Download - chapter 4

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•What is a model?

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•Uses familiar ideas to explain unfamiliar facts observed in nature.

•It can be changed if you get new info.

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•Evidence you get about an object without actually seeing or touching the object.

•You get a mental picture or a model of the object.

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•In the 5th century BC, Democritus believed that matter could be divided into smaller & smaller pieces forever until you got to the smallest possible piece called an atom (uncuttable).

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•In 1803, Dalton published his atomic theory from studying weather & the composition of air.

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•1) All matter is made of atoms 2) Different elements have different kinds of atoms 3) Compounds are formed by joining atoms of 2 or more elements.

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•He discovered the electron & figured it was part of an atom.

•Invented the Plum Pudding Model•The atom was a positively charged ball with lots of negatively charged electrons stuck into it like “plums in pudding.”

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•In 1908, Rutherford discovered the nucleus.

•He stated that the atom was mostly empty space made up of a positively charged nucleus with negative electrons scattered around it.

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• In his experiment, Rutherford fired a stream of alpha particles at a sheet of gold foil and found that:

1. Most of the bullets passed right through the gold sheet without changing course which meant that the gold atoms were made up of empty space.

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2. Some bullets bounced back from the sheet which meant that like charges repel. The alpha particles were positive so the nucleus must then be positively charged.

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•Bohr fixed up Rutherford’s theory.

•He stated that electrons orbited the nucleus on definite paths like the planets around the sun.

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•Based on a prediction of where the electrons actually are using math formulas.

•Basic idea of waves.

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•Subatomic Particles- particles smaller than an atom

•3 Main Subatomic Particles: Protons, Neutrons, Electrons

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Nucleus•The tiny center of atom•99.9% of atom’s weight is the nucleus but it is 100,000 times smaller than the entire atom.

•Like a bee in Yankee Stadium

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Protons•Positively Charged particles (+)

•Found in nucleus•Weighs 1 AMU

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Neutrons•Neutral particles •Found in nucleus•Weighs 1AMU+

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AMU•ATOMIC MASS UNIT•Special unit used to measure the mass of subatomic particles.

•1 proton = 1AMU

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Atomic Number•Number of protons in nucleus of atom

•Determines what the element is

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•Hydrogen’s Atomic number is 1 = 1 proton

•Carbon’s Atomic Number is 6 = 6 protons

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Isotopes•Atoms of same element that have the same number of protons but a different number of neutrons

•C12- C14- difference-2 more neutrons

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MASS NUMBER•Sum of protons & neutrons

•distinguishes one isotope from another

•Carbon = Mass# 12 6P + 6N= 12 total.

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•Uranium238 146N + 92P = 238 Uranium235

143N + 92P = 235

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Atomic Mass •Average mass of all isotopes of that element, usually a decimal located on the bottom of each card.

•Atomic mass of carbon=12.011

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Electrons•Number of protons = number of electrons outside nucleus.

•Electron fills cloud. Electrons can be anywhere within the space around nucleus

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•Electrons are arranged in energy levels according to how much energy they contain

•Electrons with lowest energy are in level closest to nucleus.

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•Electrons with high energy are in levels farther from nucleus.

•Each level can only hold so many electrons: 1st-2 2nd-8 3rd-18 4th-32 5th-18

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Chemical makeup•Properties of elements depend on how many electrons are in the various energy levels.

•Bonding: some do/some don’t

•Quarks-3particles that make up protons & neutrons