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Valence Electrons & Bohr Diagrams

Valence Electrons & Bohr Diagrams. Atomic Structure. Atoms have a nucleus that contains Protons and Neutrons Electrons are contained in shells that surround the nucleus An atom is made of mostly empty space Protons have a positive charge Electrons have a negative charge

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Valence Electrons & Bohr Diagrams

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  1. Valence Electrons & Bohr Diagrams

  2. Atomic Structure • Atoms have a nucleus that contains Protons and Neutrons • Electrons are contained in shells that surround the nucleus • An atom is made of mostly empty space • Protons have a positive charge • Electrons have a negative charge • Neutrons are Neutral

  3. Valence Electrons • Each electron shell can hold a certain number of electrons • Electron shells are filled from the inside out • Noble Gases have full outer electron shells • All other elements have partiallyfilled outer electron shells

  4. Valence Electrons • The electrons in the outer most electron shell are called valence electrons • The shell containing electrons that is furthest from the nucleus is called the valence shell • The number of electron shells with electrons is the same as the period number

  5. Noble Gas Stability • Noble gases are usually unreactive • This is because they have full valence shells • An element with a full valence shell is a happy element  • For two atoms to join together atoms must gain, lose or share electrons • Elements with full valence shells do not easily gain or lose electrons

  6. Noble Gas Stability • Atoms want to gain stability • Atoms will try to gain or lose electrons to have a full valence shell • Metals try to lose electrons • Non-Metals try to gain electrons

  7. Becoming An Ion • Electrons are negatively charged • Protons are positively charged • Neutral atoms do not have a charge because the number of protons is the same as the number of electrons • When atoms gain or lose electrons they become positively or negatively charged • An atom with a charge is called an Ion

  8. The Octet Rule • To draw the electron configuration of a neutral atom, look at the ATOMIC NUMBER. • Neutral atoms have the same number of electrons and protons • The first shell only holds 2 electrons • Every other shell is filled up to 8 electrons • The “left over” electrons are found on the last shell. The last shell is the valence shell and these electrons are called valence electrons. • Valence electrons tell us which atoms will likely combine with others in order to ‘share’ 8 electrons on their last shell. All matter wants to be stable.

  9. ATOMIC MASS • The atomic mass tells us how heavy an atom is. The mass is calculated by the total protons and neutrons in the nucleus of an atom. • Electrons are so tiny their mass is not counted in the overall mass of an atom. Their mass is considered negligible.

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