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Fundamental Particles

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History of Atomic Theory

Our understanding of atoms has changed over time. Important models were developed by John Dalton, J.J. Thomson, Ernest Rutherford, and Niels Bohr.

John Dalton

John Dalton

  • John Dalton was an English schoolteacher, who first wrote that atoms were the basic unit of chemistry.
  • He thought that atoms were spherical, and different spheres constituted different elements.
  • Dalton thought atoms were the fundamental unit of matter and were indivisible.
J.J. Thomson

J.J. Thomson

  • 90 years after Dalton's ideas, J.J. Thomson discovered that atoms were divisible.
  • Thompson discovered and measured the mass of, the electron.
  • The electron was measured to be several orders of magnitude lighter than an atom, proving that smaller particles than atoms existed.
  • This lead to the plum pudding model, where the atom was viewed to be a large positively charged sphere, with embedded smaller, negatively charged, electrons.
Ernest Rutherford

Ernest Rutherford

  • Ernest Rutherford fired alpha particles at a thin film of gold.
  • Were the plum pudding model true, the particles would have been deflected by the gold.
  • Instead, most particles passed straight through the film.
  • This led to the nuclear model, where the atom was viewed as being mostly empty space, with a positive nucleus and orbiting electrons.
Niels Bohr

Niels Bohr

  • The nuclear model had a problem; classically, an electron should spiral into the nucleus, and atoms should collapse.
  • Niels Bohr solved this problem by developing the first quantum theory of the atom, with electrons assigned to fixed orbits of defined energy.
  • When electrons move between orbits, they must emit or absorb electromagnetic radiation of a particular frequency.

Subatomic Particles

Atoms are made of protons, neutrons, and electrons. These different subatomic particles have different properties.

Units

Units

  • Subatomic particles are so small that conventional SI units aren't very useful.
  • For example, a proton weighs 1.6726219 × 10-27kg - this is not a nice number to use!
  • We define certain units for use with atoms - the atomic mass unit (amu) is defined as one twelfth the mass of a single carbon-12 atom.
  • The elementary charge unit (e) is equal to the charge on an electron.
Protons

Protons

  • A proton has a mass of 1.0073amu.
  • It has a charge of +1e.
Neutrons

Neutrons

  • A neutron has a mass of 1.0087amu.
  • A neutron has no electric charge.
  • A neutron is very slightly heavier than a proton, but the difference is so small we often take the masses to be the same, and equal to 1amu.
Electrons

Electrons

  • An electron has a charge of -1e.
  • The mass of an electron is so small it is usually approximated to zero.
  • The mass of an electron is approximately 0.00055amu.

Subatomic Particles

Atoms are made of a nucleus and shells of electrons.

Nucleus

Nucleus

  • The nucleus of an atom contains protons and neutrons.
  • Most of the mass of an atom is in the nucleus.
  • The nucleus is positively charged.
Electron shells

Electron shells

  • Electron shells are further split into sub-shells.
  • Each sub-shell has a slightly different energy.
  • Electron shells occupy most of the space of the atom.
Jump to other topics
1

Structure - Models of the Particulate of Matter

2

Structure - Models of Bonding & Structure

3

Structure - Classification of Matter

3.1

The Periodic Table: Classification of Elements

3.2

Periodic Trends

3.3

Group 1 Alkali Metals

3.4

Halogens

3.5

Noble gases, group 18

3.6

Functional Groups: Classification of Organic

3.7

Functional Group Chemistry

3.8

Alkanes

3.9

Alcohols

3.10

Halogenoalkanes

4

Reactivity - What Drives Chemical Reaction?

5

Reactivity - How Much, How Fast & How Far?

6

Reactivity - The Mechanisms of Chemical Change

7

Measurement, Data Processing & Analysis

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