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Atoms, Molecules, and IonsChapter 2

Dalton’s Atomic Theory (1808)1. Elements are composed of extremely small

particles called atoms. All atoms of a given element are identical, having the same size, mass and chemical properties. The atoms of one element are different from the atoms of all other elements.

2. Compounds are composed of atoms of more than one element. The relative number of atoms of each element in a given compound is always the same.

3. Chemical reactions only involve the rearrangement of atoms. Atoms are not created or destroyed in chemical reactions. 2.1

Conservation of Mass•Antoine Lavoisier (1743–1794): Showed that mass of products is exactly equal to the mass of reactants.

The Structure of Atoms 01

• Cathode-Ray Tube (Thomson, 1856–1940):

• Cathode raysconsist of tinynegativelycharged particles, now calledelectrons.

J.J. Thomson, measured mass/charge of e-

(1906 Nobel Prize in Physics) 2.2

The Structure of Atoms 03

• Oil Drop Experiment (Millikan, 1868–1953): Applied a voltage to oppose the downward fall of charged drops and suspend them (1908-1917), Noble Prize:1923

• Voltage on plates place 1.602176 x 10-19 C of charge on each oil drop.

• Millikan calculated the electron’s mass as 9.109382 x 10-28 grams.

e- charge = -1.60 x 10-19 C

Thomson’s charge/mass of e- = -1.76 x 108 C/g

e- mass = 9.10 x 10-28 g2.2

Measured Charge of e-

(1923 Nobel Prize in Physics)

2.2

• Discovery of Nucleus (Rutherford, 1871 –1937):

• Rutherford irradiatedgold foil with a beamof alpha (α) particlesto search for positivecharged particles.

The Structure of Atoms 05

(Uranium compound)2.2

1. atoms positive charge is concentrated in the nucleus2. proton (p) has opposite (+) charge of electron (-)3. mass of p is 1840 x mass of e- (1.67 x 10-24 g)

α particle velocity ~ 1.4 x 107 m/s(~5% speed of light)

(1908 Nobel Prize in Chemistry)

2.2

atomic radius ~ 100 pm = 1 x 10-10 m

nuclear radius ~ 5 x 10-3 pm = 5 x 10-15 m

Rutherford’s Model of the Atom

2.2

Chadwick’s Experiment (1932)

H atoms - 1 p; He atoms - 2 p

mass He/mass H should = 2

measured mass He/mass H = 4

α + 9Be 1n + 12C + energy

neutron (n) is neutral (charge = 0)

n mass ~ p mass = 1.67 x 10-24 g2.2

Atomic Mass

Atomic and molecular masses can be measured with great accuracy with a mass spectrometer.

Subatomic Particles (Table 2.1)

Particle Mass (g)

Charge (Coulombs)

Charge (units)

Electron (e-) 9.1 x 10-28 -1.6 x 10-19 -1

Proton (p+) 1.67 x 10-24 +1.6 x 10-19 +1

Neutron (n) 1.67 x 10-24 0 0

mass p = mass n = 1840 x mass e-

2.2

Atomic number (Z) = number of protons in nucleus

Mass number (A) = number of protons + number of neutrons

= atomic number (Z) + number of neutrons

Isotopes are atoms of the same element (X) with different numbers of neutrons in their nuclei

XAZ

Mass Number

H11 H (D)2

1 H (T)31

U23592 U238

92

Atomic NumberElement Symbol

2.3

2.3

Protium Deuterium Tritium

How many protons, neutrons, and electrons are in C146 ?

How many protons, neutrons, and electrons are in C116 ?

6 protons, 8 (14 - 6) neutrons, 6 electrons

6 protons, 5 (11 - 6) neutrons, 6 electrons

Do You Understand Isotopes?

2.3

A molecule is an aggregate of two or more atoms in a definite arrangement held together by chemical bonds

H2 H2O NH3 CH4

A diatomic molecule contains only two atomsH2, N2, O2, Br2, HCl, CO

A polyatomic molecule contains more than two atomsO3, H2O, NH3, CH4

2.5

Diatomic Gases

These seven elements occur naturally as molecules containing two atoms.

An ion is an atom, or group of atoms, that has a net positive or negative charge.

cation – ion with a positive chargeIf a neutral atom loses one or more electronsit becomes a cation.

anion – ion with a negative chargeIf a neutral atom gains one or more electronsit becomes an anion.

Na 11 protons11 electrons Na+ 11 protons

10 electrons

Cl 17 protons17 electrons Cl-

17 protons18 electrons

2.5

A monatomic ion contains only one atom

A polyatomic ion contains more than one atom

2.5

Na+, Cl-, Ca2+, O2-, Al3+, N3-

OH-, CN-, NH4+, NO3

-

13 protons, 10 (13 – 3) electrons

34 protons, 36 (34 + 2) electrons

Do You Understand Ions?

2.5

How many protons and electrons are in Al2713 ?3+

How many protons and electrons are in Se7834

2- ?

2.5

Ionic Charges

2.6

ionic compounds consist of a combination of cationsand an anions• the sum of the charges on the cation(s) and anion(s) in each

formula unit must equal zero

The ionic compound NaCl

2.6

Writing Formulas

• Because compounds are electrically neutral, one can determine the formula of a compound this way:– The charge on the cation becomes the subscript on the

anion.– The charge on the anion becomes the subscript on the

cation.– If these subscripts are not in the lowest whole-number

ratio, divide them by the greatest common factor.

Formula of Ionic Compounds

Al2O3

2 x +3 = +6

2.6

3 x -2 = -6

Al3+ O2-

CaBr2

1 x +2 = +2 2 x -1 = -2

Ca2+ Br-

Na2CO3

1 x +2 = +2 1 x -2 = -2

Na+ CO32-

Some Polyatomic Ions

NH4+ ammonium SO4

2- sulfate

CO32- carbonate SO3

2- sulfite

HCO3- bicarbonate NO3

- nitrate

ClO3- chlorate NO2

- nitrite

Cr2O72-

dichromate SCN- thiocyanate

CrO42- chromate OH- hydroxide

2.7

Chemical Nomenclature• Ionic Compounds

– often a metal + nonmetal

BaCl2 barium chloride

K2O potassium oxide

Mg(OH)2 magnesium hydroxide

KNO3 potassium nitrate

2.7

–anion (nonmetal), add “ide” to element name

• Transition metal ionic compounds– indicate charge on metal with Roman numerals

FeCl2 2 Cl- -2 so Fe is +2 iron(II) chloride

FeCl3 3 Cl- -3 so Fe is +3 iron(III) chloride

Cr2S3 3 S-2 -6 so Cr is +3 (6/2) chromium(III) sulfide

2.7

• Molecular compounds– nonmetals or, nonmetals + metalloids– common names

• H2O, CH4,

– element further left in periodic table is, usually, 1st

– element closest to bottom of group is, usually, 1st

if more than one compound can be formed from the same elements, use prefixes to indicate number of each kind of atom

– last element ends in ide

2.7

HI hydrogen iodide

NF3 nitrogen trifluoride

SO2 sulfur dioxide

N2Cl4 dinitrogen tetrachloride

nitrogen dioxide

2.7

TOXIC!NO2

N2O dinitrogen monoxide

Molecular Compounds

Laughing Gas

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