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Subatomic Particles Agenda   Review   GAME   Song   Notes   Guided practice   Homework.

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Presentation on theme: "Subatomic Particles Agenda   Review   GAME   Song   Notes   Guided practice   Homework."— Presentation transcript:

1 Subatomic Particles Agenda   Review   GAME   Song   Notes   Guided practice   Homework

2 Around the World Game Element Review

3 strontium Sr

4 manganese Mn

5 Ba barium

6 boron B

7 Ca calcium

8 Zn zinc

9 Al aluminum

10 silicon Si

11 iron Fe

12 C carbon

13 gallium Ga

14 cobalt Co

15 magnesium Mg

16 Be beryllium

17 Ti titanium

18 Ge germanium

19 potassium K

20 nickel Ni

21 P phosphorus

22 nitrogen N

23 Cu copper

24 H hydrogen

25 lithium Li

26 Na sodium

27 chromium Cr

28 V vanadium

29 tin Sn

30 scandium Sc

31 Pb lead

32 arsenic As

33 O oxygen

34 sulfur S

35 Se selenium

36 fluorine F

37 Cl chlorine

38 bromine Br

39 I iodine

40 helium He

41 Ne neon

42 argon Ar

43 Kr krypton

44 xenon Xe

45 Rn radon

46 Song Time

47 Atomic Theory Polka  Dalton, Thomson, Rutherford and Bohr. Schrödinger and Heisenberg, and many, many more. Used their brains to venture in the realm of inner space and found the world of the atom was a weird and wondrous place.

48  Dalton did experiments and said, “I think it’s clear, atoms are tiny indestructible spheres.”

49  Thomson worked with cathode rays and said, “I disagree. A plum-pudding model makes much more sense to me.”

50  A new chapter in atomic theory started to unfold when Rutherford played around with atoms made of gold. When a few of his alpha particles came bounding back, he hypothesized a nucleus had knocked them off the track.

51  Dalton, Thomson, Rutherford and Bohr. Schrödinger and Heisenberg, and many, many more. Used their brains to venture in the realm of inner space and found the world of the atom was a weird and wondrous place.

52  Bohr saw spectral lines for hydrogen and said, “It seems to me.. Electrons move in orbits with specific energies.”

53  Heisenberg said, “Forget it, there’s no way to know the orbit or a path, where the electron’s gonna go.”

54  Schrödinger used lots and lots of fancy mathematics, and made a model of the atom based on quantum mechanics. It has orbitals and those are based on probability. The atom is a fuzzy blob of pure uncertainty.

55  Dalton, Thomson, Rutherford and Bohr. Schrödinger and Heisenberg, and many, many more. Used their brains to venture in the realm of inner space and found the world of the atom was a weird and wondrous place.

56 What do you know about the atom? White boards

57 Subatomic Particles Date:

58  PROTONS  p +  In the nucleus  +1 charge  1 amu  ELECTRON  e -  In electron cloud  -1 charge  1 / 1840 amu  NEUTRON  n o  In the nucleus  No charge  1 amu

59 Atomic number  Used to arrange elements in PT by Mosley  # of PROTONS  # of ELECTRONS IF an ATOM

60 Isotopes  Atoms of the same element that differ in the # of neutrons 11p + 11n o 11p + 12n o

61 Atomic Mass  The weighted average of all isotopes.  Always a decimal (unless a man-made element)

62 Mass number  Mass of an isotope  Always a whole number – not on PT  # of PROTONS + NEUTRONS

63 Nuclide  Tells atomic # and mass # of an atom 23 11 Na  Sodium-23 has ____ protons, ___ electrons and ____ neutrons 11 12

64 Practice

65 32 16 S 16 protons 16 neutrons 16 electrons

66 28 14 Si 14 protons 14 neutrons 14 electrons

67 14 6 C 6 protons 8 neutrons 6 electrons

68 Ions  Atoms with a charge

69 CATIONS  Cations are pawsitive and are written with a plus charge on the upper right.  LOST an e-, have more protons; therefore positive.  Charge indicates the number of electrons lost.  Hint: cation has a t which looks like +

70 Lost an e - and a shell 11p + 11n o 11p + 11n o

71 ANIONS  Anions are negative and written with a negative charge on the upper right.  GAINED an e-, have more electrons; therefore negative.  Charge indicates number of electrons gained.

72 Has an additional electron! 9p + 10n o 9p + 10n o

73 36 17 Cl -  _____ protons _____ neutrons _____ electrons 17 18 19

74 Practice

75 16 8 O -2 8 protons 8 neutrons 10 electrons

76 108 47 Ag + 47 protons 61 neutrons 46 electrons

77 80 35 Br - 35 protons 45 neutrons 36 electrons

78 207 82 Pb +4 82 protons 125 neutrons 78 electrons

79 Homework   Element Quiz tomorrow!   Last one!   Be prepared for lab tomorrow!   Want to try to complete tomorrow   Complete subatomic chart


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