1 / 27

Atoms, Atoms Everywhere! The History of Atomic Models

Atoms, Atoms Everywhere! The History of Atomic Models. Timeline of the Models*. ?. *There are many more models. These are the ones we’ll cover in class. The Ancients – B.C. Believed everything was made up of the fundamental “elements” Earth Wind (air) Fire Water. Democritus (c. 460 BC).

tuyen
Download Presentation

Atoms, Atoms Everywhere! The History of Atomic Models

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Atoms, Atoms Everywhere!The History of Atomic Models

  2. Timeline of the Models* ? *There are many more models. These are the ones we’ll cover in class.

  3. The Ancients – B.C. • Believed everything was made up of the fundamental “elements” • Earth • Wind (air) • Fire • Water

  4. Democritus (c. 460 BC) • Democritus asked: If you keep breaking matter in half, how many breaks can you make before you can’t break it apart any further? • Democritus called the smallest possible bits of matter atoms. Democritus was supposedly known as ‘the laughing philosopher’ because of his wry amusement at human foibles.

  5. Aristotle’s Folly • Unfortunately Aristotle (the more popular Greek philosopher) dismissed the atomic idea as worthless. (What?!) • For more than 2000 years nobody did anything to continue Democritus’ work. • No surprise, we call these the “Dark Ages” of atomic theory.

  6. John Dalton (c. 1800 AD) • English chemist, John Dalton, performed experiments with various chemicals and showed matter seemed to consist of “lumpy” particles (atoms). • Though he didn’t know about an atoms’ structure, he knew evidence pointed to something fundamental. Dalton was an avid weather watcher and discoverer of color blindness among other things.

  7. John Dalton’s Model “Billiard Ball” or “Marbles” • Believed each atom of different elements were different. • Dalton's model represented atoms as tiny, indivisible, indestructible particles or spheres.

  8. J.J. Thomson (c. 1897) • In 1897, English physicist J.J. Thompson discovered the electronand proposed a model for the structure of the atom. • Using a CATHODE RAY TUBE, Thomson discovered electrons have a negative charge and thought that the rest of matter must have a positive charge to offset the negative electron.

  9. His Experiment

  10. His Experiment

  11. JJ Thomson’s Model“Plum Pudding” • Because the beam of light traveled to the positive end of the tube he concluded that the cathode beam had a negative charge. • Because the beam could push a paddle wheel he concluded that the particle had mass. • Thomson's model says atoms are positively charged spheres with negatively charged electrons randomly located throughout.

  12. Side Trip…Alpha Particles! • Around this time scientists also discovered alpha rays (particles), which had a positive charge. • Some physicists thought these alpha particles were made up of the positive parts of JJ Thompson’s atom.

  13. Ernest Rutherford (1911) • In 1911 Ernest Rutherford hypothesized that alpha particles shot at atoms should go right through them. • He devised the now famous “gold foil experiment” to test his hypothesis.

  14. Gold Foil Experiment • Rutherford used Radium as the source of the alpha particles which were emitted toward the atoms in gold foil. • A fluorescent screen (detector) circled the gold foil enabling him to observe the result of the alpha particles’ impact. • http://www.mhhe.com/physsci/chemistry/essentialchemistry/flash/ruther14.swf

  15. Rutherford’s Model “Planetary Model” • Rutherford was forced to conclude that the alpha particles were reflected by what must be a centrally located mass of positive charge… A nucleus. • Rutherford’s new model was that negative electrons orbited a positive center (nucleus) like our planets orbit the sun. • He suggested that the distance between the positive center (nucleus) and the electrons was huge-like a marble in the center of a football field.

  16. One little problem… • The theory of electricity and magnetism predicted that opposite charges attracteach other and the electrons should gradually radiate (ultraviolet) energy as they spiraled inward toward the nucleus. • This meant that atoms were unstable and could not exist very long. This was known as the Ultra-Violet Catastrophe.

  17. Niels Bohr (1912) • In 1912 a Danish physicist, Niels Bohr came up with a theory that would not allow electrons to spiral into the nucleus and came up with some rules for what does happen. • His model required that electrons had to orbit in exact (quantized) energy levels, as this would support observed spectral emissions of atoms such as Hydrogen and Helium.

  18. Bohr’s Rules • RULE 1: Electrons can orbit only at certain allowed distances from the nucleus (energy-levels). • RULE 2: Atoms radiate (emit) energy when an electron jumps from a higher-energy orbit to a lower-energy orbit. • RULE 3: an atom absorbs energy when an electron gets boosted from a low-energy orbit to a high-energy orbit. ff ff

  19. Neils Bohr had some help from Louis DeBroglie . Prince DeBroglie suggested that the electron acts as a wave, In so doing, only discrete (quantized) energy levels are allowed! Even Einstein was impressed! 1924

  20. 1924

  21. Recall: White light gives off all wavelengths of energy- all colors.

  22. Line emission spectrum for helium gas. Only certain colors are seen which are characteristic of the electron transitions occurring in the Helium atoms.

  23. Spectral line emission is characteristic of a given element. • Bohr’s Model of the atom matched the observed spectrum for atoms of small atomic number, but did not match what was observed for larger atoms. It also did not explain why some spectral lines were observed to be brighter than others.

  24. Energy Levels or “shells” • An electron absorbs energy it jumps farther away form the nucleus • As the electron falls back closer to the nucleus it gives off the energy as colored light.

  25. As excited electrons drop down to lower energy levels, electromagnetic energy is given off (emitted). Sometimes this electromagnetic energy corresponds to the visible spectrum of light.

  26. Are We Done Yet? • Almost… Cliff Notes version is that Niels Bohr came really close, and when you add the works of Arnold Sommerfeld, Wolfgang Pauli, Louis de Broglie, Erwin Schrödinger, Max Born, and Werner Heisenberg, we arrive at today’s model…

  27. Today’s Model!-Electron Cloud • Today's model says electrons are not confined to fixed orbits. • They occupy volumes of space outside the nucleus.

More Related