Beanium Isotope Lab
Beanium Isotope Lab
We have talked in class about isotopes: atoms of the same element that
differ in mass. For example, there are actually three different kinds of hydrogen atoms. Refer to the
table below for the different kinds (or isotopes) of two common atoms.
This lab exercise is designed to show you isotopes of an element in a simulation form.
You will be asked to gather data about the “isotopes” and organize the data. If
atoms were as large as beans they could be sorted, counted, and massed. In this
experiment we will sort, count, and mass three different kinds of beans and imagine
that we are observing three different isotopes of the same element (let’s call it
BEANIUM). The three different isotopes are blackium, brownium, greenium and
whitium. Finally we will calculate the isotopic mass, the isotopic abundance, and the
atomic mass of the bean element.
These experiments and calculations are equivalent to the way scientists actually
determine the atomic mass of elements. As in real elements, the mixture of
isotopes are collections of atoms of the element each having different masses
because they have different numbers of neutrons. Unlike real isotopes, the
individual isotopic particles of Beanium differ slightly in mass, so you will determine
the average mass of each type of isotopic particle. Then you can calculate the
"weighted average atomic mass" of Beanium.
Definitions/ reference:
Beanium Lab 1
Atomic mass – the mass of the atoms of a specific isotope of an element
Isotopic abundance – what percent of the element’s atoms are a specific isotope
Atomic weight – the weighted average mass of an element’s atoms
Most elements have 1, 2 or 3 naturally occurring isotopes. This means that in any sample of
the element these naturally occurring isotopes are all present typically always in the same %
ratio.
For example:
The element carbon has three isotopes:
% abundance means that in a sample of carbon (like a lump of coal or a diamond) 90%
of the carbon atoms will be carbon-12, 9% will be carbon-13 and 1% will be carbon-14.
Since not all the atoms in a sample of an element have the same mass, we have to
calculate an average atomic mass for the element. The average atomic mass is
calculated taking into account the different percents of each isotope present.
Materials: Plastic cup or ziplock bags of beans (black, brown, & white); electronic balance
Procedure:
Beanium Lab 2
1. Obtain a plastic cup which contains many atoms (beans) of BEANIUM.
2. Sort the atoms (beans) into a group for each isotope: black, brown, white.
Record the total number of atoms and the number of each type of isotope
(blackium, brownium, greenium and whitium) in the data table.
3. Determine the isotopic mass:
a) find the total mass of each of the three isotope groups and record on
data table
b) find the average mass of a single atom of each isotope and record on
the data table to the nearest 0.001g.
EXAMPLE: I counted 340 white beans. They have a mass of 80 grams. The average
mass of one white bean is 80 / 340 = 0.235 grams.
4. Find the isotopic abundance (% of beans) for each isotope by dividing the
number of atoms of one isotope by the total number of atoms (black, brown,
plus white) and multiplying by 100%. Record on the data table to the nearest
0.1%.
EXAMPLE: There are a total of 500 atoms. 340 are white beans. Therefore, (340 ÷
500) x 100% = 68.0% are white beans (whitium).
5. Determine the atomic mass for BEANIUM based on the isotopic abundances
and the isotopic masses.
6. Place all the beans back in the plastic cup or ziplock bag.
Data:
Show one sample of each calculation. Remember significant digits for all
calculations.
Complete the data table.
Brownium
Whitium
Analysis Questions:
1. What is an isotope?
2. Explain any differences between the atomic mass of your BEANIUM sample and
that of a different lab group. Explain why the difference would be smaller if
larger samples were used.
5. How are the beans in this lab similar to isotopes? How are they different?
6. What are at least two sources of error for this activity. (A source of error is
an error that could have affected your results.)
Beanium Lab 4
Isotopes and Weighted Average Atomic Mass
If the atomic mass is the sum of protons and neutrons in an atom, why are the atomic
masses on the periodic table not all whole numbers? Because the atoms of elements come in
a variety of isotopes, meaning they are made up of atoms with the same number of protons
(atomic number) but different number of neutrons in the nucleus. The atomic number on the
periodic table is a “weighted average” of the naturally occurring isotopes of that element.
The weighted average atomic mass (sum of neutrons and protons) takes into account the
fact that there are different amounts of each type of isotope (abundance) in a naturally
occurring sample of any given element. The weighted average atomic mass is calculated by
multiplying the decimal equivalent of each isotope times its mass and adding up all the
results for all the naturally occurring isotopes.
AMU = atomic mass unit = mass of one proton = mass of one neutron
Example:
A sample of Cesium, Cs, has the following % abundance:
Cs-132 = 20.0%; Cs – 133 = 75.3%; Cs – 134 = 4.7%
Weighted average atomic mass = (0.753 x 133) + (0.20 x 132) + (134 x 0.047) = 132.85 amu
Determine the average atomic mass for the following mixtures of isotopes:
Complete 3 of these
as group,
2.) Fe – 55 = 15%, Fe – 56 = 85%
Beanium Lab 5
3.) H – 1 = 99%, H-2- = 0.8%, H – 3 = 0.2%
Beanium Lab 6