1 / 54

THE ATOM

THE ATOM. Part 1. Pg 65-74. The Atom:. From Philosophy to Science. Think with me…about sugar crystals, you can see that they are small crystals and every crystal is identical . You may grind these particles into a very fine powder, but each tiny piece is still sugar.

selene
Télécharger la présentation

THE ATOM

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. THE ATOM Part 1 Pg 65-74

  2. The Atom: From Philosophy to Science • Think with me…about sugar crystals, you can see that they are small crystals and every crystal is identical. • You may grind these particles into a very fine powder, but each tiny piece is still sugar. • If you dissolve the sugar in water, the sugar particles become virtually invisible. Pg 65-69 Sec 3-1

  3. The Atom: From Philosophy to Science • You could look at the dissolved sugar water under a microscope and you’d still not be able to see the sugar. • However, you know it is still there because you can taste it. • These kind of observations and logic patterns led ancient philoso- phers to ponder the design of the universe Pg 65-69 Sec 3-1

  4. The Atom: From Philosophy to Science • The two schools of thought philoso-phers were divided into were…is everything in the universe continuous and infinitely divisible, or is there a limit to how small you can get? • Particle theory was not a popular early opinion, but was supported as early as Democritus in ancient Greece. Pg 65-69 Sec 3-1

  5. The Atom: From Philosophy to Science • Democritus proposed that all the matter is composed of tiny particles called Atomos • These particles are indivisible • Aristotle did not believe in Democ-ritus’ atom, he was of the “matter is continuous” philosophy • Because of Aristotle’s popularity his idea was accepted as the better philosophy for 200 years Pg 65-69 Sec 3-1

  6. The Atom: From Philosophy to Science • In the 1700’s nearly all chemists accepted the modern definition of an element as a substance that is indivisible • It was also thought that elements combine to form compounds that are different in their properties than the elements that composed them Pg 65-69 Sec 3-1

  7. The Atom: From Philosophy to Science • There was controversy as to whether elements always combine in the same ratio when forming a particular compound. • In the 1790’s, chemistry was revolut-ionized by a new emphasis on quant- itative analysis because of new and improved balances Pg 65-69 Sec 3-1

  8. The Atom: From Philosophy to Science • This new technology led to the discovery of some new scientific laws • The Law of Conservation of Mass: • States that mass is neither created nor destroyed during ordinary chemical rxns or physical changes. • Which means the total mass of the reactants must equal the total mass of the products. Pg 65-69 Sec 3-1

  9. + = Carbon, C Oxygen, O Carbon Monoxide, CO Mass x Mass y Mass x + Mass y + Carbon, C Oxygen, O Carbon Monoxide, CO Mass x Mass y Mass x + Mass y Law of Conservation of Mass = Pg 65-69 Sec 3-1

  10. The Atom: From Philosophy to Science • The Law of Definite Proportions: • The fact that a chemical compound contains the same elements in exactly the same proportions by mass regardless of the size of the sample or the source of the compound • NaCl is NaCl no matter if it is table salt (small crystals) or rock salt (large crystals) Pg 65-69 Sec 3-1

  11. + 1 Carbon 2 Oxygen Law of Definite Proportions ALWAYS + = 1 Carbon 1 Oxygen Carbon Monoxide ALWAYS = Carbon Dioxide, CO2 Pg 65-69 Sec 3-1

  12. The Atom: From Philosophy to Science • The Law of Multiple Proportions: • If 2 or more different compounds are composed of the same 2 elements, then the ratio of the masses of the 2nd element combined with a certain mass of the 1st element is always a ratio of small whole numbers Pg 65-69 Sec 3-1

  13. + Carbon Oxygen Law of Multiple Proportions + = Carbon Oxygen Carbon Monoxide, 1:1 1 1 = Carbon Dioxide, 1:2 1 2 Pg 65-69 Sec 3-1

  14. Pg 65-69 Sec 3-1

  15. The Atom: From Philosophy to Science • In 1808, John Dalton proposed an explanation for each of the proposed laws • He reasoned that elements were composed of atoms & that only whole #’s of atoms can combine to form compnds • His ideas are now called the Atomic Theory of Matter Pg 65-69 Sec 3-1

  16. ELEMENT 1 ELEMENT 2 ELEMENT 3 ELEMENT 4 Pg 65-69 Sec 3-1

  17. + + Pg 65-69 Sec 3-1

  18. The Atom: From Philosophy to Science • Through these statements, evidence could be gathered to confirm or discount its claims • Not all of Dalton’s claims held up to the scrutiny of experimentation • Atoms CAN be divided into even smaller particles • Not every atom of an element has an identical mass Pg 65-69 Sec 3-1

  19. The Atom: From Philosophy to Science • Dalton’s Atomic Theory of Matter has been modified. • What remains is… • All matter is composed of atoms • Atoms of any one element differ in properties from atoms of another element Pg 65-69 Sec 3-1

  20. The Structure of the Atom • One of the disputed statements of Dalton was that atoms are indivisible • In the 1800’s it was determined that atoms are actually composed of several basic types of smaller particles • it’s the number and arrangement of these particles that determine the atom’s chemical properties. Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  21. The Structure of the Atom • The def. of an atom that emerged was, the smallest particle of an element that retains the chemical properties of that original element. • All atoms consist of 2 regions that contain the subatomic particles • The nucleus • The electron cloud around the nucleus Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  22. The Structure of the Atom • The nucleus is a very small region located near the center of the atom • In every atom the nucleus contains at least 1 proton, which is positively charged particle • Usually contains 1 or more neutral particles called neutrons Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  23. The Structure of the Atom • The electron cloud is the region that surrounds the nucleus • This region contains 1 or more electrons, which are negatively charged subatomic particles • The volume of the electron cloud is much larger than the nucleus Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  24. The Structure of the Atom • The 1st discovery of a subatomic particle took place in the late 1800’s. • electric current was passed through various gases at low pressures • The glass tubes the experiments were carried out in are called cathode ray tubes. Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  25. The Structure of the Atom • Investigators noticed that when electric current was passed through a cathode ray tube, the surface of the tube directly opposite the cathode glowed. • they decided that the glow was caused by a stream of particles • they called the stream a cathode ray Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  26. Electric Current Electric Current cathode ray cathode Cathode Ray anode Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  27. The Structure of the Atom • The ray traveled from the cathode to the anode when current was passed through the tube • Electric current instead flows from the anode to the cathode • Scientists began to cleverly study cathode rays and observed several remarkable characteristics. Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  28. The Structure of the Atom • An object placed in the path of the ray cast a shadow on the glass • A paddle wheel placed the path of the cathode ray began to spin • Cathode rays were deflected by a magnetic field • The rays were deflected away from a negatively charged object Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  29. The Structure of the Atom • The first 2 observations support the evidence that the cathode ray is composed of particles traveling through the depressurized gases • The second 2 observations support the evidence that the ray is composed of a substance that has a negative charge to it. Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  30. magnet cathode ray deflection due to magnetic field Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  31. Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  32. The Structure of the Atom • An English Physicist J.J. Thomson became the authority on cathode-rays • He measured the ratio of the charge of cathode-ray particles to their mass • He discovered the ratio was always the same regardless of the conditions His conclusion: all cathode-rays are composed of identical negatively charged particles a.k.a. electrons Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  33. The Structure of the Atom • Thomson’s experiments revealed that the electron has a very large charge in relation to its mass • In 1909, Robert Millikan, performed an ingenious experiment to calculate the mass of an electron • he calculated that the electron’s mass is 9.109x10-31kg Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  34. Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  35. The Structure of the Atom • Thomson’s & Millikan’s Ideas: • atoms are composed of smaller particles, and one of these compo-nents is negatively charged • atoms are neutral, so there must be an opposing (+) charge • because E’s are essentially mass-less there must be something else that accounts for the atoms mass. Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  36. The Structure of the Atom • These proposals led to an elemen-tary understanding of the compo-sition of the atom. • The atom might look something like a tiny chocolate chip cookie The chips would be the E’s The cookie part is (+) matter to cancel out the (-) chips Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  37. The Structure of the Atom • In 1886, E. Goldstein observed a cathode-ray tube and found rays traveling in the opposite direction of that of the cathode rays • The new rays are called canal rays and they are (+) charged • And the particles mass is about 2000 X’s that of the electron Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  38. The Structure of the Atom • In 1932, the English physicist James Chadwick discovered yet another subatomic particle. • the neutron has no electrical charge • It’s mass is nearly equal to the proton • Therefore the subatomic particles are the electron, proton, and neutron. Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  39. The Structure of the Atom • When subatomic particles were discovered, scientists wondered how they were put together in an atom. • This was a difficult question to resolve, given how tiny atoms are. • Most thought it likely that the atom resembled the chocolate chip cookie we discussed earlier Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  40. The Structure of the Atom • In 1911, Ernest Rutherford et al. provided a more detailed picture of the internal structure of the atom • In his experiment, Rutherford direct-ed a narrow beam of alpha particles at a very thin sheet of gold foil. • Alpha particles () are He atoms that have been stripped of its electrons Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  41. The Structure of the Atom • According to the prevailing theory, the alpha particles should have passed easily through the gold, with only a slight deflection • And mostly that’s how it happened. • However, they found 1 every 8000 particles had actually been deflected back toward the source. Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  42. Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  43. Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  44. Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  45. Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  46. The Structure of the Atom • Based on the results, Rutherford suggested a new theory of the atom. • The atom is mostly empty space; • He concluded that all the (+) charge and almost all the mass is conc. in a small core in the center of the atom • The E’s surround the positively charged nucleus like planets surround the sun. Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  47. The Structure of the Atom • With the exception of Hydrogen, all nuclei contain 2 kinds of particles protons and neutrons • Proton has a (+) charge equal in mag-nitude to the (-) charge of an electron • Atoms are neutral because they con- tain equal #’s of protons & electrons • A neutron is electrically neutral Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  48. The Structure of the Atom • The nuclei of atoms of different elements differ in the # of protons they contain and therefore in the amount of (+) charge they possess. • The # of protons the atom contains determines the atom’s identity • Oxygen contains 8 protons • Fluorine contains 9 protons • Neon contains 10 protons Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  49. Properties of Subatomic Particles RELATIVE RELATIVE ACTUAL MASS (g) PARTICLE SYMBOL MASS CHARGE Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

  50. The Structure of the Atom • The nucleus is composed of a coll-ection of protons, which are all (+) • Shouldn’t they repel each other; like charges and all? • When 2 protons are very close to each other, there is a strong force of attraction between them. • A similar attraction exists when neutrons are close too. Pg 70-74 Sec 3-2

More Related