Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does...

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Atomic Theory

Transcript of Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does...

Page 1: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

Atomic Theory

Page 2: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

Catalyst (5 min)

1. What does the atomic number of each atom represent?

2. What does the mass number of each atom represent?

3. How many protons and neutrons are in the nuclei of the following elements?

a. phosphorus (P)b. cadmium (Cd)c. lead (Pb)

Page 3: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

Let’s Take a Trip Through Time!

Page 4: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

``Nothing exists except atoms and empty space; everything else is opinion.'' Democritus

Page 5: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

Democritus460 – 370 B.C.

• the first to propose that matter was not infinitely divisible

• Believed that matter was made up of tiny indivisible particles called atomos

• Everything is composed of small atoms moving in a void

• Ideas rejected by leading philosophers because they did not believe in empty space

Page 7: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

John Dalton1766-1844

• English School Teacher• Introduced his ideas in

1803• Used experiments that

studied the ratio that elements combine in chemical reactions to transform Democritus’s ideas on atoms into a scientific theory

Page 8: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

Dalton’s Atomic Theory

1. All elements are composed of tiny indivisible particles called atoms

2. Atoms of the same element are identical. The atoms of any one element are different from those of any other element.

3. Atoms of different elements can physically mix together or chemically combine to form compounds

4. In a chemical reaction, atoms are separated, combined or rerranged. Atoms of one element are never changed into atoms of another element.

5. Atoms cannot be created, divided into smaller particles or destroyed.

Page 9: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

Dalton’s Model

Page 10: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

But if the scientists couldn’t SEE the atom, how did they even know it existed?!

Page 11: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

``To the electron: may it never be of any use!''J.J. Thomson

Page 12: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

J.J. Thomson1856-1940

• Hypothesized that the structure of an atom was like ‘plum pudding’

• Discovered the electron in the Cathode Ray Experiment

• Discovered that this subatomic particle has a negative charge

• Discovered isotopes 1913

Page 13: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

Cathode Ray Tube Experiment

• Identified the first subatomic particle, the electron• Determined the charge to mass ratio of the electron• Mass of the electron is MUCH less then the mass of a hydrogen atom• Meant there are particles smaller than atoms!

Page 14: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

Video!

Page 15: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

Cathode Ray Experiment

Altering the gas in the tube and the material used for the cathode have no effect

Proves: the ray’s negative particles (electrons) are found in all forms of matter

Cathode Ray is deflected toward the positively charged plate by an

electric field

Proves: the particles in the ray must have a negative charge

Page 17: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

“Fullness of knowledge always means some understanding of the depths of our ignorance; and that is always conducive to humility and reverence. “

Robert Millikan

Page 18: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

Robert A. Millikan1868-1953

• Conduced oil drop experiment to determine the mass and quantity of an electrons charge

Page 19: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

“You should never bet against anything in science at odds of more than about 1012 to 1.”Ernest Rutherford

Page 20: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

Ernest Rutherford1871-1937

• Student of J.J. Thomson• Conducted the gold foil

experiment • Discovered that an atom consists

of mostly empty space through which the electrons move

• Concluded there is a tiny dense region called the nucleus which is located in the center of the atoms and contain all its mass

• Electrons are held in the atom by attraction with positively charged protons.

Page 21: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

Gold Foil Experiment

• Shot alpha particles at a thin piece of gold foil• Most of particles passed through foil which

indicated that atoms are composed of mostly empty space

• Alpha particle sometimes bounced back which indicated they were deflected from the nucleus

Page 22: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

Video!

Page 23: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

“If an atom were expanded to the size of a cathedral, the nucleus would be about the size of a fly - but a fly many thousands of times heavier than the cathedral.”

Page 24: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

“This is almost as incredible as if you fired a 15-inch shell at a piece of tissue paper and it came back and hit you”Ernest Rutherford

Page 25: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

Rutherford Model

Page 26: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

But what keeps the electrons from spiraling into the nucleus?

Page 27: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

``An expert is a person who has made all the mistakes that can be made in a very narrow field.''Niels Bohr

Page 28: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

Niels Bohr1885-1962• Developed theory that

electrons orbited the nucleus in neat, planet-like orbits

• Planetary Model 1913• Nucleus surrounded by orbiting

electrons at different energy levels

• Electrons have definite orbits

• Utilized Planck’s Quantum Energy theory

• Worked on the Manhattan Project (US atomic bomb)

Page 29: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

Bohr Model for Nitrogen

Page 30: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

How can the protons bundle inside the nucleus without blowing the atom apart?

Page 31: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

James Chadwick1932

showed that the nucleus contained a neutral particle called the neutron.

Page 32: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

Quantum Model (learn next class)

Developed from wave equation by Erwin Schrodinger (1926)

Page 33: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

Fill in the chart using your notes (5 min)

Name Democritus Dalton Thomson Rutherford Bohr

Time Frame

Key Points

Model

Page 34: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

Who Did It? (5 min)

Six scientists were sitting around a table discussing their contributions to Atomic Theory. Use the clues to determine where they were sitting and what contribution they made.

Page 35: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

Subatomic Particles Table SummaryIn your notes fill in the table comparing the relative charge, mass and location of each of the subatomic particles (3 min)

Page 36: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

400 BC 1803 1904 1910 1913 1926

Niels Bohr

J J Thomson

Democratus

John Dalton

Schroedinger / Heisenberg

Ernest Rutherford

Atomic Theory

In your notes, make a timeline graph showing the development of modern atomic theory (5 min)

Page 37: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

You Do:

Complete the following book problems on a separate sheet of paper: p.104 #1, 4p.105 #13, 15p.122 #39, 62

Page 38: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

Closing

How did the concept of the atom change over time and what key experiments and scientists led to our current understanding of the atom?

Page 39: Atomic Theory. Catalyst (5 min) 1.What does the atomic number of each atom represent? 2.What does the mass number of each atom represent? 3.How many protons.

Homework

1. Describe the location of the electrons in Thompson’s ‘plum pudding’ model of the atom

2. In the Rutherford atomic model, which subatomic particles are located in the nucleus?

3. Describe Thomson’s and Millikan’s contributions to atomic theory.