1 / 31

Outline the history of the atomic model.

Outline the history of the atomic model. Agenda for Tuesday Dec 14 th Atoms Atomic mass, #, protons, etc. Atoms. Nucleus in the center Protons and neutrons Electrons on outside of nucleus Electron cloud model Electrons exist in energy levels – based on # of electrons.

edie
Télécharger la présentation

Outline the history of the atomic model.

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. Outline the history of the atomic model. Agenda for Tuesday Dec 14th • Atoms • Atomic mass, #, protons, etc

  2. Atoms • Nucleus in the center • Protons and neutrons • Electrons on outside of nucleus • Electron cloud model • Electrons exist in energy levels – based on # of electrons

  3. Atomic Number and Atomic Mass Element name boron 5 Atomic number B Symbol 10.811 Atomic mass

  4. Atomic number: # of protons in nucleus • Each element has a different atomic # • Identifies the element • Hydrogen = smallest atomic # (1) • # of protons = # of electrons

  5. Atomic mass: total mass of protons and neutrons in an atom, measured in atomic mass units (amu) • Atomic weight • Atoms of the same element can have different numbers of neutrons - isotopes • # on periodic table is the average atomic mass for that element

  6. We will round the average atomic mass to get a whole # called the mass number. • Examples: Sodium (Na) Avg. atomic mass = 22.990 amu Mass # = 23 Nitrogen (N) Avg. atomic mass = 14.007 amu Mass # = 14

  7. Finding # of neutrons mass # - atomic # = # of neutrons For Na: 23 – 11 = 12 neutrons For N: 14 – 7 = 7 neutrons

  8. Practice

  9. Find the mass number, protons, neutrons, and electrons for Bromine. Agenda for Wednesday Dec 15th • History of the Atom Flash Cards • Practice with mass, protons, etc • Isotopes

  10. 6 6 6 Oxygen 8 16 1 1 0 Carbon 6 8 1 1 3 7 7 7

  11. Isotopes • Atoms of the same element can have different numbers of neutrons  isotopes • # of protons and electrons stays the same for a particular element • Mass changes • Means # of neutrons changes • Atomic mass on your P.T. is an average of all the isotopes • For Boron: .8 (10 amu) + .2 (11 amu) = 10.811 amu

  12. More on Isotopes • Because the numbers of neutrons in the isotopes are different, the mass numbers are also different • You use the name of the element followed by the mass number of the isotope to identify each isotope: boron-10 and boron-11

  13. Example: • Neon. All neon atoms have 10 protons and 10 electrons. Some neon atoms have 10 neutrons and some have 12. • Both isotopes of neon

  14. Mass # (protons + neutrons). Different for each isotope Ne or Ne-20 Ne or Ne-22 20 10 Atomic # (# of protons) Mass # (protons + neutrons). Different for each isotope 22 10 Atomic # (# of protons)

  15. What’s the point of Isotopes • You can tell how old something is • Radiocarbon Dating • Use as markers in research • Follow a certain molecule, atom

  16. Practice ProblemsYou will need your periodic table! • For Mg-25: How many protons, electrons, and neutrons? • For N-15: How many protons, electrons, neutrons? • For P-31: How many protons, electrons, neutrons?

  17. Practice

  18. What is an isotope? Agenda for Thursday Dec 16th • Mass #, Atomic weight, proton review • Valence Electrons • Lewis Dot Structures

  19. Atoms • Nucleus in the center • Protons and neutrons • Electrons on outside of nucleus • Electron cloud model • Electrons exist in energy levels – based on # of electrons

  20. Valence Electrons • Electrons in the outermost energy level • Valence electrons determine reactivity and other chemical properties • 8 valence electrons means a stable atom = do not want to react with other atoms

  21. Where are electrons found? Nucleus Least likely Most likely

  22. Valence electrons Help! We’re so vulnerable! • A way to draw an atom showing where electrons are found 13 p+ 14 n0

  23. Valence electrons Carbon -12 has 4 electrons in the last energy level . . . therefore carbon-12 has 4 valence electrons

  24. 2nd shell can hold 8 e- 1st shell can hold 2 e- Nucleus 3rd shell can hold 8 e- Bohr’s Model

  25. How many electrons in each shell? • 1st shell = 2 electrons • 2nd shell = 8 electrons • 3rd shell = 8 electrons • 4th shell = 18 electrons

  26. Drawing Carbon-12 with Bohr’s Model • Steps: • Find number of neutrons and protons. • 2. Find number of electrons. • 3. Fill in electrons, beginning with the 1st energy level.

  27. How many valence electrons does Nitrogen have? NUCLEUS

  28. How many valence electrons does Calcium have? Calcium has 2 Valence electrons NUCLEUS

  29. How many valence electrons does Phosphorous have? Phosphorous has 5 Valence electrons NUCLEUS

  30. How many valence electrons does Boron have? Boron has 3 Valence electrons NUCLEUS

  31. Cool Trick! 1 8 3 5 4 2 7 6

More Related