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How long have people been interested in understanding matter and its structure?
A. Thousands of years
B. Hundreds of years
C.A few years
D.Never
History of Atomic Structure
Ancient Philosophy• Who: Aristotle, Democritus
• When: More than 2000 years ago
• Where: Greece
• What: Aristotle believed in 4 elements: Earth, Air, Fire, and Water. Democritus believed that matter was made of small particles he named “atoms”.
• Why: Aristotle and Democritus used observation and inferrence to explain the existence of everything.
Aristotle
Democritus
Aristotle
Early Greek Theories• 400 B.C. - Democritus thought matter
could not be divided indefinitely.
• 350 B.C - Aristotle modified an earlier theory that matter was made of four “elements”: earth, fire, water, air.
Democritus
• Aristotle was wrong. However, his theory persisted for 2000 years.
fire
air
water
earth
• This led to the idea of atoms in a void.
Alchemists• Who: European Scientists
• When: 800 – 900 years ago
• Where: Europe
• What: Their work developed into what is now modern chemistry.
• Why: Trying to change ordinary materials into gold.
Alchemic Symbols
Particle Theory• Who: John Dalton
• When: 1808
• Where: England
• What: Described atoms as tiny particles that could not be divided. Thought each element was made of its own kind of atom.
• Why: Building on the ideas of Democritus in ancient Greece.
John Dalton
John Dalton• 1800 -Dalton proposed a modern atomic model
based on experimentation not on pure reason.• All matter is made of atoms.• Atoms of an element are identical.• Each element has different atoms.• Atoms of different elements combine in
constant ratios to form compounds.• Atoms are rearranged in reactions.
• His ideas account for the Law of Conservation of Mass
The Law of Conservation of Mass
Atoms are neither created nor destroyed
The Law of Constant Proportions Atoms in compounds are in fixed ratios…CO2 is a different ration than CO.
Discovery of Electrons• Who: J. J. Thompson
• When: 1897
• Where: England
• What: Thompson discovered that electrons were smaller particles of an atom and were negatively charged.
• Why: Thompson knew atoms were neutrally charged, but couldn’t find the positive particle.
J. J. Thompson
Atomic Structure I• Who: Ernest Rutherford
• When: 1911
• Where: England
• What: Conducted an experiment to isolate the positive particles in an atom. Decided that the atoms were mostly empty space, but had a dense central core.
• Why: He knew that atoms had positive and negative particles, but could not decide how they were arranged.
Ernest Rutherford
Ernest Rutherford
Most particles passed through. So, atoms are mostly empty.
Some positive -particles deflected or bounced back!
Thus, a “nucleus” is positive & holds most of an atom’s mass.
Radioactive substance path of invisible
-particles
• Rutherford shot alpha () particles at gold foil.
Lead blockZinc sulfide screen Thin gold foil
Atomic Structure II• Who: Niels Bohr
• When: 1913
• Where: England
• What: Proposed that electrons traveled in fixed paths around the nucleus. Scientists still use the Bohr model to show the number of electrons in each orbit around the nucleus.
• Why: Bohr was trying to show why the negative electrons were not sucked into the nucleus of the atom.
Niels Bohr
Bohr’s model
There are 2 types of spectra: continuous spectra & line spectra. It’s when electrons fall back down that they release a photon. These jumps down from “shell” to “shell” account for the line spectra seen in gas discharge tubes (through spectroscopes).
• Electrons orbit the nucleus in “shells”•Electrons can be bumped up to a higher shell if
hit by an electron or a photon of light.
Electron Cloud Model• Electrons travel around the nucleus in
random orbits.
• Scientists cannot predict where they will be at any given moment.
• Electrons travel so fast, they appear to form a “cloud” around the nucleus.
The Atom • All matter is composed of tiny particles called
Atoms.
• All atoms are composed of smaller particles:– Protons- atomic particles with a positive charge.
– Neutrons- atomic particles with no charge.
– Electrons- atomic particles with a negative charge
Atomic Number• The atomic number- depends on the number
of protons in a type of element.– In an electrically neutral atom, the number or electrons is
the same at the number of protons. • Number of protons = number of electrons
Atomic Number
Atomic Mass
Atomic Mass• Atomic mass is based on the number of
protons and neutrons in an atom of an element.
A certain element has an atomic mass of 16 and an atomic number of 8. The atomic number equals the number of protons in the element’s atoms. To find the number of protons, subtract the atomic number (8) from the atomic mass (16).
16- 8
8 neutrons
Dalton’s Theory• All matter is made of atoms. Atoms are indivisible
and indestructible.• All atoms of a given element are identical in mass
and properties• Compounds are formed by a combination of two or
more different kinds of atoms.• A chemical reaction is a rearrangement of atoms.
J.J. Thompson’s Theory• Discovered a negatively charged particle in
the atom, that he named the electron.
• Chocolate Chip Cook Model of the Atom.
• Positive and negative charges are distributed evenly throughout the atom.
Lord Rutherford’s Theory• Gold Foil Experiment:
– Fired alpha particles at a piece of gold foil.– Most particles when through the foil, but about 1 in
10,000 got deflected.• The new evidence allowed him to formulate a
new atomic model with a central nucleus. • He suggested that the dense positive charge
was in the center and the negatively charged electrons were being held in place by attractive forces.– Remember, opposites attract!