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An atom is made of a nucleus containing protons and neutrons; electrons move around the nucleus. Section 2: Defining the Atom K What I Know W What I Want.

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Presentation on theme: "An atom is made of a nucleus containing protons and neutrons; electrons move around the nucleus. Section 2: Defining the Atom K What I Know W What I Want."— Presentation transcript:

1 An atom is made of a nucleus containing protons and neutrons; electrons move around the nucleus. Section 2: Defining the Atom K What I Know W What I Want to Find Out L What I Learned

2 6(A) Understand the experimental design and conclusions used in the development of modern atomic theory, including Dalton’s Postulates, Thomson’s discovery of electron properties, Rutherford’s nuclear atom, and Bohr’s nuclear atom. 2(H)Organize, analyze, evaluate, make inferences, and predict trends from data. 3(F) Research and describe the history of chemistry and contributions of scientists. Defining the Atom Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education

3 Essential Questions What is an atom? How can the subatomic particles be distinguished in terms of relative charge and mass? Where are the locations of the subatomic particles within the structure of the atom? Defining the Atom Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education

4 Review model New atom cathode ray electron nucleus proton neutron Defining the Atom Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education Vocabulary

5 The Atom The smallest particle of an element that retains the properties of the element is called an atom. An instrument called the scanning tunneling microscope (STM) allows individual atoms to be seen. Defining the Atom Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education

6 The Electron When an electric charge is applied, a ray of radiation travels from the cathode to the anode, called a cathode ray. Cathode rays are a stream of particles carrying a negative charge. The particles carrying a negative charge are known as electrons. This figure below shows a typical cathode ray tube. Defining the Atom Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education

7 The Electron J.J. Thomson measured the effects of both magnetic and electric fields on the cathode ray to determine the charge-to-mass ratio of a charged particle, then compared it to known values. The mass of the charged particle was much less than a hydrogen atom, then the lightest known atom. Thomson received the Nobel Prize in 1906 for identifying the first subatomic particle—the electron. Defining the Atom Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education

8 The Electron In the early 1910s, Robert Millikan used the oil-drop apparatus shown below to determine the charge of an electron. Defining the Atom Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education

9 The Electron Charges change in discrete amounts—1.602 × 10 –19 coulombs, the charge of one electron (now equated to a single unit, 1–). With the electron’s charge and charge-to-mass ratio known, Millikan calculated the mass of a single electron. Defining the Atom Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education the mass of a hydrogen atom

10 The Electron Matter is neutral. You know that matter is neutral from everyday experiences. You do not receive an electric shock (except under certain conditions) when you touch an object. If electrons are negative, then how is matter, which is made up of electrons, neutral? J.J. Thomson proposed a model of the atom to answer this question. J.J. Thomson's plum pudding model of the atom states that the atom is a uniform, positively charged sphere containing electrons. Defining the Atom Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education

11 The Nucleus In 1911, Ernest Rutherford studied how positively charged alpha particles interacted with solid matter. By aiming the particles at a thin sheet of gold foil, Rutherford expected the paths of the alpha particles to be only slightly altered by a collision with an electron. Defining the Atom Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education

12 The Nucleus Although most of the alpha particles went through the gold foil, a few of them bounced back, some at large angles. Defining the Atom Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education

13 The Nucleus Rutherford concluded that atoms are mostly empty space. Almost all of the atom's positive charge and almost all of its mass is contained in a dense region in the center of the atom called the nucleus. Electrons are held within the atom by their attraction to the positively charged nucleus. The repulsive force between the positively charged nucleus and positive alpha particles caused the deflections. Defining the Atom Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education

14 Rutherford’s Gold Foil Experiment Concepts in Motion FPO Add link to concepts in motion animation from page 112 here. Defining the Atom Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education

15 Completing the Model of the Atom All atoms are made of three fundamental subatomic particles: the electron, the proton, and the neutron. Atoms are spherically shaped. Atoms are mostly empty space, and electrons travel around the nucleus held by an attraction to the positively charged nucleus. Defining the Atom Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education

16 Structure of the Atom Concepts in Motion FPO Add link to concepts in motion animation from page 114 here. Defining the Atom Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education

17 Completing the Model of the Atom Scientists have determined that protons and neutrons are composed of subatomic particles called quarks. Scientists do not yet understand if or how quarks affect chemical behavior. Chemical behavior can be explained by considering only an atom's electrons. Defining the Atom Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education

18 Interactive Table – Properties of Subatomic Particles Concepts in Motion FPO Add link to concepts in motion interactive table from page 114 here. Defining the Atom Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education

19 Defining the Atom Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education Review Essential Questions What is an atom? How can the subatomic particles be distinguished in terms of relative charge and mass? Where are the locations of the subatomic particles within the structure of the atom? Vocabulary atom cathode ray electron nucleus proton neutron


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