comparing atoms and periodic table
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Comparing Atoms&
The Periodic Table
Chapter 18.2 and 18.3Neistadt
Physical Science
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How do you tell atoms apart?
• All atoms have neutrons, protons and electrons.
• *It is the number of protons in an atom that distinguishes one atom from another
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Atomic Number
• *Atomic Number– The number of protons in an element is called its
atomic number.– Every element has it’s own unique atomic number.
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Mass Number
• *Mass Number: the total number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus of an atom is called the mass number.
• Atoms of the same element have the same number of protons, but they can have different numbers of neutrons
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Isotopes
• *Isotopes are atoms of the same element that have different numbers of neutrons.
• These are all isotopes of hydrogen:
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Where are the electrons?
• *Protons and neutrons are attracted to each other inside the nucleus of the atom.
• *The electrons of an atom are orbiting around the nucleus in an electron cloud.
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Where are the electrons?
• *The electron cloud is divided into energy levels.
• *The levels have less energy closer to the nucleus, more energy the further from the nucleus.
• *The further an electron is from the nucleus, the more energy it has.
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18.2 Comparing Atoms
Key Question:
What are atoms and how are they put together?
*Read text section 18.2 BEFORE Investigation 18.2
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18.3 The Periodic Table of Elements
• Elements are made up of only one kind of atom.
• Compounds are made up of combinations of atoms.
• Elements that are part of the same group act alike.
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18.3 The Periodic Table of Elements
• Dimitri Mendeleev (1834- 1907) organized information about all the known elements in a table that visually organized the similarities between them.
• Mendeleev placed each element on the table in a certain row and column based on its properties.
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18.3 The Periodic Table of Elements
• The chemical symbol is an abbreviation of the element’s name.
• The atomic number is the number of protons all atoms of that element have in their nuclei.
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18.3 The Periodic Table of Elements
• The mass number of an element is the total number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus.
• The atomic mass is the average mass of all the known isotopes of the element.
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18.3 The Periodic Table of Elements
• The symbols for some elements don’t always obviously match their names.
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18.3 The Periodic Table of ElementsKey Question:
What does atomic structure have to do with the periodic table?
*Read text section 18.3 BEFORE Investigation 18.3
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