Session 2-Description of An Atom
Session 2-Description of An Atom
Session 2-Description of An Atom
CHEMISTRY
• The plum pudding model of the atom (Joseph John (J.J.) Thomson)
• Electrons and protons are uniformly mixed throughout the atom
• Atom consist of electrons scattered in a sphere of positive
charge (protons)
• According to Thomson atoms are composed of electrons
distributed in a cloud of positively charged material (protons)
• The electrons are free to rotate in orbits in the cloud, and their
negative charges exactly offset the positively charged cloud
Location of Subatomic Particles According
to Different Models cont…
Location of Subatomic Particles According to Different Models
cont…
Z
x
Example, the isotopes of uranium
235 238
92
U U
92
Isotopes cont...
• With the exception of hydrogen, isotopes of elements are
identified by their mass numbers
• The two isotopes of uranium are called uranium-235 (pronounced
“uranium two thirty-five”) and uranium-238 (pronounced “uranium two
thirty-eight”)
• The chemical properties of an element are determined primarily
by the protons and electrons in its atoms;
• Neutrons do not take part in chemical changes under normal conditions
• Isotopes of the same element have similar chemistry, forming the same
types of compounds and displaying similar reactivity
Key Points
• Atom
• Refers to the smallest particle of an element that can take part in a chemical
reaction
• According to Dalton’s Atomic theory
• All matter is composed of tiny, indivisible particles called atoms
• Atoms cannot be made or destroyed
• All atoms of one element are identical in weight and atoms of different
elements have different weight
• Compounds are formed by joining the atoms of two or more elements
• When forming a compound, the atoms of elements combine in whole-number ratios,
such as 1 to 1, 2 to 1, 3 to 2, and so on
• A chemical reaction is the rearrangement of atoms
Key Points cont…
• According to Dalton’s Atomic theory
• Atoms cannot be made or destroyed
• All atoms of one element are identical in weight and
atoms of different elements have different weight
• Compounds are formed by joining the atoms of two or
more elements
• When forming a compound, the atoms of elements combine in
whole-number ratios, such as 1 to 1, 2 to 1, 3 to 2, and so on
• A chemical reaction is the rearrangement of atoms
Key Points cont…
• According to modern concepts
• Matter is composed of atoms which are divisible
• All atoms of one element may not be identical in weight
• An atom is composed of three elementary particles: proton, electron,
and neutron.
• The proton has a positive charge, the electron has a negative charge,
and the neutron has no charge
Key Points
• Electrons are smallest and lightest
• Protons are heavier and larger than electrons
• Neutrons are as large and massive as protons
• Protons and neutrons are located in a small region at
the center of the atom, called the nucleus
• Atomic Number (Z) is the number of protons in the nucleus of each
atom of an element
• The mass number (A) is the total number of neutrons and protons
present in the nucleus of an atom of an element
Evaluation
• What is an Atom?
• What is the Dalton’s Atomic Theory?
• What is the Composition of an Atom?
• Where do the Protons, Neutrons and Electrons found in an Atom?
• What is the Difference between Atomic Number and Mass Number?
• What is an isotopes?
References
• Chang, R., & Overby, J. (2011). General chemistry: The Essential
Concepts (6th ed.). New York, NY: The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
• Donald, C. (2008). Essentials of Pharmaceutical Chemistry (3rd Ed).
London: Pharmaceutical press.
• Satyajit, D. S., & Lutfun, N. (2007). Chemistry for pharmacy students:
General, Organic and Natural Product Chemistry. England: John Wiley
& Sons Ltd.
• Troy D. B. (Ed.). (2005). Remington: The science and practice of
pharmacy. (21st ed.). Baltimore, MA. A Wolters Kluwer Company.