1 Atomic Intro
1 Atomic Intro
1 Atomic Intro
Atomic Models
The
atomic
model has
changed
throughout the
centuries,
starting in 400
BC, when it
looked like a
billiard ball
Democritus
400 BC
Atomos
Atomos
To Democritus, atoms
were small, hard
particles that were all
made of the same
material but were
different shapes and
sizes.
Atoms were infinite in
number, always
moving and capable
of joining together.
Why?
The eminent
philosophers of
the time,
Aristotle and
Plato, had a
more respected,
(and ultimately
wrong) theory.
Daltons Model
Daltons Theory
.
This
theory
became one
of the
foundations
of modern
chemistry.
1897, the
English scientist
J.J. Thomson
provided the first
hint that an atom
is made of even
smaller particles.
Thomson Model
He proposed a
model of the atom
that is sometimes
called the Plum
Pudding model.
Atoms were made
from a positively
charged substance
with negatively
charged electrons
scattered about,
like plums in a
pudding.
Thomson Model
Cathode Ray
Experiment
Thomson studied the
passage of an electric
current through a
gas.
As the current passed
through the gas, it
gave off rays of
negatively charged
particles (electrons).
Thomson Model
This
surprised
Thomson,
because the
atoms of the gas
were uncharged.
Where had the
negative charges
come from?
Where did
they come
from?
In 1908, the
English physicist
Ernest Rutherford
was hard at work
on an experiment
that seemed to
have little to do
with unraveling the
mysteries of the
atomic structure.
Rutherfords
experiment
Involved firing a stream of tiny
positively charged alpha
particles at a thin sheet of gold
foil (2000 atoms thick)
http://chemmovies.unl.edu/ChemAnime/R
UTHERFD/RUTHERFD.html
Rutherford
Rutherford reasoned
that all of an atoms
positively charged
particles were
contained in the
nucleus. The
negatively charged
particles were
scattered outside the
nucleus around the
atoms edge within a
lot of empty space.
Bohr Model
Bohr Model
According to Bohrs
atomic model,
electrons move in
definite orbits around
the nucleus, much
like planets circle the
sun. These orbits, or
energy levels, are
located at certain
distances from the
nucleus.
Wave Model
Orbitals
A space in which an
electron is most likely to
be found is called an
orbital
Electrons whirl about the
nucleus billions of times
in one second
They are not moving
around in random
patterns.
Location of electrons
depends upon how much
energy the electron has.
Electrons
Indivisible Electron
Greek
Dalton
Nucleus
Thomson
Rutherford
Bohr
Wave
Orbit
Orbital
X
X