+ All Categories
Home > Technology > 2008 Atomic Theories

2008 Atomic Theories

Date post: 19-Jan-2015
Category:
Upload: tams
View: 568 times
Download: 3 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
 
Popular Tags:
18
Notes: Atomic Theories CW: Models of the Atom H: Extra! Headline News
Transcript
Page 1: 2008  Atomic Theories

Notes: Atomic TheoriesCW: Models of the AtomH: Extra! Headline News

Page 2: 2008  Atomic Theories

Atomic Theories

December 5, 2008

Page 3: 2008  Atomic Theories

Objectives

1. Describe the relationship between theories and models.

2. Summarize how atomic theories have changed.

3. Define atom and its parts

Page 4: 2008  Atomic Theories

Why use models?

• Simplify the idea

• Allow us to visualize

• Help us predict

Page 5: 2008  Atomic Theories

• Before 400 BC, Greeks defined atoms as smallest part of matter

• Before scanning electron microscope (1981), no one had seen at atom

Page 6: 2008  Atomic Theories

Democritus 440 BC

Said you would end up with an un-cutable piece of matter

• “Atom” from Greek atomos (indivisible)

• No evidence

Page 7: 2008  Atomic Theories

John Dalton 1800’s

Billiard ball model” based on experimental evidence

• All matter is made of atoms.• Atoms of each element are

alike.• Atoms can not be created,

destroyed or changed.• Atoms can join to form new

substances.

Page 8: 2008  Atomic Theories
Page 9: 2008  Atomic Theories

JJ Thomson 1897

“Plum pudding model”

• Atoms contain subatomic particles

• Atoms have negative particles (electrons)

• Electrons stuck in a positive sphere

Page 10: 2008  Atomic Theories
Page 11: 2008  Atomic Theories

Ernest Rutherford 1909

Peach model

• Dense, positive region (nucleus)

• Electrons fly around nucleus

Page 12: 2008  Atomic Theories
Page 13: 2008  Atomic Theories

Niels Bohr 1913

Planetary model

• Electrons exist in energy levels

• Electrons contain certain energy

Page 14: 2008  Atomic Theories
Page 15: 2008  Atomic Theories

Schrodinger & Heisenberg 1928

Electron cloud model, “Spinning fan”

• Electrons move in a region around nucleus

• Orbitals - regions of most probable electron location

Page 16: 2008  Atomic Theories
Page 17: 2008  Atomic Theories

Schrodinger & Heisenberg

Electron cloud model

Page 18: 2008  Atomic Theories

Scientist Theory

Democritus

Dalton

Thomson

Rutherford

Bohr

Heisenberg & Schrodinger

Matter is made of indivisible atoms

Atoms are unchangeable, but can join

Electrons have negative charge

Positively charged nucleus

Electrons exist in energy levels

Position of electrons is uncertain


Recommended