aim: models of the atom do now: hw: on a separate sheet of paper make a timeline of the history and...

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AIM: Models of the Atom DO NOW: HW: ON A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER MAKE A TIMELINE OF THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOM. INCLUDE: 1. DALTON’S MODEL, J. J. THOMPSON’S MODEL, RUTHERFORD MODEL, BOHR MODEL, ELECTRON CLOUD MODEL 2. YEAR AND SHORT DESCRIPTION 3. IMAGE OR DRAWING OF MODEL

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Page 1: AIM: Models of the Atom DO NOW: HW: ON A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER MAKE A TIMELINE OF THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOM. INCLUDE: 1. DALTON’S MODEL,

AIM: Models of the AtomDO NOW:

HW: ON A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER MAKE A TIMELINE OF THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOM. INCLUDE:

1. DALTON’S MODEL, J. J. THOMPSON’S MODEL, RUTHERFORD MODEL, BOHR MODEL, ELECTRON CLOUD MODEL

2. YEAR AND SHORT DESCRIPTION

3. IMAGE OR DRAWING OF MODEL

Page 2: AIM: Models of the Atom DO NOW: HW: ON A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER MAKE A TIMELINE OF THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOM. INCLUDE: 1. DALTON’S MODEL,
Page 3: AIM: Models of the Atom DO NOW: HW: ON A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER MAKE A TIMELINE OF THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOM. INCLUDE: 1. DALTON’S MODEL,

Democritus’s Atomic PhilosophyProposed an Atomic Theory which states

that all atoms are small, hard, indivisible and indestructible particles made of a single material formed into different shapes and sizes.

He named the smallest piece of matter “atomos,” meaning “not to be cut.”

Page 4: AIM: Models of the Atom DO NOW: HW: ON A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER MAKE A TIMELINE OF THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOM. INCLUDE: 1. DALTON’S MODEL,

Dalton’s Atomic Theory In the early 1800s, the English Chemist John

Dalton performed a number of experiments that eventually led to the acceptance of the idea of atoms.All matter is made of atoms.Atoms of an element are identical.Each element has different atoms.Atoms of different elements combine

in constant ratios to form compounds.Atoms are rearranged in reactions.

Page 5: AIM: Models of the Atom DO NOW: HW: ON A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER MAKE A TIMELINE OF THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOM. INCLUDE: 1. DALTON’S MODEL,

Dalton’s Atomic TheoryBased on Dalton’s Atomic Theory (5

postulates), most scientists in the 1800s believed that the atom was like a tiny solid ball that could not be broken up into parts.

Dalton was credited for the three Atomic Laws that were proven after his time.

Page 6: AIM: Models of the Atom DO NOW: HW: ON A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER MAKE A TIMELINE OF THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOM. INCLUDE: 1. DALTON’S MODEL,

Dalton’s Atomic Laws

1. Law of Conservation of MassMatter cannot be created or destroyed in any

physical or chemical process, just transferred.

2.     Law of Constant CompositionWhen atoms combine to form molecules, the

ratio of atoms is constant.Example – H2O will always have 2 times as

many Hydrogen atoms as Oxygen.

Page 7: AIM: Models of the Atom DO NOW: HW: ON A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER MAKE A TIMELINE OF THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOM. INCLUDE: 1. DALTON’S MODEL,

Dalton’s Atomic Laws3.     Law of Multiple Proportions – if two elements can combine to form more than one compound, then the ratio of the second element combined with a certain mass of the first element is always a ratio of small whole numbers.

Formula

Ratio of N:O

Example:

CO vs. CO2

Page 8: AIM: Models of the Atom DO NOW: HW: ON A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER MAKE A TIMELINE OF THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOM. INCLUDE: 1. DALTON’S MODEL,

J. J. Thomson’s Plum Pudding Model

Used cathode rays to prove that Dalton’s Solid-ball model could be broken into smaller particles

Thomson is credited with discovering electrons

Page 9: AIM: Models of the Atom DO NOW: HW: ON A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER MAKE A TIMELINE OF THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOM. INCLUDE: 1. DALTON’S MODEL,

J. J. Thomson’s Plum Pudding

A cathode ray is a tube that has a

piece of metal, called an electrode, at

each end. Each electrode is connected to a power source (battery). When the power is turned on, the electrodes

become charged and produce a stream of charged particles. They travel from cathode, across the tube to the anode.

Page 10: AIM: Models of the Atom DO NOW: HW: ON A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER MAKE A TIMELINE OF THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOM. INCLUDE: 1. DALTON’S MODEL,

J. J. Thomson’s Plum Pudding Model

Stated that the atom is neutral In 1897, he proposed the Plum

Pudding Model which states that atoms mostly consist of positively charged material with negatively charged particles (electrons) located throughout the positive material

Page 11: AIM: Models of the Atom DO NOW: HW: ON A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER MAKE A TIMELINE OF THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOM. INCLUDE: 1. DALTON’S MODEL,

Rutherford Model Rutherford’s experiment Involved firing a stream of tiny

positively charged particles (alpha particles) at a thin sheet of gold foil (2000 atoms thick)

Most of the positively charged particles passed right through the gold atoms in the sheet of gold foil without changing course at all.

Some of the positively charged particles, however,

did bounce away from the gold sheet as if they had hit

something solid. He knew that positive charges repel

positive charges.

Page 12: AIM: Models of the Atom DO NOW: HW: ON A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER MAKE A TIMELINE OF THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOM. INCLUDE: 1. DALTON’S MODEL,
Page 13: AIM: Models of the Atom DO NOW: HW: ON A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER MAKE A TIMELINE OF THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOM. INCLUDE: 1. DALTON’S MODEL,

Rutherford ModelGold Foil Experiment and suggested the

following characteristics of the atom:It consists of a small core, or nucleus, that contains most of the mass of the atom

This nucleus is made up of particles called protons, which have a positive charge

The protons are surrounded by negatively charged electrons, but most of the atom is actually empty space

Page 14: AIM: Models of the Atom DO NOW: HW: ON A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER MAKE A TIMELINE OF THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOM. INCLUDE: 1. DALTON’S MODEL,

Bohr Model In 1913, the Danish scientist Niels Bohr proposed an

improvement. In his model, he placed each electron in a specific energy level.

According to Bohr’s atomic model, electrons move in definite orbits around the nucleus, much like planets circle the sun. These orbits, or energy levels, are located at certain distances from the nucleus.

Additionally, the electrons can jump from a path in one level to a path in another level (depending on their energy)

Page 15: AIM: Models of the Atom DO NOW: HW: ON A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER MAKE A TIMELINE OF THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOM. INCLUDE: 1. DALTON’S MODEL,

Bohr’s ModelHe proposed the following

Protons and neutrons are in the

nucleusElectrons can only be certain

distances from the nucleusThe electrons orbit the nucleus at fixed

energy levelsThe electrons must absorb or emit a fixed

amount of

energy to travel between these energy levels

Page 16: AIM: Models of the Atom DO NOW: HW: ON A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER MAKE A TIMELINE OF THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOM. INCLUDE: 1. DALTON’S MODEL,

Electron Cloud Model (Wave Mechanical Model)

In 1926, Erwin Schrodinger further explained the nature of electrons in an atom by stating that the exact location of an electron cannot be stated; therefore, it is more accurate to view the electrons in regions called electron clouds; electron clouds are places where the electrons are likely to be found

Page 17: AIM: Models of the Atom DO NOW: HW: ON A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER MAKE A TIMELINE OF THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOM. INCLUDE: 1. DALTON’S MODEL,

Electron Cloud Model (Wave Mechanical Model)

Depending on the electron’s energy they are locked into a certain area in the cloud.

Electrons with the lowest energy are found in the energy level closest to the nucleus

Electrons with the highest energy are found in the outermost energy levels, farther from the nucleus.

Today’s atomic model is based on the principles of wave mechanics.

Page 18: AIM: Models of the Atom DO NOW: HW: ON A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER MAKE A TIMELINE OF THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOM. INCLUDE: 1. DALTON’S MODEL,

Summary

Who is the father of atomic theory?

Dalton

What was the first model of the atom?

Dalton’s Tiny Ball Model

What are Dalton’s 3 Laws?

Law of Conservation of Mass, Law of Constant Composition, Law of Multiple Porportion

Page 19: AIM: Models of the Atom DO NOW: HW: ON A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER MAKE A TIMELINE OF THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOM. INCLUDE: 1. DALTON’S MODEL,

SummaryHow were Thomson’s and Dalton’s model

different?

Dalton’s model was 1 sphere that cannot be divided, Thomson had the plum pudding where electrons are randomly spread throughout a positively charged sphere.

What did Thomson find out?

Atoms have electrons, they have a negative charge

Page 20: AIM: Models of the Atom DO NOW: HW: ON A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER MAKE A TIMELINE OF THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOM. INCLUDE: 1. DALTON’S MODEL,

Summary

What were Rutherford’s conclusions from the Gold Foil Experiment?

Atom has a positively charged nucleuselectrons are outside, atoms are mostly emptyNucleus contains most of the mass.

Page 21: AIM: Models of the Atom DO NOW: HW: ON A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER MAKE A TIMELINE OF THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOM. INCLUDE: 1. DALTON’S MODEL,

Summary Bohr Model of the Atom

Electrons go around the nucleus in concentric circular orbits

Electron Cloud ModelThe electron does not move in a definite

path.An electron is in an orbital which is the most

probable location where the electron isThe most dense part of the cloud is the most

probable place to find the electron