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Science 20 - Unit 1 Chemistry Lesson 1 - The Structure of Matter

1) All atoms are composed of protons, neutrons, and electrons. Protons and neutrons are located in the nucleus, while electrons surround the nucleus in energy levels. 2) Atoms can bond by gaining electrons to become negatively charged ions, losing electrons to become positively charged ions, or sharing electrons through covalent bonds. 3) Atoms are most stable when their outer energy level is filled with electrons, in the configuration of a noble gas. Elements in the same group on the periodic table have similar properties due to their shared number of valence electrons.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
134 views5 pages

Science 20 - Unit 1 Chemistry Lesson 1 - The Structure of Matter

1) All atoms are composed of protons, neutrons, and electrons. Protons and neutrons are located in the nucleus, while electrons surround the nucleus in energy levels. 2) Atoms can bond by gaining electrons to become negatively charged ions, losing electrons to become positively charged ions, or sharing electrons through covalent bonds. 3) Atoms are most stable when their outer energy level is filled with electrons, in the configuration of a noble gas. Elements in the same group on the periodic table have similar properties due to their shared number of valence electrons.

Uploaded by

Tahsim Ahmed
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Science 20 – Unit 1 Chemistry

Lesson 1 - The Structure of Matter

Review:

 Element - a pure substance that can’t be broken down into simpler substances by chemical means
E.g. Na, Cl, H, O ….

 Atom - the smallest part of an element that has all the properties of that element

The Atom:
Basic Unit of Matter

 All atoms are made up of three major particles:

1. Proton - positively charged, located in the nucleus of an atom, has


a large mass

2. Neutron - neutral particle, located in the nucleus of an atom, has


a large mass

3. Electron - negatively charged, very little mass, surrounds the


nucleus of an atom to produce an electron cloud due to rapid
movement of the electrons

Opposites Attract…

 Since oppositely charged particles are attracted to each other, negatively charged electrons are attracted to
positively charged protons

 This explains why one atom will bond with another

 In a neutral atom, the number of protons & electrons are equal, balancing all charges

Terms (Very Important)

 Atomic number - the number of protons in the nucleus of an atom

 Atomic mass - the average mass of the atoms of an element

 Mass number - the total number of protons & neutrons in an atom

 mass number = # of protons + # of neutrons


Sketching Atoms:

Bohr Diagram

 3 steps to follow:

1. Use the atomic # and atomic mass from periodic table to determine the # of protons, neutrons, and electrons
(PEN) that make up the atom

2. Draw the nucleus of the atom with the appropriate # of protons & neutrons

3. Use dots to represent the electrons in each energy level that surrounds the nucleus

** Remember**

 the 1st energy level can only hold 2 electrons & the 2nd energy level can hold eight electrons (refer to periodic
table)

 Fill the energy level closest to the nucleus first

Example :

Sketch a Bohr diagram for the most common form of chlorine:

Chlorine has 17 electrons. The first energy level can hold 2 electrons leaving 15 more to place. The second energy level
can hold 8 electrons, leaving 7 more to place. The final 7 will fit on the third energy level.

PRACTICE p. 8 #2-4, p. 9 #5
Lewis Dot Diagrams (LDD)
 a more efficient way to represent the inner electrons & the nucleus, where only the valence electrons are shown

3 steps to follow:

1. Write the chemical symbol – this will represent the inner electrons & the
nucleus.

2. Determine the # of electrons in the outer most energy level.

3. Use a dot to represent each electron in the outer energy level ( to be placed on
the north, south, east, or west sides of the symbol. Each position has room for
2 electrons. Double up on electrons only after all other positions contain at
least one electron.

Lewis Dot Diagrams of Noble Gases

 Each of the noble gases (He, Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe, & Rn) has a full outer energy level making them very stable atoms.

 These atoms rarely form bonds as a result of their filled outer energy levels.

 Having their outer energy levels filled with the maximum # of electrons makes noble gases unreactive.

Atoms can obtain a configuration to become more like a noble gas in 1 of 3 ways: by gaining electrons, by losing
electrons, or by sharing electrons

PRACTICE p.10 #6

Atomic Bonding

 When two atoms come closer to each other, their electrons are attracted to both nuclei

 Valence electrons are electrons found in the outermost energy level and are the most significant electrons in
atomic bonding

 Valence electrons indicate the bonding properties of an atom

• •

Li Na --- each atom has one valence

Lithium Sodium electron & as a result, both

have similar bonding properties


As two atoms approach each other….

…each nucleus begins to attract the electrons of the other atom

Gaining Electrons – REDUCTION (GER)

 An atom can gain electrons to fill empty spaces in the outermost energy level

 Result --> the atom has more electrons than protons & the net charge changes to a negative charge

 This charged atom is called an ion

 Anion - a negatively charged ion

 Non-metallic atoms have a tendency to become negatively charged ions or anions

By gaining an electron, the chloride ion now has 1 more than it has protons so it has a charge of 1-

Losing Electrons (OXIDATION) - LEO

 An atom can lose electrons from its outer energy level to produce a positively charged ion called a cation.

 Metallic atoms have a tendency to form cations

By losing an electron, the sodium ion now has one more proton than it has electrons so it has a charge of 1+

Na -------------------> Na+ + 1e-

Sodium Sodium

atom ion
Sharing Electrons

 An atom can share electrons with their atoms to produce a covalent bond

 Two or more non-metallic atoms tend to share electrons to complete their outer energy levels

 Both chlorine atoms require 1 electron to fill their outer energy level. They can share their electrons to
produce a covalent bond.

PRACTICE p.13 #7-8

Summary

 All atoms that make up different elements are made from the same basic parts: protons, neutrons, and
electrons.

 Elements contained in the same vertical column on the periodic table (groups or families) have the same
number of valence electrons and similar properties.

 An atom is most stable when its outer energy level if filled with electrons and all atoms can gain, lose or
share electrons to obtain a full outer energy level.

ASSIGNMENT: Read pg. 6-13 Questions pg. 14 #1-10

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