11 Lectureoutline
11 Lectureoutline
Chapter 11:
The Atomic
Nature Of Matter
Atoms
"All things are made of atomslittle particles
that move around in perpetual motion, attracting
each other when they are a little distance apart,
but repelling upon being squeezed into one
another."
Richard Feynman
Characteristics of Atoms
Characteristics of atoms:
Incredibly tiny
Numerous
Perpetually in motion
Ageless
Characteristics of Atoms
CHECK YOUR NEIGHBOR
Which of the following are incorrect statements about the
atom?
A. Atoms are smaller than the wavelength of visible light.
B. Atoms are mostly empty space, just as the solar
system is mostly empty space.
C. Atoms are perpetually moving.
D. Atoms are manufactured in plants, and in humans
during pregnancy.
E. All are correct.
Characteristics of Atoms
CHECK YOUR ANSWER
Which of the following are incorrect statements about the
atom?
A. Atoms are smaller than the wavelength of visible light.
B. Atoms are mostly empty space, just as the solar
system is mostly empty space.
C. Atoms are perpetually moving.
D. Atoms are manufactured in plants, and in humans
during pregnancy.
E. All are correct.
Atomic Imagery
View of atoms
Too small to be seen with visible light
As chains of individual thorium atoms in a
1970 electron micrograph image
Revealed as ripples in rings by scanning
tunneling microscope in mid-1980s
Classical model has a nucleus
at the center, surrounded by
electrons
2015 Pearson Education, Inc.
Atomic Structure
Atomic structure composed of
atomic nucleus
concentration of nearly all the mass
nucleons
building block of nucleus
all are identical
in a neutral statea neutron
in a positively charged statea proton
positive charges repel positive charges and attract
negative charges
The Elements
Atoms
Refer to particles that make up a substance
Elemental substance
Composed of only one kind of atom
Lightest and most abundant is hydrogen.
The Elements
Composition of living things include these
5 elements:
Oxygen
Carbon
Hydrogen
Nitrogen
Calcium
Isotopes
Protons in nucleus matches electrons around nucleus,
but not necessarily neutrons.
Isotopes:
Atoms of the same element with different numbers of
neutrons
Identical behavior
Identified by their mass number (total number of
protons and neutrons in the nucleus or number of
nucleons)
Example: Iron isotope with 26 protons contain 30 neutrons.
Mass number is number 56, referred to
as iron-56.
2015 Pearson Education, Inc.
Isotopes
CHECK YOUR NEIGHBOR
The atomic number of an element matches the
number of
A.
B.
C.
D.
Isotopes
CHECK YOUR ANSWER
The atomic number of an element matches the
number of
A.
B.
C.
D.
Comment:
When the atomic number doesn't match the number of
electrons, the atom is an ion.
2015 Pearson Education, Inc.
Isotopes
CHECK YOUR NEIGHBOR
A nucleus with an atomic number of 44 and a mass
number of 100 must have
A.
B.
C.
D.
44 neutrons.
56 neutrons.
100 neutrons.
All of the above.
Isotopes
CHECK YOUR ANSWER
A nucleus with an atomic number of 44 and a mass
number of 100 must have
A.
B.
C.
D.
44 neutrons.
56 neutrons.
100 neutrons.
All of the above.
Comment:
Be sure to distinguish between neutron and nucleon. Of the 100 nucleons
in the nucleus, 56 are neutrons. A neutron is a nucleon, as is a proton.
2015 Pearson Education, Inc.
Molecules
Molecules
Two or more atoms bonded together
Example:
NH3 (ammonia)
3 atoms of hydrogen and 1 atom of nitrogen
Molecules
Chemical reaction:
A process in which atoms rearrange to form
different molecules
Example:
Pulling molecules apart requires energy.
During photosynthesis, sunlight's energy breaks bonds
of CO2 to produce O2 and C.
Antimatter
Matter:
Composed of atoms with positive nuclei and negative electrons
Antimatter:
Composed of atoms with negative nuclei and positive electrons
(positrons)
Antimatter
Positrons
have the same mass as an electron but are
positively charged.
Antiprotons
have the same mass as protons but are
negatively charged.
Dark Matter
Dark matter
is unseen and unidentified matter very
different from the elements that comprises
about 23% of matter in the universe.
Dark energy
is an antigravity energy comprising 73% of
the universe.
Dark Matter
Finding the nature of the dark matter and the
nature of the energy of empty space are
high-priority quests in these times.
What we will have learned by 2050 will likely
dwarf all that we have ever known.