Chemistry, Third edition

(Wang) #1

Inside the Atom


Objectives


Describes atomic structure and the evidence for quantization


Defines isotopic mass and the atomic mass of elements


Looks at the construction and use of mass spectrometers


Discusses the electronic configuration of atoms


Introduces the idea of an electron acting as a wave


In Chapter 2 we saw that atoms are not created or destroyed in chemical reactions,


but that they are simply reshuffled to produce new molecules. Experiments show


that the law of conservation of mass is found to apply to all chemical reactions,


even to those carried out at high temperature. Do these observations mean that


atoms are completely indestructible?


This chapter shows how atoms have been forced to reveal their inner secrets.


Atoms are not indestructible – they do indeed have an inner structure, and


although they often behave as if they were solid, they are mostly empty space!


Atomic structure


Pieces of history


In 1897, Sir J. J. Thomson (1856–1940) investigated the way that gases at low


pressure conduct electricity. When high voltages were used, streams of minute


particles were detected on a fluorescent screen. These particles possessed a negative


charge and were even lighter than hydrogen atoms. The particles were called


electrons.


Thomson realized that the electrons must have been squeezed out of the atoms of


gas by the high voltages used in his experiments. (This is one piece of evidence that


atoms are not indestructible. Another piece of evidence is provided by radioactivity,


discussed in Chapter 21.) In other words, electrons are subatomic particles. Thom-


son realized that since atoms are usually observed to be electrically neutral, there


must be positive charges in the atom too. He proposed that atoms consisted of a pos-


itively charged ‘cement’ in which rings of electrons were embedded. Thomson’s


3.1


Contents


3.1Atomic structure 29

3.2Isotopes 32

3.3Mass spectrometer 35

3.4Electronic structure of
atoms 38

3.5Evidence for the
existence of energy
levels in atoms 40

3.6More advanced ideas
about electronic
structure 41

3.6Revision questions 45

3


UNIT

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