Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

75
Unit 4- Atomic Theories and Nuclear Chemistry Chapters 3 & 22

Transcript of Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Page 1: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Unit 4- Atomic Theories and Nuclear

ChemistryChapters

3 & 22

Page 2: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

J.J. Thomson

Kishan AlluriChristina Costeas

Sandy JiangPatrick Morgan

Ben Wong

Page 3: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Cathode Ray Experiment http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XU8nMK

kzbT8

Page 4: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Background Born in Manchester, England in December

1856 Studied physics and mathematics Won a nobel prize in 1906

Page 5: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Experiment Observations(on page 71)1. An object placed between the cathode

and the opposite end of the tube cast a shadow on the glass.

2. A paddle wheel placed on rails between the electrodes rolled along the rails from the cathode toward the anode.

3. Cathode rays were deflected by a magnetic field in the same manner as a wire carrying electric current, which was known to have a negative charge.

4. The rays were deflected away from a negatively charged object.

Page 6: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Discovery of Electrons-1897 Experiments supported hypothesis that

the particles that compose cathode rays are negatively charged

Measured the ratio of cathode-ray particles to their mass—found it was always the same

Concluded that all cathode rays are composed of identical negatively charged particles called electrons

Experiments revealed the electron has a very large charge for its tiny mass

Page 7: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

RobertMillikan

By: Katrina Leung,Jesse Stathis, Jenna Taormina,

Danielle Zhang, Matt Odea

Page 8: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Millikan’s Atomic Theory Electrons are really small Mass of electron 1/2000 the mass of a

hydrogen atom Electron has a mass of 9.109 * 10^-31kg or

1/1837 the mass of a hydrogen atom Electrons carry a negative charge

Page 9: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Video on Millikan’s Oil Experiment

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XMfYHag7Liw

Page 10: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

New Inferences aboutAtomic Structure

1. Because atoms are electrically neutral, they must contain a positive charge to balance the negative electrons.

2. Because electrons have so much less mass than atoms, atoms must contain other particles that account for most of their mass.

Page 11: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Lord Rutherford of Nelson

As flawlessly explained by: Adam, Jane, Justin, Jeremy,

rob

Page 12: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Rutherfordian History

Born 1871 in New Zealand

In early work, discovered radioactive half-life

Had an element named after him-rutherfordium

Became known as the father of nuclear physics

Page 13: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Discovery of the Atomic Nucleus Assistants Geiger and Marsden

bombarded a thin piece of gold foil with a narrow beam of alpha particles.

Some of the particles were redirected by the gold foil back towards their source.

Rutherford thus concluded that the force must be caused by a very densely packed bundle of matter with a positive charge, which he called the nucleus.

Page 14: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

The Experiment

Rutherford had discovered that the volume of the nucleus was very small compared to the total volume of the atom, suggesting that there was a lot of empty space.

Page 15: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

James ChadwickBy Monica, Santosh, Jennie, Antonella, and

Drew

Page 16: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

James Chadwick’s Discovery of the Neutron In 1932, Chadwick discovered a previously

unknown particle in the atomic nucleus.3 This particle became known as the neutron because of its lack of electric charge. Chadwick's discovery was crucial for the fission of uranium 235.

Page 17: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

A. Mass Number

mass # = protons + neutrons

¨ always a whole number

¨ NOT on the Periodic Table!

© Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc.

Page 18: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

B. Isotopes

Atoms of the same element with different mass numbers.

C126

Mass #

Atomic #

¨ Nuclear symbol:

¨ Hyphen notation: carbon-12

Page 19: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

B. Isotopes

© Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc.

Page 20: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

B. Isotopes

Chlorine-37◦ atomic #: 17

◦ mass #: 37

◦ # of protons:17

◦ # of electrons:17

◦ # of neutrons:20 Cl3717

Page 21: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Chlorine-35◦ atomic #: 17

◦ mass #: 35

◦ # of protons:17

◦ # of electrons:17

◦ # of neutrons:18

B. Isotopes

Cl3517

Page 22: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

C. Johannesson

C. Relative Atomic Mass

12C atom = 1.992 × 10-23 g

¨ 1 p = 1.007276 amu

1 n = 1.008665 amu

1 e- = 0.0005486 amu

© Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc.

¨ atomic mass unit (amu)

¨ 1 amu = 1/12 the mass of a 12C atom

Page 23: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

D. Average Atomic Mass

weighted average of all isotopes on the Periodic Table round to 2 decimal places

100

(%)(mass(mass)(%) )

Avg.AtomicMass

Page 24: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Avg.AtomicMass

D. Average Atomic Mass

EX: Calculate the avg. atomic mass of oxygen if its abundance in nature is 99.76% 16O, 0.04% 17O, and 0.20% 18O.

100

(18)(0.20)(17)(0.04))(16)(99.76 16.00amu

Page 25: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Avg.AtomicMass

D. Average Atomic Mass

EX: Find chlorine’s average atomic mass if approximately 8 of every 10 atoms are chlorine-35 and 2 are chlorine-37.

100

(37)(2)(35)(8)35.40 amu

Page 26: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

New Terms for Nuclear Chemistry Atom = nuclide Nucleus = nucleon

Page 27: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

A. Mass Defect Difference between the mass of an

atom and the mass of its individual particles.

4.00260 amu 4.03298 amu

Page 28: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Mass of subatomic particles: Protons - 1.007276 u Electrons – 0.0005486 u Neutrons – 1.008665 u

Ex. Helium-4 has an atomic mass of 4.002602Calculate the mass defect:2 Protons = (2x1.007276)= 2.014552u2 Electrons = (2x0.0005486) = 0.001097u2 Neutrons = (2x1.008665)= 2.017330u Total = 4.032979 uMass defect = 4.032979 - 4.002602=

0.030377

Page 29: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

What causes the loss of mass? It is nuclear binding: (Energy released when

a nucleus is formed from nucleons)

According to E=mc2:◦ Mass can be converted into energy and energy to

mass The mass defect is caused by the

conversion of mass to energy upon formation of the nucleus.

Page 30: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Calculating the Binding Energy: E=mc2

◦ E-energy (J, Joules)◦ m- mass (kg)◦ c- speed of light (3.00x108 m/s)

◦ J= kg x m2

s2

Steps:1. Calculate the mass defect in (u).2. Convert to kg using 1u=1.6605X10-27kg3. Plug in to energy equation

Page 31: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Practice:1. Calculate the binding energy of Sulfur-32. The measured atomic mass is 31.972070 u.

(4.36 x 10-11 J)

2. Calculate the nuclear binding energy per mole of Oxygen-16. The measured atomic mass of oxygen is 15.994915u. (1.23 x 1013 J)

3. Calculate the binding energy per nucleon of a Manganese-55 atom. It’s measured atomic mass is 54.938047 u.

(1.41 x 10-12J)

Page 32: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

B. Nuclear Binding Energy

Energy released when a nucleus is formed from nucleons.

High binding energy = stable nucleus.

E = mc2

E: energy (J)m: mass defect (kg)c: speed of light

(3.00×108 m/s)

Page 33: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Calculate the binding energies of the following two nuclei, and indicate which nucleus releases more energy when formed.

A. Potassium–35, Atomic mass 34.988011

B. Sodium – 23, Atomic Mass 22.989767

Do now:

Page 34: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

A. Potassium–35, Atomic mass 34.9880114.47 X 10-11 J

B. Sodium – 23, Atomic Mass 22.9897672.99 x 10 -11J

Potassium releases more energy

Do now:

Page 35: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

B. Nuclear Binding Energy

Unstable nuclides are radioactive and undergo radioactive decay.

Page 36: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Binding energy per nucleon- Binding energy per nucleon, is the binding energy of the

nucleus divided by its number of nucleons.

- The higher the binding energy per nucleon, the more tightly the nucleons are held together.

- Elements with intermediate atomic masses have the greatest binding energies per nucleon and are therefore the most stable.

Page 37: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

The Band of Stability

What observations can you make?

Page 38: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Atoms having low atomic numbers, are the most stable. ◦ N:P = 1:1

As atomic number increases the N:P increases (1.5:1)

Band of Stability

Page 39: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Why does this happen?

- Explained by the relationship btwn nuclear force and electrostatic forces btwn protons.

Protons in the nucleus repel all other protons through electrostatic repulsion.

As #p increase, the repulsive electrostatic force between protons increase faster than the nuclear force

More neutrons are required to increase the nuclear force to stabilize the nucleus.

Band of Stability

Page 40: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Beyond Bismuth (#83), the repulsive forces of protons are so great that no stable nuclide exists.

Stable nuclei tend to have even number of nucleons

Band of Stability

Page 41: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

A. Types of Radiation Alpha particle ()

◦ helium nucleus ◦ 2 protons and 2 neutrons bound together and

emitted from the nucleus◦ Restricted nearly to heavy atomic nuclei◦ Mostly because protons numbers need to be

reduced to stabilize the nuclei

Page 42: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

A. Types of Radiation Beta (-)

◦ Is an electron emitted from the nucleus during some kinds of radioactive decay.

◦ Usually for the nuclides above the band of stability, to decrease the number of neutrons.

◦ Electron is emitted from the nucleus as a beta particle.

Page 43: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

A. Types of Radiation Positron particle (+)

◦ Particle has the same mass as an electron but has a positive charge and emitted from the nucleus

◦ Proton is converted into a neutron

Page 44: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

He42

A. Types of Radiation Alpha particle ()

◦ helium nucleus

2+

Beta particle (-) electron e0

-1 1-

Positron (+) positron e0

11+

Gamma () high-energy photon 0

Page 45: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

B. Nuclear Decay

Alpha Emission

He Th U 42

23490

23892

parentnuclide

daughternuclide

alphaparticle

Numbers must balance!!

Page 46: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

B. Nuclear Decay

Beta Emission

e Xe I 0-1

13154

13153

electronPositron Emission

e Ar K 01

3818

3819

positron

Page 47: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

B. Nuclear Decay

Electron Capture

Pd e Ag 10646

0-1

10647

electronGamma Emission Usually follows other types of

decay.

Transmutation One element becomes another.

Page 48: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Complete the following:

He Th U 42

23490

23892

e Xe I 0-1

13154

13153

e Ar K 01

3818

3819

Pd e Ag 10646

0-1

10647

Page 49: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Complete the following:

He Th U 42

23490

23892

e Xe I 0-1

13154

13153

e Ar K 01

3818

3819

Pd e Ag 10646

0-1

10647

Page 50: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Complete the following:

He Th U 42

23490

23892

e Xe I 0-1

13154

13153

e Ar K 01

3818

3819

Pd e Ag 10646

0-1

10647

Page 51: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Complete the following:

He Th U 42

23490

23892

e Xe I 0-1

13154

13153

e Ar K 01

3818

3819

Pd e Ag 10646

0-1

10647

Page 52: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Complete the following:

He Th U 42

23490

23892

e Xe I 0-1

13154

13153

e Ar K 01

3818

3819

Pd e Ag 10646

0-1

10647

Page 53: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

B. Nuclear Decay

Why nuclides decay…◦ need stable ratio of neutrons to protons

DECAY SERIES TRANSPARENCY

Page 54: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Characteristics of stable nuclei: When number of protons is plotted against

number of neutrons, a belt-like graph is obtained.

Atoms of low atomic numbers have stable nuclei with a ratio of 1:1, p:n

As atomic number increases, the p:n increases

Page 55: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

What happens when p:n increase? Explained by nuclear and electrostatic

forces between protons.◦ Protons in the nucleus repel each other bc of

electrostatic repulsion◦ However Nuclear forces allow protons to attract to

other protons in close proximity As #p increase the repulsive electrostatic

force between protons increase faster than the nuclear force. Therefore creating an unstable nucleus.◦ More neutrons are required to stabilize this force.

Page 56: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Radioactive Decay The spontaneous disintegration of a nucleus

into a slightly lighter nucleus, accompanied by the emission of particles, electromagnetic radiation or both.

Leads to more stable nucleons.

Page 57: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

C. Half-life

Half-life (t½)◦ Time required for half the atoms of a

radioactive nuclide to decay.◦ Shorter half-life = less stable.

Page 58: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

C. Half-life

nif mm )( 2

1

mf: final massmi: initial massn: # of half-livesn: t/T t = time elapsed

T = Length of half life

Page 59: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

C. Half-life Fluorine-21 has a half-life of 5.0 seconds. If you

start with 25 g of fluorine-21, how many grams would remain after 60.0 s?

GIVEN:

t½ = 5.0 s

mi = 25 g

mf = ?

total time = 60.0 s

n = 60.0s ÷ 5.0s =12

WORK:

mf = mi (½)n

mf = (25 g)(0.5)12

mf = 0.0061 g

Page 60: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Add in new equation

Page 61: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

More Half-life problems: (wkst) The half-life of carbon-14 is 5715 years.

How long will it be until only half of the carbon-14 in a sample remains? (5715y)

The EPA is concerned about the levels of radon gas in homes. The half-life of radon-222 isotope is 3.8days. If a sample of gas taken from a basement contained 4.38ug of radon-222, how much will remain after 15.2 days? (0.274ug)

Uranium-238 decays through alpha decay with a half life of 4.46x109years. How long would it take for 7/8 of a sample of uranium-238 to decay? (three half-lives or 1.34 x 1010 years)

Page 62: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

Decay Series Parent Nuclide:

The heaviest nuclide of each decay series

Daughter Nuclide:

The nuclide produced by decay of the parent nuclide

Page 63: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

A. F ission

splitting a nucleus into two or more smaller nuclei

1 g of 235U = 3 tons of coal

U23592

Page 64: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

A. F ission

chain reaction - self-propagating reaction

critical mass - mass required to sustain a chain reaction

Page 65: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

B. Fusion combining of two nuclei to form one nucleus of larger

mass thermonuclear reaction – requires temp of

40,000,000 K to sustain 1 g of fusion fuel =

20 tons of coal occurs naturally in

stars

HH 31

21

Page 66: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

C. Fission vs. Fusion

235U is limited danger of

meltdown toxic waste thermal pollution

fuel is abundant no danger of

meltdown no toxic waste not yet sustainable

FISSION FUSION

Page 67: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

A. Nuclear Power Fission Reactors

Cooling Tower

Page 68: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

A. Nuclear Power Fission Reactors

Page 69: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

A. Nuclear Power Fusion Reactors (not yet sustainable)

Page 70: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

A. Nuclear Power

Fusion Reactors (not yet sustainable)

Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor

Princeton University

National Spherical Torus Experiment

Page 71: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

B. Synthetic Elements

Transuranium Elements◦ elements with atomic #s above 92◦ synthetically produced in nuclear reactors and

accelerators◦ most decay very rapidly

Pu He U 24294

42

23892

Page 72: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

C. Radioactive Dating half-life measurements of radioactive

elements are used to determine the age of an object

decay rate indicates amount of radioactive material

EX: 14C - up to 40,000 years238U and 40K - over 300,000 years

Page 73: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

D. Nuclear Medicine Radioisotope Tracers

◦ absorbed by specific organs and used to diagnose diseases

Radiation Treatment◦ larger doses are used

to kill cancerous cells in targeted organs

◦ internal or external radiation source

Radiation treatment using

-rays from cobalt-60.

Page 74: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

E. Nuclear Weapons

Atomic Bomb◦ chemical explosion is used to form a critical mass of

235U or 239Pu◦ fission develops into an uncontrolled chain reaction

Hydrogen Bomb◦ chemical explosion fission fusion◦ fusion increases the fission rate◦ more powerful than the atomic bomb

Page 75: Chapters 3 & 22. Kishan Alluri Christina Costeas Sandy Jiang Patrick Morgan Ben Wong.

F. Others Food Irradiation

◦ radiation is used to kill bacteria

Radioactive Tracers◦ explore chemical pathways◦ trace water flow◦ study plant growth, photosynthesis

Consumer Products◦ ionizing smoke detectors - 241Am