Structure of The Atom and The Periodic Table

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Structure of the Atom and the Periodic Table

Simple Structure of the Atom

Atoms are very small particles of an element, but they contain even smaller
particles called sub-atomic particles as follows;

 Protons - found in the nucleus, they are positively charged (+ve)


 Electrons - found in the nucleus, they are negatively charged (–ve)
 Neutrons - they can be imagined as circulating the nucleus in energy
levels, they have no charge

In a neutral atom, Number of protons = Number of electrons


Particles present in an atom are summarized below.

Structure of the Atom


The various energy levels in an atom are represented by a series of circles
sharing the same centre (nucleus), separated from each other by roughly
equal distances
The nucleus of the atom is at the centre of the circles. The electrons in the
energy levels are represented by dots (.) or crosses (x). The energy levels
are labelled 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th and so on starting from the one nearest to the
nucleus as shown below;

The electrons that occupy the 1st energy level have lower energy than those
in the 2nd energy level. Subsequently those in the 2nd energy level have
lower energy than those in the 3rd energy level and so on. The 1st energy
level usually has a maximum of two electrons while the 2nd energy level has
a maximum of eight (8) electrons.

We can summarize the electrons, and their arrangement in each energy


level as shown in the table below.

Element Symbol Electron


Configuration

Hydrogen H 1
Helium He 2
Lithium Li 2.1
Beryllium Be 2.2
Boron B 2.3
Carbon C 2.4
Nitrogen N 2.5
Oxygen O 2.6
Fluorine F 2.7
Neon Ne 2.8
Sodium Na 2.8.1
Magnesium Mg 2.8.2
Aluminium Al 2.8.3
Silicon Si 2.8.4
Phosphorous P 2.8.5
Sulphur S 2.8.6
Chlorine Cl 2.8.7
Argon Ar 2.8.8
Potassium K 2.8.8.1
Calcium Ca 2.8.8.2

Atomic Characteristics

Atomic Number and Mass Number


The atomic number tells us how many protons are there in a nucleus. It is
denoted by letter Z.
It also tells us the number of electrons in an atom

Atomic Number = Number of Protons = Number of Electrons

The mass number is the sum of protons and neutrons, therefore it is always
bigger than the atomic number. It is denoted by letter A.
Roughly the mass number is double the atomic number.
To get the number of neutrons, we just subtract the atomic number from
the mass number, that is A – Z.

Example
Calculate the number of neutrons in a chlorine atom given that the atomic
number, Z = 17 and mass number, A = 35

The number of neutrons


=A–Z
= 35 – 17
= 18

Usually, the atomic number, Z, and mass number A, of an atom of an


element X can be written alongside the symbol of that element, one as a
superscript and the other a subscript as shown below

NOTE: The top number is referred to as the superscript and bottom number
as the subscript.

Isotopes
Isotopes are atoms of the same element, which have the same number of
protons in the nucleus (atomic number) but different mass numbers.
There are two examples below.
Relative Atomic Mass
Originally, the mass of a hydrogen atom was taken as the standard
reference atom. Its atomic mass was arbitrarily fixed as one unit i.e H = 1.

The mass of any other element was found by comparing its mass with that
of hydrogen.The idea wasto find out howmany timesthe atomof another
element is as heavy as one atom of hydrogen hence relative atomic mass
(R.A.M)

Relative Atomic Mass = mass of 1 atom of the element divided by


mass of 1 atom of hydrogen

For instance an oxygen atom (O), has a mass of 16. This means one
oxygen atom is 16 times heavier than one atom of hydrogen.

NOTE
Relative atomic mass has no units. It is a ratio of two masses. The relative
atomic masses are not whole numbers like mass numbers. This is because
the abundance of isotopes of an element is different.

Example
Chlorine consists of two isotopes, chlorine – 35 and chlorine – 37 in the
ratio 3 : 1. Calculate the relative atomic mass (R.A.M) of chlorine.

Suppose the sample contains 4 atoms of chlorine, in the ratio 3 : 1


3 atoms will each have a mass of 35
1 atom will have a mass of 37
The total mass of  Cl = 35 × 3
35

While the total mass of  Cl = 37 × 1


37

Therefore, the average mass of chlorine atoms will be

Writing Chemical Formulae


The formula of a compound shows the atoms present in the compound in
their simplest ratio. The formula of sodium chloride is NaCl. The formula for
water is H O.
2

When writing the formula, metals are always written first. For example it is
not correct to write ClNa or Br Ca even though it gives us the same
2

information. The correct way is NaCl and CaBr  respectively.


2

Balancing Chemical Equations


In order for an equation to describe a reaction accurately, the equation
must be balanced. Chemical reactions should always follow the law of
conservation of mass so that the total mass of reactants must be equal to
the total mass of products.

An equation can be balanced using a number of rules. Let us follow these


rules to balance the following equation.

Mg + O  → MgO
2

Rule number 1
Write the equation using correct formulae for the reactants and products
Magnesium + oxygen → Magnesium oxide

Mg + O  → MgO
2

Rule number 2
Count the number of atoms of each element in the reactants and in the
products.
We notice that the oxygen atoms are not equal. We have 2 atoms on the
left and only one on the right.
Rule number 3
To make oxygen atoms equal, balance the equation by writing numbers in
front of the formula. Remember that 1 is assumed to be there already.
Therefore start by inserting 2. If this does not balance, go to 3, 4 until the
equation is balanced. Usually we do not go to very big numbers.

2Mg + O  → 2MgO
2

The number 2 now balances the equation. When you have 2O  it means
2

two oxygen molecules. The number in front of a formula means, everything


following is multiplied by that number.
Rule number 4
Count again the number of atoms of each element on the reactants and
product sides.
Rule number 5
Insert the correct state symbols for each substance.

2Mg (s) + O  (g) → 2MgO (s)


2

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