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Chemistry: Matter and Chemical Bonding Early Atomic Theories.

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Presentation on theme: "Chemistry: Matter and Chemical Bonding Early Atomic Theories."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chemistry: Matter and Chemical Bonding Early Atomic Theories

2 Timeline.....  Ancient Greeks (approx 450 BC)  "Four Element" Theory – Earth, Air, Fire, Water

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4 Benefits:  First suggestion that substances were actually made up of a combination of different "elements."

5 Democritus:  400 BC – Democritus  "The smallest indivisible particle of matter is the 'atom' "  No evidence – based on thought  However, the "4 element" theory lingered for almost 2000 years! (YIKES)

6 Democritus’ Model

7 John Dalton (1809)  All matter is composed of indivisible particles called atoms.  All atoms of a given element are identical; atoms of different elements have different properties.  Chemical reactions involve the combination of atoms, not the destruction of atoms.  When elements react to form compounds, they react in whole-number ratios.  Dalton's atomic theory supported previous research. Lasted almost a century!

8 Model: Indivisible billiard ball

9 J.J. Thomson (1897)  Used the work of other scientists that showed that atoms contain charges, and his own work with cathode ray tubes, to develop a modified atomic theory.  Atoms are positive spheres, with negative particles (electrons) embedded in them.

10 Model: Raisin bun

11 Ernest Rutherford (1911)  Student of Thomson – disagreed. Gold Foil Experiment:  Alpha radiation (positive) were shot at a piece of gold foil.  Most of the alpha particles passed through the foil, suggesting that most of matter is empty space!  Some particles were deflected back at angles; they had come in contact with something very dense!

12 Gold Foil Experiment:

13 Leading to…..Nuclear Model:  Rutherford – dense core of positive charge (nucleus), with negative electrons orbiting around the nucleus.  Later experiments showed that the positively charged particles, now called protons, have an equal but opposite charge to the electrons, and have a mass 1836 x greater!  The neutron and the existence of isotopes were also discovered

14 Niels Bohr  Worked with Rutherford  Used atomic spectrum information to place electrons in energy levels around the nucleus

15 Spectroscope:

16 How it works….  Each element has a unique emission spectrum  When electrons are given energy, they jump to a new energy level  When they fall back down, they emit this extra energy as light  Lines on an emission spectrum represent jumps between energy levels. DEMO

17 Emission Spectra:

18 Modern View of the Atom  Dense nucleus containing: (+) protons Neutral neutrons  Shells of small (-) electrons orbiting the nucleus 2 e - in 1 st orbital 8 in 2 nd 8 in 3 rd (until next year)

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20 Subatomic Particle ChargeLocationSize Proton (p + )PositiveNucleus1 Neutron (n 0 )NeutralNucleus1 Electron (e - )NegativeIn Orbit 1_ 2000

21 Atomic mass / Mass Number -Use rounded values -26.98 -> 27 -28.09 -> 28 -30.97 -> 31 Atomic Number = # of protons = # of electrons in a neutral atom Mass number = protons + neutrons

22 Isotopes  Atoms of the same element have the same # of protons  The # of neutrons can differ  The same element with a different # of neutrons are called isotopes  Radioisotopes are unstable and decay creating radioactivity  Average atomic mass takes the masses of all isotopes into account.

23 Standard Atomic Notation C  mass # is 12  atomic # is 6  therefore, this carbon has 12 - 6 = 6 neutrons 6 12

24 GROUPS ON THE PERIODIC TABLE

25 Your Turn  Subatomic Particle Worksheet  Read 6.4 Define: Chemical Family, Periods, Dmitri Mendeleev  “Try this” on page 224  Homework P. 225 Q: 1-6, 8-11


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