Atomic Structure

    Cards (29)

    • An atom is a positively charged nucleus made up of both protons and neutrons surrounded by negatively charged electrons.
    • Most of the mass of an atom is concentrated in the nucleus
    • The electrons are arranged at different distances from the nucleus
    • The electron arrangements may change with:
      • the absorption of electromagnetic radiation
      • by the emission of electromagnetic radiation
    • In an atom the number of electrons is equal to the number of protons in the nucleus.
    • Atoms have no overall electrical charge.
    • The total number of protons and neutrons in an atom is called its mass number
    • isotopes are atoms of the same element that have a different number of neutrons
    • Atoms turn into positive ions if they lose one or more outer electron
    • Before the discovery of the electron, atoms were thought to be tiny spheres that could not be divided.
    • The plum pudding model suggested that the atom is a ball of positive charge with negative electrons embedded in it
    • The results from the alpha particle scattering experiment led to the conclusion that the mass of an atom was concentrated at the nucleus and that the nucleus was charged
    • Niels Bohr adapted the nuclear model by suggesting that electrons orbit the nucleus at specific distances.
    • James Chadwick provided the evidence to show the existence of neutrons within the nucleus
    • Some atomic nuclei are unstable. The nucleus gives out radiation as it changes to become more stable. This is a random process called radioactive decay
    • Activity is the rate at which a source of unstable nuclei decays.
    • Activity is measured in becquerel (Bq)
    • Count-rate is the number of decays recorded each second by a detector (eg Geiger-Muller tube)
    • an alpha particle consists of two neutrons and two protons, it is the same as a helium nucleus
    • • a beta particle is a high speed electron ejected from the nucleus as a neutron turns into a proton
    • • a gamma ray is electromagnetic radiation from the nucleus
    • Nuclear equations are used to represent radioactive decay.
    • alpha decay causes both the mass and charge of the nucleus to decrease
    • beta decay does not cause the mass of the nucleus to change but does cause the charge of the nucleus to increase.
    • Radioactive decay is random.
    • the half life of a radioactive isotope is the time taken for the activity to halve
    • Radioactive contamination is the unwanted presence of materials containing radioactive atoms on other materials.
    • The hazard from contamination is due to the decay of the contaminating atoms.
    • Irradiation is the process of exposing an object to nuclear radiation. The irradiated object does not become radioactive.
    See similar decks