1 / 28

8 th Grade Science-Atoms Unit

8 th Grade Science-Atoms Unit. Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Structure of the Atom. Chemical Symbols- consist of one capital letter or a capital letter plus one or two small letters ex: table 1—pg. 544. Atomic Components.

nburke
Download Presentation

8 th Grade Science-Atoms Unit

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. 8th Grade Science-Atoms Unit Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table

  2. Structure of the Atom • Chemical Symbols- consist of one capital letter or a capital letter plus one or two small letters ex: table 1—pg. 544

  3. Atomic Components • Atoms—the smallest piece of matter that still retains the property of the element • Atoms: Contain protons and neutrons in the nucleus • Electrons—contained in electron cloud

  4. Quarks—smaller particles that comprise protons and neutrons • Scientists have confirmed the existence of six uniquely different quarks • The search for the composition of protons and neutrons is an ongoing effort

  5. Atomic Theory-Past Models of the Atom • Democritus—around 400 BCE composed of tiny, solid particles that could not be subdivided/cut apart further • Called these particles”atomos” • (did not conduct experiments as proof)

  6. Dalton—solid sphere model (pool ball)-- • 1808--Dalton proposed an ATOMIC THEORY with 3 main points-- • All matter is made up of atoms • Atoms cannot be created or destroyed • All atoms of a certain element are identical, of they are different from atoms of all other elements

  7. JJ Thomson—(1897)conducted experiments providing evidence that atoms are made up of even smaller particles with a negative charge—ELECTRONS -known as “plum pudding” or cookie dough model w/electrons embedded in positively charged sphere

  8. Ernest Rutherford—(1909) -conducted the “gold foil” experiment -suggested atoms have a nucleus—positive center surrounded by moving electrons -he called the positively charged particles in the nucleus--PROTONS

  9. Niels Bohr—(1913) --Hypothesized about electrons traveling in fixed orbits -The Bohr model shows electrons moving around the nucleus in circular paths a certain distance from the nucleus -This model helped to predict properties of elements -(This is the model we see drawn most often)

  10. Electron Cloud Model • (1926)—current model (due to discovery of neutrons in nucleus as well) • Electron cloud—area around the nucleus of an atom where its electrons are most likely found (cannot be predicted) • Energy levels are areas of the cloud where electrons are more likely to befound

  11. Masses of Atoms • AMU—unit of measurement used for atomic particles • Mass of 1 proton or 1 neutron is almost 1 amu. • Atomic number—the number of protons in an atom • Mass number—the sum of the number of protons and the number of neutrons in the nucleus

  12. Atomic mass = decimal number under the symbol on the periodic table • NOT THE SAME THING AS ATOMIC NUMBER or MASS NUMBER • It is the average weight of all atoms of the element (including isotopes)

  13. Calculating neutron number • If you know the mass number and atomic number of an atom, you can find the number of neutrons as well,. • Neutron #= mass # - atomic #

  14. Isotopes • Carbon-12 is the most common form of carbon • However, Carbon-14 is a radioactive form of carbon • WHY? • Not all the atoms of an element have the same number of neutrons

  15. ISOTOPES • Isotopes—atoms of the same element that have different numbers of neutrons • Average atomic mass—the weighted average mass of an element’s mixture of isotopes (used because most elements have more than one isotope)

  16. The Periodic Table • Dimitri Mendeleev-arranged all the elements known in order of increasing atomic masses and discovered a pattern • Today’s PeriodicTable—elements are arranged by increasing atomic number and by changes in physical and chemical properties

  17. Mendeleev-left blank spaces to keep elements in line according to chemical properties • He predicted the existence of two elements not yet discovered

  18. Groups • The vertical columns in the periodic table-also called families • Periodic Table—pg. 556 and 557

  19. Electron Cloud Structure • In neutral atoms, the electron number = the proton number • SO: Atomic number tells how many protons AND how many electrons the element has

  20. Elements in the same group have the same number of electrons in their outer energy level-called VALENCE ELECTRONS • This number determines properties of the elements

  21. Number of Atoms in Energy Levels • Energy Level 1—holds 2 e • Energy Level 2—holds 8 e • Energy Level 3—holds 18 e • Energy Level 4—holds 32 e • Octet Rule—explains that atoms are most stable with an outer valence holding 8 electrons

  22. Periods/Rows • Horizontal groups across the periodic table • Each row ends with an element with a full outer valence (8 electrons) • Periods increase by one proton and one electron going L to R

  23. Metals • Metals are on the left-hand side of the periodic table • Most are shiny, ductile, malleable and are good conductors • Ductile—drawn into wire • Malleable-can be hammered into sheets

  24. Non-metals • Non-metals are on the right side of the periodic table • Most are gases, brittle, and poor conductors

  25. Metalloids • Metalloids-run along the middle zig-zag line • Metalloids have some of the properties of both metals and non-metals

  26. Carbon-14 has 6 protons and 8 neutrons Isotopes—atoms of the same element that have different numbers of neutrons Radioactive isotopes—those isotopes that are unstable and become radioactive

  27. Identifying Isotopes • Average atomic mass—the weighted-average mass of the mixture of its isotopes • Ex: 4 out of 5 atoms of B are boron-11 and 1 out of five is boron-10 • Weighted average = 4/5 (11) + 1/5(10) = 10.8 AMU

  28. Periodic Table websites: • www.chemicool.com • www.Ptable.com • www.periodictable.com • www.webelement.com

More Related