • Approx. = 1 u

  7. The Electron • Charge = –1.602 x 10–19 C • Called “–1” • Located outside nucleus in an e- “cloud” • Mass = 9.109 x 10-28g • Approx. = 0 u

  8. Plum Pudding Model • J.J. Thomson • 1904

  9. Gold Foil Experiment • Ernest Rutherford • 1909 • Proved J.J. Thomson’s theory wrong • Evidence for existence of protons

  10. Evidence of Electrons

  11. Dmitri Mendeleev (1834-1907) • Russian chemist • Arranged elements in horizontal rows in order of increasing atomic weight • Started new rows in order to make columns of chemicals with similar characteristics • Left spaces open for elements yet to be discovered

  12. Classification of the Periodic Table Classification by Physical Properties

  13. Metals • Shiny • Conduct electricity • Ductile • Can be drawn through wires • Malleable (Shapeable) • High M.P. & B.P • Solids @ room temp • Except Hg

  14. Non-Metals • Don’t tend to conduct well • Not usually ductile • Tend to be brittle • Low M.P. & B.P. • Many are gases at r.t.

  15. Metalloids • Have chemical characteristics in between those of metals and non-metals • Includes elements: B (Boron), Silicon (Si), Germanium (Ge), Arsenic (As), Antimony (Sb), Tellurium (Te), Polonium (Po), Astatine (At)

  16. Classification by Electronic Properties

  17. Alkali Metals • Group 1 (1A) • Li, Na, K etc. • Soft, shiny metals • Conduct heat and electricity • React violently with H2O • Form H2(g) and alkaline (basic) solutions

  18. Akali(ne) Earth Metals • Group 2 (2A) • Be, Mg, Ca etc. • Not as reactive as Alkali Metals, but still quite reactive • Tend to make basic solutions when placed in water

  19. Transition Metals • Groups 3-12 • Tend to have high densities and B.P. • All are metals • Often used for electrical conduction • Often have vivid colors when in solution • Used for pigments

  20. Colors of Transition Metal Compounds Nickel Cobalt Copper Zinc Iron

  21. Lanthanides • Elements 57-71 • Lanthanum (La) to Lutetium (Lu) • Commonly used in lasers • Can deflect UV and infrared rays

  22. Actinides/Actinoids • Elements 89-103 • Actinium (Ac) to Lawrencium (Lr) • Only Actinium, Thorium (Th), and Uranium (U) occur naturally • Others created by neutron bombardment • Radioactive

  23. Groups 13(3A) – 16(6A) • No common name • Boundary between metals and non-metals occurs here • Contain elements abundant in earth’s crust, atmosphere, and living things • Contains the metalloids

  24. Halogens • Group 17 (7A) • Love to form salts with metals • NaCl, KBr, CaCl2 • Like to form diatomic molecules • F2, Cl2, Br2

  25. Noble Gases • Group 18 (8A) • Very unreactive • Don’t like to bond to other molecules • Generally not abundant

  26. Diatomic Molecules Dinitrogen (N2) • Molecules consisting of only two atoms of either the same or different elements • O2 • CO • Homonuclear Diatomic Molecule: a molecule made of two atoms of the same element • H2 • Heteronuclear Diatomic Molecule: a molecule made of two atoms that are different elements • NO

  27. Allotropism • The existence of multiple pure forms of an element, in the same phase (solid, liquid, or gas), that differ in structure • Different forms are called allotropes • Can exhibit varied physical properties and chemical behaviors • Don’t confuse allotropes with isotopes!!! O2 O3

  28. Which atom does the picture below represent?

  29. Atomic # • # of protons Atomic symbol Atomic Mass Atomic Weight Mass # Molar Mass

  30. Identify the atomic mass, number of protons, and number of neutrons for the following elements.

  31. Isotopes • Atoms of the same element that have different atomic masses • Same number of protons • Different # of neutrons

  32. Problems • Lithium has two natural isotopes, 6Li and 7Li, which have percent abundances of 7.5% and 92.5% respectively. What is the average atomic mass of Lithium? • Using the percent abundances below, calculate the average atomic mass for Carbon • C-12 = 98.890% • C-13 = 1.110% • C-14 = 0.0000000001% • Antimony (Sb) has two stable isotopes, 121Sb and 123Sb with masses of 120.9038 u and 122.9042 u, respectively. Calculate the percent abundances of these two isotopes

  33. Atomic Orbitals and Electron Configurations

  34. Atomic Orbitals • Orbital: a specific region in an atom thought to posses the highest probability of containing the electron in question at any one time • Only hold maximum of two electrons at a time • 4 basic types: s, p, d, f

More Related