Chemistry lecture notes
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Transcript Chemistry lecture notes
Lecture 1
Dr: Sahar Mousa
Electrons and nuclei
The Familiar Planetary Model of the atom
was proposed by Rutherford in 1912
All the mass of an atom was concentrated
in the positively charged (+) Nucleus.
Electrons have Negatively charged (-).
electrostatic force: it’s a force required to
attracted the electrons to the nucleus.
Nuclear structure
Atomic number (Z) ,is the no. of protons
and also the no. of electrons in a neutral
atom.
Mass number,is the no.of protons + the
no. of neutrons
The lightest atomic nucleus (hydrogen) is
1830 times more massive than an
electron.
The size of a nucleus is around 10−15 m
(1 fm)
Nuclear structure
Nuclei contain positively charged Protons and
uncharged Neutrons
Protons and neutrons are held together by an
attraction force (strong interaction).
An electrostatic ruplsion between protons
occurs inside the nucleus
The balance of the two forces controls some
important features of nuclear stability
Nuclear structure
The lighter nuclei are generally stable with
approximately equal no. of protons and neutrons
as O16 andC12.
The heavier ones have higher proportion of
neutrons as pb 208.
As Z increases the electro static repulsion
comes to be dominate.
There is a limit to the number of stable nuclei.
All elements beyond Bi (z=83)being radioactive.
• Magic number
The nuclei with even no. of either protons
or neutrons ( or both) are generally more
stable than ones with odd no.
O16 and Pb208 are example of nuclei with
magic no.
-certain magic numbers of protons or
neutrons, which give extra stability
Isotopes
are atoms of the same element that have a different
number of neutrons. Therefore, isotopes have the
following characteristics:
Isotopes have the same atomic number (same number
of protons), but a different atomic mass number (a
different number of neutrons).
Isotopes behave the same chemically, because they are
the same element. The only difference is that one is
heavier than the other, because of the additional
neutrons.
For example, carbon-12 and carbon-14 are both
isotopes of carbon. Carbon-12 has 6 neutrons; carbon14 has 8 neutrons.
Isotopes
Some elements have:
only one stable isotope (e.g. 19F, 27Al, 31P).
others may have several (e.g. 1H and 2H, the
latter also being called deuterium, 12C and 13C).
Molar mass is also known as Relative atomic
mass (RAM) is determine by the Proportions
(Mixture of the isotopes of an element).
Isotopes
NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance )
technique depend on NMR of H1 and C13.
All elements have unstable radioactive
isotopes, some of these occur Naturally
and the other can be mad e artificially.
Importance and uses of isotopes
(students)
Radioactivity
Radioactive decay:
It is a process whereby unstable nuclei
change into more stable ones by emitting
particles of different kinds as Alpha, beta
and gamma (α, β and γ) radiation
Radioactivity
Gamma radiation, is high energy electro
magnetic radiation accompanies alpha
and beta decays.
Half-life is the time taken for half of a
sample to decay. It can vary from a
fraction of a second to billions of years.
All elements beyond Bi (z=83) are
radioactive and non beyond U(z=92)
occur naturally on Earth.
Radioactivity
Spontaneous fission
It occurs for heavy elements ,where the
nucleus splits into two fragments of similar
mass.