Lecture 2
Lecture 2
Lecture 2
Observation
Hypothesis
Experiment
Theory Law
(model)
Theory
modified
Prediction
as needed
Figure 1.4
Experiment
2
1
The Early History of Chemistry
Democritus proposed the existence of atoms as the
smallest indivisible unit (~400 B.C.)
every 1 g of C
2
Dalton’s Atomic Theory
3
Absolute Formulas for Compounds
Joseph Gay-Lussac measured (under the same conditions
of temperature and pressure) the volumes of gases that
reacted with each other (1809)
e.g. 2 volumes of hydrogen react with 1 volume of
oxygen to form 2 volumes of water vapor
Cannizzaro’s Interpretation
how?
8
4
Characterizing the Atom
in the late 19th century and early 20th century, J. J.
Thomson experimented with electrical discharges in
partially evacuated tubes called cathode-ray tubes
upon application of a high
voltage to the tube, a “ray”
was emitted from the
negative electrode
Figure 2.7
this “ray” was repelled by the negative
pole of an applied electric field -
proposed that the “ray” was a stream
of negatively charged particles, now
called electrons
9
Figure 2.8
10
5
Characterizing the Atom (cont’d)
11
Figure 2.11
in a lead block to absorb
most of the radiation)
Thin
Beam of
metal foil
alpha particles Luminescent screen
t d t t tt d
expected
results
actual
results
Figure 2.12 12
6
“Seeing” Atoms
some of the most compelling evidence regarding the
existence of atoms comes from scanning probe microscopy
13
Figure 2.13
14
7
Atomic Structure (cont’d)
the mass and charge of the electron, proton and neutron
Particle Mass Charge
Electron 9.11 x 10-31 kg -1
Proton 1.67 x 10-27 kg +1
Neutron 1.67 x 10-27 kg 0
note that the magnitude of the electron and the proton
charge is 1.60 x 10-19 C
summary:
the nucleus is small relative to the overall size of the
another question
“if all atoms are made up of these same components
(electrons, protons and neutrons), why do different
atoms have different chemical properties?”
Because the
have different
amounts of
electrons
16
8
Notation for Atoms
A
Z X
where
X = element symbol (e.g. H, He, Li, etc.)
e.g. 4
2 He
17
Isotopes
all atoms of the same element have the same number of
protons and electrons but they can have different
numbers of neutrons
2
deuterium 1H
3
tritium
1H
18
9
Isotopes (cont’d)
in nature, most elements contain a mixture of isotopes:
e.g. Carbon (C)
carbon-12 (98.892%)
carbon-13 (1.108)
rubidium-85 (72.17%)
rubidium-87 (27.83%) 19
Isotopes (cont’d)
20
10