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Introduction to Atoms Chapter 4 Section 1.

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1 Introduction to Atoms Chapter 4 Section 1

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4 Development of Atomic Models
Democritus in ancient Greece Atomos “uncuttable” Atomic theory grew as a series of models that developed from experimental evidence. As more evidence was collected, the theory and models were revised.

5 Dalton’s Atomic Theory
Dalton thought that atoms were like smooth, hard balls that could not be broken into smaller pieces.

6 Summary of Dalton’s Ideas
All elements are composed of atoms that cannot be divided. All atoms of the same element are exactly alike and have the same mass. Atoms of different elements are different and have different masses.

7 Summary of Dalton’s Ideas
An atom of one element cannot be changed into an atom of a different element. Atoms cannot be created or destroyed in any chemical change, only rearranged. Every compound is composed of atoms of different elements, combined in a specific ratio.

8 Thomson and Smaller Parts of Atoms
Found that atoms contain negatively charged particles. He reasoned that atoms must also contain some sort of positive charge.

9 Rutherford’s Gold Foil Experiment

10 Rutherford and the Nucleus
Rutherford inferred that an atom’s positive charge must be clustered in a tiny region in its center, called the nucleus.

11 Rutherford and the Nucleus
Nearly all of the atom’s mass is located in the tiny positively charged nucleus. Rutherford named protons

12 Bohr’s Model Showed that electrons could only have specific amounts of energy, leading them to move in certain orbits.

13 A Cloud of Electrons Electrons can be anywhere in cloud like region around the nucleus. An electron’s movement is related to its energy level, or specific amount of energy it has

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16 The Modern Atomic Model
James Chadwick discovered the neutron, the electrically neutral particle in the nucleus.

17 The Modern Atomic Model
The modern model describes an atom as consisting of a nucleus that contains protons and neutrons, surrounded by a cloudlike region of moving electrons.

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19 Particle Charges Protons are diagramed as +
Electrons are diagramed as e¯ The number of protons equal the number of electrons in an atom.

20 Particle Charges The charges balance because of the equal amounts of + charges and – charges, making the atom neutral. Neutrons don’t affect the charge of an atom because they have no charge.

21 Comparing Particles Masses
It takes almost 2,000 electrons to equal the mass of just one proton. Protons and neutrons are about equal in mass Together, the protons and neutrons make up nearly all the mass of an atom.

22 Comparing Particles Masses
Atoms are too small to be described easily by everyday units of mass, such as grams or kilograms. Sometimes scientists use units known as atomic mass units (amu). A proton and neutron has a mass equal to about one amu.

23 Scale and Size of Atoms Most of an atom’s volume is the space in which electrons move. Pencil eraser in baseball stadium. In the tiniest visible speck of dust may contain 10 million billion atoms.

24 Atomic Number Every atom of an element has the same number of protons.
This unique number of protons in the nucleus of an atom is an element’s atomic number. Atomic number identifies an element.

25 Isotopes and Mass Number
Although all atoms of an element have the same number of protons, their number of neutrons can vary. Atoms with the same number of protons and a different number of neutrons are called isotopes.

26 Isotopes and Mass Number
An isotope is identified by its mass number, which is the sum of the protons and neutrons in the nucleus of an atom. Although these atoms have different mass numbers, they will react the same way chemically.

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28 Definitions Atom – The basic particle from which all elements are made. Electrons – A negatively charged particle that is found outside the nucleus of an atom. Nucleus – The central core of the atom

29 Definitions Protons – A positively charged particle that is part of an atom’s nucleus. Energy Level – The specific amount of energy an electron has. Neutron – A small particle in the nucleus of the atom, with no electrical charge.


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