Chapter 2 Atom
Chapter 2 Atom
Sodium is made of tiny Diamond is made of carbon atoms Mercury is made of mercury
particles called sodium atoms. –different from sodium atoms. atoms – different again!
Atoms are the smallest particles of matter, that we cannot break
down further by chemical means.
The elements
Sodium is made of sodium atoms only, so it is an element.
An element contains only one kind of atom.
Around 90 elements have been found in the Earth and
atmosphere. Scientists have made nearly 30 others in the lab.
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Dalton's atomic theory
a. element- tiny indivisible particles (atoms)
b. atom of same element are identical
c. can physically mix together or chemically combine
d. atoms separated, joined, rearranged - chemical reaction
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Important change in Dalton's atomic theory -
atoms is divisible
it can be broken down into subatomic particles.
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Particle Symbol Relative Relative Actual mass
Charge Mass (g)
electron e- 1- 1/1840 9.11 x 10-28
proton p+ 1+ 1 1.67 x 10-24
neutron n0 0 1 1.67 x 10-24
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= Element name
Atomic number of an element - the number of
protons in the nucleus of each atom of that element.
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Mass number is the number of protons and
neutrons in the nucleus. (Nucleon number)
Mass number = p+ + n0
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10
Mass number
197
Au Element
symbol
Atomic number 79
Gold - 197
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Example: Oxygen
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8 18
33 75
16 15 31
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Workbook P 17 Q 1, 2
P 21 Q 8abcd (due 9/23)
Read chapter 2.3
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The atoms of the first 20 elements
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Each of the electron energy levels can hold only a
certain number of electrons.
⚫ First energy level - up to 2 e
⚫ Second energy level - up to 8 e
⚫ Third energy level - up to 18 e (8 e for K, Ca)
The electrons fill the energy levels starting from
the energy level nearest to the nucleus, which has
the lowest energy.
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1 2,1 2,8,1 2,8,8
Period 1 2 3 3
Number of occupied energy levels
Group 1 1 1 18/8A
Number of valence electrons
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EBKwG25hRPE 22
Group VIII, a special group
The elements in Group VIII have a very stable arrangement of
electrons.
Their atoms all have 8 outer-shell electrons, except for helium,
which has 2. (It has only one shell.)
helium atom full outer neon atom full outer shell argon atom outer shell
shell of 2 electrons of 8 electrons of 8 electrons
stable stable stable
This stable arrangement of electrons has a very important
result: it makes the Group 0 elements unreactive.
They exist naturally as single atoms.
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Workbook P 17-20 Q 3, 4, 5, 6, 7
Read chapter 2.2 (Due 9/23)
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Write the chemical symbols for three isotopes of
oxygen. Oxygen 16, oxygen 17, and oxygen 18.
Mass Number
(# protons + # neutrons)
16 17 18
O O O
8 8 8
Atomic number
(# proton = # electrons)
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Isotopes are atoms of the same element that have same
number of protons, but a different mass (nucleon) number
(different numbers of neutrons).
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same chemical properties
slightly different physical properties
Isotopes –
Some are radioactive (Hydrogen-3) -radioisotope
✓Unstable- break down over a period of time- decay
✓Radiation may be harmful
Some are non-radioactive.
Uses of isotopes
Medical uses
✓Kill cancer cells (radiation- cobalt)
✓Sterilize medical equipment
Industrial uses
✓Check for leaks in oil or gas pipelines
✓Archeology-test how old is the ancient stuff
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atomic mass unit (amu)- 1/12 of the mass of a carbon-12 atom
Atomic mass of an element is a weighted average mass of
the atoms in the naturally occurring isotopes of that element.
Carbon = 12.011 29 29
The atomic mass of copper is 63.546.
Which of copper’s two isotopes is more abundant:
copper-63 or copper-65?
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Atomic mass = multiply the mass of each isotope by
its natural abundance, expresses as a decimal, and
then add the products.
Element X has two natural isotopes.
The isotope with a mass number of 10 has a abundance of
19.91%.
The isotope with a mass number of 11 has a abundance of
80.09%.
Calculate the atomic mass of this element.
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Copper–63 has 69.2% abundance. Copper-65 has
30.8% abundance. What is copper’s average atomic
mass?
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Understanding atomic structure - a timeline
of discovery (Due 9/23)
A4 one page hard copy
Workbook P 17 Q 1, 2
P 21 Q 8abcd
Workbook P 17-20 Q 3, 4, 5, 6, 7
Workbook P 21 Q 8e, 9
Workbook P 24-25 Q 11
(Due 9/23)
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❖ John Dalton (1766-1844)
❖ All elements are composed of tiny invisible
particles called atoms.
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The electrons were like plums embedded in a
positively charged “pudding,” thus it was called the
“plum pudding” model.
Positive charged sphere with negatively charged
electrons.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QprcORLMazQ
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In 1897, J.J. Thomson used a cathode ray (-) tube to prove the presence of a
negatively charged particle.
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❑ Most of the particles passed right through
❑ A few particles were deflected
❑ VERY FEW were greatly deflected
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WEPMwhNsLbU
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❖ Electron is in specific electron shell (energy
level) around nucleus.
❖ Electron can gain or lose energy to change its
energy level.
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