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Isotopes and Ions. Variations on the Atom Dr. M. Hazlett Mandeville High School. Isotopes. All atoms of an element have the SAME number of protons (p + ) The p + number is the atomic number (Z) This is a constant For example: All Sodium (Na) atoms have 11 p +
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Isotopes and Ions Variations on the Atom Dr. M. Hazlett Mandeville High School
Isotopes • All atoms of an element have the SAME number of protons (p+) • The p+ number is the atomic number (Z) • This is a constant • For example: All Sodium (Na) atoms have 11 p+ • If an atom loses a proton, it becomes a different element • If Na loses 1 p+, then it has become Neon (Ne)
Z = atomic number = p+ • The number of protons identifies the atom and which element it is • In a stable atom: • # p+ = # n0 = # e- • Thus, Na in its stable form has 11 p+; 11 n0; and 11 e- • If it has an unequal number of p+ and n0, then it is called an ISOTOPE
Theoretically – an element can have as many isotopes of itself as it has neutrons, or it can add an unlimited number of n0 • For example: H has 3; C has 16; Al has 25 • These can be looked up in the CRC (the Chemistry/Physics Data Bible) or on the internet • Remember – a change in the number of n0 does not change the element’s atom – only a change in the number of protons can do that!
Ions • Ions are when an atom has an unequal number of p+ and e- • Remember – a stable atom has a neutral overall charge due its equal number of p+ and e- • When an atom loses or gains an e-, its charge changes accordingly • Loss of e- means a + charge; gaining an e- means a – charge for the atom
Losing or Gaining e- . . . . . • If an atom loses an e-, then it has more p+ than e- and it will have an overall positive charge • Different elements’ atoms can lose 1, 2, 3, or even 4 electrons depending on various factors • If an atom has LOST e-, then it is called a CATION or a positive ion • A Cation would be written as Al+ (the one being understood) or Al+3
Atoms can also gain electrons • If an atom gains electrons (from 1 up to 4), then it will have more e- than p+ and will end up having an overall negative charge • A negatively charged ionis called an ANION • The element is shown this like: Na- (the 1 is understood) or Na-2 • The losing or gaining of electrons determines what type of bonds the atoms will form, and which atoms will bond to others
Using the Periodic Table • Elements in the Main Groups (A), form fairly consistent ions – LEARN TO USE THE CHART • Group IA will form +1 ions; Group 2A form up to +2; Group 3A form up to +3 ions • Group 4A will form either up to -4 or +4 ions • Group 5A will form up to -3 ions; Group 6A up to -2; Group 7A form -1; and Group 8A will not form ions at all • Those elements in the B groups vary and we’ll learn those later
Ions and Isotopes in Review • Stable atom: #p+ = #n0 = #e- • Atomic Mass - #n0 = # p+ • Atomic Mass - #p+ = #n0 • If charge is 0, then #p+ = #e- • If charge is positive, then #p+ > #e- Cation • If charge is negative, then #p+ < #e- Anion
Examples: • Li-1 has gained an electron, meaning there is one more negative charge than positive ones • It has 3 p+ and 4 e- • Li+1 has lost an electron, meaning there is one more positive charge than negative ones • It has 3 p+ and 2 e- • REMEMBER: The # of p+ DO NOT CHANGE • Only the number of n0 (isotope) and e- (ion) change
Cf-3 has an atomic number of 98 • This means it has 98 p+ • Its atomic mass is 216 • It has 118 n0, (216 – 98), making it an ion and an isotope! • Since it has a -3 charge, the number of e- will be 101; (98 + 3) • Zn+1 has 30 p+ and n0; but due to the +1 charge, it has only 29 e-
Mass Number and Atomic Mass • An atom’s mass number = # p+ + # n0 • The atomic mass unit (amu or u) is a little more complex • It is an average of all of an atom’s isotopes and what percent abundance that isotope is in nature • Abundances will add up close to 100% • The closer to a whole number the amu is, the fewer the isotopes that exist
Determining the average atomic mass: • Average Atomic Mass = (Mass of Isotope 1)(% Abundance of Isotope 1) + (Mass of Isotope 2)(% Abundance of Isotope 2) + (Mass of Isotope 3)(% Abundance of Isotope 3) + (Mass of Isotope ∞)(% Abundance of Isotope ∞) AMU is a little different. . . . . . .
AMU (sometimes just an ‘u’) • Average Mass Unit • It uses C-12 as a reference point • C-12 has 6 protons and 6 neutrons • 1 amu is the equivalent of 1/12 of a Carbon’s mass Mass amu n0 1.675 x 10-24 g 1.008665 p+ 1.673 x 10-24 g 1.007276 e- 9.1 x 10-28 g 0.000549
Average Atomic Weight example: For an unknown element we know that: • the mass of Isotope 1 is 6.015 amu and its abundance is 7.5% • The mass of Isotope 2 is 7.016 amu with a 92.5% abundance • Therefore – • (6.015)(.075) + (7.016)(.925) = 6.941 amu • Looking on the Periodic Chart we can see the element is Lithium (Li)
Another example: • N 14 and N 15 have a total amu of 14.007. What are the percentages of abundance? Make the abundances equal to x and (x-1). Thus: 14(x) + 15(1 - x) = 14.007 14x + (15 – 15x) = 14.007 - x = 14.007 - 15 so, x = 99.3 % for N14 and, 1 – x = 0.7% for N15
On the Periodic Table: The top number is Z, the Atomic Number or number of p+ The Element’s Symbol The element average atomic weight set by isotopes and abundances
If the Atomic Weight is in (parentheses), then it is a synthetically made element and it has no known isotopes • The closer to a whole number the atomic weight is, the fewer isotopes the element has • To discover known isotopes and abundances – use the CRC Handbook
Conservation of Mass • Conservation of Mass means that the mass of the reactants will equal the mass of the products after the reaction • This is true no matter how many reactants or products exist in the reaction • Example: Fe with a mass of 15.72 g; placed in a solution of 21.2 g Cu(II)Sulfate. Cu separates. How much Fe (II) Sulfate created?
The final masses of the reaction (rxn) are Fe = 8.33 g; and Cu = 8.41 g • Thus – 15.72 g – 8.33 g = 7.39 g • mreactant 1 + mreactant 2 = mproduct 1 + mproduct 2 • mFe + mCu = mCuS + mFeS • mFeS = mFe + mCuS - mCu • mFeS = 7.39 g + 21.12 g – 8.41 g = 20.10 g
Law of Definite Proportions • In a compound, the same elements will be in the same proportion by mass • Example: • 100 g H2O contains 11.19 g of H2 and 88.81 g O • % Composition = mass element x 100 mass compound Well, what does it equal???????
OK – try another one . . . . • 25 g of a compound with 6.77 g tin and 18.23 g bromine. What percent is tin by mass? • mass tin x 100 = 6.77 x 100 = mass compound 25 Did you get the answer?
The End Now, onto the Periodic Table!