The document discusses the development of the atomic model over time. It describes the contributions of scientists like Dalton, Thomson, Rutherford, Bohr, and Chadwick who through experiments discovered subatomic particles and developed the current nuclear model of the atom with a small, dense nucleus surrounded by electrons in energy levels.
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The Atomic Model
The document discusses the development of the atomic model over time. It describes the contributions of scientists like Dalton, Thomson, Rutherford, Bohr, and Chadwick who through experiments discovered subatomic particles and developed the current nuclear model of the atom with a small, dense nucleus surrounded by electrons in energy levels.
Introduction to atoms Everything is made up of atoms. Atoms are the smallest unit of any element and cannot be seen.
Atoms of different elements can combine to make new
substances. Like this, we can make all of the materials on the planet! electron shell nucleus Atoms have a unique structure. They are made up of a core nucleus which contains protons and neutrons. The nucleus is surrounded by electrons which are in shells.
Charge of atoms Protons are positively charged. The number of protons an atom has can be referred to as its atomic number. You can see that on the periodic table, elements are arranged in order of their atomic number. proton Neutrons are neutral and electron do not have a charge.
Electrons are negatively charged. neutron
If the number of protons and electrons are the same, there
will be no overall charge for the atom. It is said to be neutral.
If we can’t see atoms, how do we know so much about them?
John Dalton John Dalton was an English chemist who lived in 19th century. Dalton did a lot of scientific experiments involving gases. His experiments led to him to think about what gases are made up of. The ancient Greeks had already come up with a theory that everything is made of very small units, called atoms, which cannot be broken down any further. Dalton went on to do many experiments which showed that when atoms of different elements combine to form chemical compounds, they are always in whole numbers. For example 2 oxygen atoms will always react with 1 carbon atom to make carbon dioxide, CO2.
JJ Thomson At the end of the 19th century, English physicist Sir Joseph John Thomson, carried out an experiment where he passed a high voltage beam through a low pressure gas.
He found that the beam would always
be attracted to a positive charge, and therefore must be negative itself. He had discovered the electron! Atoms were then thought to be solid, indivisible spheres, but Thomson found that the electron had a very small mass. He thought that about 2,000 electrons must be needed to make one hydrogen atom.
Plum pudding model A hydrogen atom made entirely of electrons would be negatively charged. As this was not observed, he knew that that could not be correct. positively-charged pudding Thomson then concluded that negatively- there must be fewer electrons, charged which are spread out and plums mixed with positive charges, like plums in a pudding. This new model of the atom was therefore called the plum pudding model.
Thomson’s work earned him the Nobel Prize in 1906.
Ernest Rutherford Ernest Rutherford was a student of JJ Thomson. Rutherford designed an experiment to test out the plum pudding model theory. alpha particle The experiment was conducted by his assistants, Geiger and Marsden.
Geiger and Marsden fired gold
positively-charged alpha nucleus particles at a sheet of gold foil, which is made up of gold atoms. They expected the alpha particles to pass through the gold atoms.
Naming the proton What actually happened in Rutherford’s scattering experiment was that some of the alpha particles were deflected and some were reflected straight back .
They concluded that, for
this to occur, there must be alpha a small core of positive particle charge that repels the gold alpha particles. They had nucleus alpha particle discovered the nucleus! deflected
pudding model with a new model of the atom as a core of positive charge in the nucleus surrounded by negatively-charged electrons. He concluded that the nucleus was very small.
This new model of the atom was called the nuclear model.
Niels Bohr In 1914, Danish scientist Niels Bohr further adapted the nuclear model. electron Bohr suggested that electrons energy levels are not just orbiting the nucleus (shells) electron in a random fashion, but are in fixed energy levels. This can be compared to planets orbiting the sun. They have a fixed path that they follow, just like the electrons around the nucleus. nucleus
Other scientists thought Bohr’s idea was unacceptable,
until later experimental data supported his claim. Bohr won the Nobel prize for his work in 1922.
Sir James Chadwick A few years later in 1932, English physicist, James Chadwick carried out a series of experiments involving radiation.
Chadwick discovered that the
nucleus not only contained positively-charged protons, but also small particles with the same mass as protons but no charge. He called these particles neutrons.