atom history

Cards (24)

  • the theory of atomic structure has ...

    changed over time
  • Democritus
    (460-370 BCE) a Greek philosopher who theorized that all matter could be reduced to particles that could not be divided, which he described as "atomos" (meaning indivisible)
  • John Dalton
    developed modern atomic theory, where all elements consist of identical atoms and different elements combine to make compounds
  • plum pudding model
    J.J Thomsons model of an atom, in which he thought electrons were randomly distributed within a positively charged cloud
  • plum pudding model diagram
  • plum pudding model explained
    - at the start of the 19th century John Dalton described atoms as solid spheres, and said that different spheres made up the different elements
    - in 1897 JJ Thomson concluded from his experiments that atoms were not solid spheres
    - his measurements of charge and mass showed that an atom must contain even smaller, negatively charged particles (electrons)
    - the solid sphere idea of atomic structure had to be changed, the new theory was known as the plum pudding model
    - the plum pudding model showed the atom as a ball of positive charge with electrons stuck in it
  • alpha particle scattering experiment
    an experiment in which alpha particles were fired at gold foil to see if they were deflected - it led to the plum pudding model being abandoned in favour of the nuclear model of the atom
  • alpha particle scattering experiment diagram
  • alpha particle scattering experiment explained
    - in 1909 Ernest Rutherford and his student Marsden conducted the famous alpha particle scattering experiments which involved firing positively charged alpha particles at an extremely thin sheet of gold
    - from the plum pudding model they were expecting the particles to pass straight through the sheet or be slightly deflected at most
    - this was because of the positive charge of each atom was thought to be very spread out through the 'pudding' of the atom
    - most particles did go straight through the thin gold sheet, however some were deflected more than expected and a small number deflected backwards
    - this was happened due most of the mass of the atom being concentrated in the small nucleus, which must have had positive charge since it repelled the positive alpha particles
    - they also realised because nearly all the alpha particles passed straight through, most of the atom is just empty space with positive charge amd concentrated mass in the middle
    - this proved the plum pudding model wrong
  • Rutherford model
    discovered that atom is mostly empty space and has a small, dense, positively charged nucleus with electrons travelling around it
  • Rutherford model diagram
  • Rutherford model explained

    - Rutherford came up with an idea to explain the evidence found with the alpha particle scattering experiment, the nuclear model of the atom
    - in this, there's a tiny, positively charged nucleus at the centre, where most of the mass is concentrated
    - a 'cloud' of negatively charged electrons surround this nucleus, meaning most of the atom is empty space
    - when alpha particles came near the concentrated, positive charge of the nucleus, there were deflected
    - if they were fired directly at the nucleus, they were deflected backwards
    - otherwise they passed though the empty space
  • Bohr's nuclear model
    the idea that electrons orbit the nucleus in fixed shells.
  • Bohr's nuclear model diagram
  • Bohr's nuclear model explained
    - scientists realised that electrons in a cloud around the nucleus of an atom, as Rutherford described, would be attracted to the nucleus, causing the atom to collapse
    - Niels Bohr's nuclear model of the atom suggested that all the electrons were contained in shells
    - Bohr proposed that electrons orbit the nucleus in fixed shells and aren't anywhere in between, each shell is a fixed distance from the nucleus
    - Bohr's theory of atomic structure was supported by many experiments and it helped to explain lot of other scientists' observations at the time
  • discovery of protons
    - further experimentation by Rutherford and others gave the conclusion that the nucleus could be divided into smaller particles
    - one of these smaller particles was a proton
    - each of these smaller particles (protons) has the same charge as a hydrogen nucleus, which is a single proton
  • discovery of neutrons
    - about 20 years after scientists had accepted atoms have nuclei, James Chadwick carried out an experiment which provided evidence for neutral particles in the nucleus, known as neutrons
    - the discovery of neutrons resulted in a model of the atom which was similar to the modern day accepted version, known as the nuclear model
  • who discovered electrons?
    JJ Thomson in 1897
  • who discovered protons?

    Ernest Rutherford in 1909
  • who discovered neutrons?

    James Chadwick in 1932
  • who came up with the term 'isotope'?
    Frederick Soddy in 1900
  • who discovered that electrons orbit the nucleus?
    Niels Bohr in 1913
  • current atom model
    - tiny nucleus that makes up most of the mass of the atom consisting of protons and neutrons
    - radius of nucleus is 10000 times smaller than the radius of the atom
    - most of the atom is empty space
    - electrons move around the nucleus in energy shells and give the atom its overall size
  • number of protons =
    number of electrons OR atomic number