1 / 43

Atoms and Molecules

Atoms and Molecules. Atoms. Atoms are basic building blocks of matter. Democritus - developed the theory that atoms made all matter in 450 B.C. Atoms. John Dalton- proposed the atomic theory of atoms All atoms of an element are alike No to elements have the same atoms

walter
Download Presentation

Atoms and Molecules

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. Atoms and Molecules

  2. Atoms • Atoms are basic building blocks of matter. • Democritus- developed the theory that atoms made all matter in 450 B.C

  3. Atoms • John Dalton- proposed the atomic theory of atoms • All atoms of an element are alike • No to elements have the same atoms • Atoms cant be broken into smaller pieces • Atoms combine to make compounds • Every atom of an element has the same mass • The masses of atoms in a compound must be equalized • Found not to be true

  4. Atoms • J.J. Thompson- said atoms were a ball of positive charges with negative charges scattered throughout

  5. Atoms • Smallest unit of matter but not the smallest particle of matter • Made of: • Protons- have mass and a + charge • Electrons- have very little mass and a - charge • Neutrons- have about the same mass as a proton but have no charge

  6. Atoms • Ruthorford- found the positively charged center of the atom called the nucleus (it contained + charged protons)

  7. Niels Bohr • Father of the atomic model used today. Electron cloud • Cloud Model

  8. Molecules • A molecule is the smallest particle of a substance that exists alone. • This is a picture of a water molecule. It is two parts hydrogen and one part oxygen.

  9. Compounds • A compound is two or more elements combined together. • This is a picture of a salt compound.

  10. Name the charge of each part of an atom (whether it’s negative or positive). • Proton • Neutron • Electron

  11. Elements and the Periodic Table

  12. Elements • An element is a substance made up of only one kind of atom. • Song

  13. Classification is arranging items into groups or categories according to some criteria.

  14. Classifying Matter

  15. Review • Matter is usually defined as anything that has mass and occupies space.

  16. Disorder Some space Particles closer together Order Particles fixed in position Total disorder Lots of empty space Gas Liquid Solid

  17. Review • Solids, Liquids, and Gases • Gases have no defined shape or defined volume • Low density • Liquids flow and can be poured from one container to another • Indefinite shape and takes on the shape of the container. • Solids have a definite volume • Have a definite shape.

  18. Mixtures and Pure Substances • A mixturehas unlike parts and a composition that varies from sample to sample • A heterogeneous mixturehas two or more dislike parts. • A homogeneous mixtureis the same throughout the sample

  19. A classification scheme for matter.

  20. Review • A physical change is a change that does not alter the identity of the matter. • A chemical change is a change that does alter the identity of the matter. • A compound is a pure substance that can be decomposed by a chemical change into simpler substances with a fixed mass ratio • An element is a pure substance which cannot be broken down into anything simpler by either physical or chemical means.

  21. Sugar (A) is a compound that can be easily decomposed to simpler substances by heating. (B) One of the simpler substances is the black element carbon, which cannot be further decomposed by chemical or physical means.

  22. Elements

  23. Names of Elements • The first 103 elements have internationally accepted names, which are derived from: • The compound or substance in which the element was discovered • An unusual or identifying property of the element • Places, cities, and countries • Famous scientists • Greek mythology • Astronomical objects.

  24. The elements of aluminum, Iron, Oxygen, and Silicon make up about 88 percent of the earth's solid surface. Water on the surface and in the air as clouds and fog is made up of hydrogen and oxygen. The air is 99 percent nitrogen and oxygen. Hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon make up 97 percent of a person. Thus almost everything you see in this picture us made up of just six elements.

  25. MODERN ATOMIC THEORY

  26. Chemical Symbols • There are about a dozen common elements that have s single capitalized letter for their symbol • The rest, that have permanent names have two letters. • the first is capitalized and the second is lower case. • Some elements have symbols from their Latin names. • Ten of the elements have symbols from their Latin or German names.

  27. Atomic Number Charge (if ion) Symbol Atomic Mass

  28. 55 133 EXAMPLE How many protons, neutrons and electrons are found in an atom of Cs Atomic number = protons and electrons There are 55 protons and 55 electrons Mass number = sum of protons and neutrons 133 – 55 = 78 There are 78 neutrons

  29. Hydrogen Protons: Neutrons: 0 Electrons: H 1 1

  30. Sodium Protons: 11 Neutrons: Electrons: 11 Na 23

  31. Rhenium isotope Protons: 75 Neutrons: 112 Electrons: 75 75 Re 187

  32. The Periodic Law

  33. Things to look for • Explain the properties of metals. • What are the noble gasses? • What makes a metalloid different from a non- metal? • How do you calculate the atomic mass of an element? • What are the locations of the alkali metals, the earth metals, the halogens, and the noble gasses?

  34. The Periodic Law • Similar physical and chemical properties recur periodically when the elements are listed in order of increasing atomic number.

  35. The Modern Periodic Table

  36. Introduction • A row is called a period • A column is called a group

  37. Chemical “Families” • IA are called alkali metals because the react with water to form an alkaline solution • Group IIA are called the alkali earth metals because they are reactive, but not as reactive as Group IA. • They are also soft metals like Earth. • Group VIIA are the halogens • These need only one electron to fill their outer shell • They are very reactive. • Group VIIIA are the noble gases as they have completely filled outer shells • They are almost non reactive.

  38. Four chemical families of the periodic table: the alkali metals (IA), the alkaline earth metals (IIA), halogens (VII), and the noble gases (VIIIA). • Alkaline metals- very reactive • Earth metals- reactive • Halogens- slightly reactive • Noble gases- unreactive

  39. Metal: Elements of the left side of the periodic table that are usually solids at room temperature, conduct heat, can be bent, and are shiny. Non-Metal: Elements in the upper right corner of the periodic Table. Relatively unreactive Metalloid: Elements that lie on a diagonal line between the Metals and non-metals. Their chemical and physical properties are intermediate between the two. Conductive , brittle, solid, slightly reactive

  40. Properties of Metals • Malleable- can be bent, hammered, and rolled • Ductile- can be drawn into strands • Magnetic

  41. Review • Horizontal rows are called periods • Atomic number is the number of protons • Atomic mass is the number of protons + neutrons (average) • Mendeleev made the first periodic table • Chemical symbols are made of 1-2 letters • Neutrons have no charge • Electrons have a negative charge • Shared Electrons are the electrons shared between two atoms that are combined

  42. Ticket Out • Choose One of the following questions to answer • Explain the properties of alkali metals, and where are they located? • What are the noble gasses, and where are they located? • What makes a metalloid different from a non- metal? • How do you calculate the atomic mass of an element?

More Related