Chemistry, Third edition

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30 3 · INSIDE THE ATOM

model has been compared with currants in a bun, with the electrons as the currants
and the dough as the positive charge.
In 1909 a group led by Lord Rutherford (1871–1937) carried out an experiment in
which alpha particles from a radioactive material were fired at a very thin layer of gold
metal in an evacuated bulb. (Alpha particles are much smaller than gold atoms.)
Rutherford’s team repeated the experiment many times. They found that
although most of the alpha particles passed through the foil undisturbed, very
occasionally an alpha particle underwent a massive deflection – like a table tennis
ball bouncing off a wall. Only about 1 in every 20 000 alpha particles bounced back
in this way, and the deflections were so rare that many experimenters might have
simply ignored them. But Rutherford and his workers realized that such deflections
were very significant indeed. Rutherford proposed that the mass of an atom was
concentrated in its centre (the nucleus). The chances of an alpha particle striking
the nucleus were very small but, when such a collision did occur, the considerable
mass of the nucleus ensured that the alpha particle was greatly deflected (Fig. 3.1).

The ‘insides’ of atoms: a summary


The Rutherford model may be summarized as follows:


1.Atoms consist of electrons circling the nucleus of the atom.Electrons are nega-
tively charged. By agreement, electrons are assigned a charge of 1. The circular
paths of the electrons are called shellsororbits. The radius of an atom is equal to
the radius of the outermost electron shell.

2.The nucleus consists of two kinds of particles, protons (which possess a relative
charge of 1) and neutrons(with a mass approximately equal to that of the proton but
with no electrical charge). Protons and neutrons are collectively known as nucleons.

Nucleus

Fig. 3.1Explanation of the
Rutherford experiment. The
path of the alpha particles is
shown by arrows. Only if an
alpha particle makes a direct
hit on a nucleus does it suffer
a large deflection.

Joseph John (‘JJ’) Thomson
(left) and Ernest Rutherford.
Both were awarded Nobel
Prizes, Thomson in 1906 (for
his work on atomic structure)
and Rutherford in 1908 (for his
work on radioactivity). Much to
Thomson’s delight, his son,
George, also won the Nobel
Prize for Physics (in 1937).

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