Atomic History - Brief
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Transcript Atomic History - Brief
Unit 1: Structure & Properties
EARLY HISTORY OF
ATOMIC THEORY
Timeline. . . . .
Ancient Greeks
450 BC – Empedocles – Pre-Socratic Philosopher
"There are 4 elements; Earth, Air, Fire and Water"
Benefits:
Among the first to suggest that substances were
actually made up of a combination of different
"elements."
Democritus:
400 BC – Democritus
"The smallest indivisible particle
of matter is the 'atom'"
No evidence – based on thought
However, the "4 element" theory
lingered for almost 2000 years!
Democritus’ Model
Alchemists
Believed that elements were all basically the same,
but with different levels of purity.
Gold was the purest element, and alchemists tried to
change different metals into gold.
Considered to be serious science up until the 1600s.
Contributors to the Modern Atomic
Theory….
Robert Boyle (1660) –
"There are not just 4 elements!“
Controlled experiments, gas law
Joseph Priestly (1773) – Discovered oxygen, also
discovered pop!
Antoine Lavoisier (1778)–
First balance leads to;
Law of Conservation of Mass
Joseph Proust (1790) –
Law of Definite Proportions
End Result;
Beginning of the Scientific Method!
John Dalton (1805)
All matter is composed of indivisible particles called
atoms.
All atoms of a given element are identical; atoms of
different elements have different properties.
Chemical reactions involve the combination of atoms,
not the destruction of atoms.
When elements react to form compounds, they react in
whole-number ratios.
Dalton's atomic theory supported previous research.
Lasted almost a century!
Model: Indivisible billiard ball
J.J. Thomson (1897)
Used the work of other scientists that showed that
atoms contain charges = modified atomic theory.
Atoms are positive spheres, with negative particles
(electrons) embedded in them.
Thomson used a Cathode ray tube & passed rays
between two parallel aluminium plates, which
produced an electric field between them when
they were connected to a battery. The rays were
deflected by the negative plate.
Model: Raisin bun
Ernest Rutherford (1911)
Student of Thomson – worked further on Thomson’s
model.
Gold Foil Experiment:
Alpha radiation (positive) were shot at a piece of gold
foil.
Most of the alpha particles passed through the foil =
most of matter is empty space!
Some particles were deflected back at angles; they
had come in contact with something very dense!
Gold Foil Experiment:
Leading to…..Nuclear Model:
Rutherford – dense core of positive charge
(nucleus), with negative electrons orbiting
around the nucleus.
Positively charged particles = protons, have
equal but opposite charge to the electrons, mass
1836 x greater!
Completed his work at McGill University
Neutron
James Chadwick was a student of Rutherford
He passed alpha particles through positive and
negative charged plates. He discovered a particle that
was not deflected by the positive or negative plate
but passed right through – called this the neutron
Chadwick won the Nobel
prize in Physics and was
part of the Manhattan
Project
http://dsc.discovery.com
/tv-shows/othershows/videos/assignmen
t-discovery-shortsdevelopment-of-atomtheory.htm
Timeline
Using pg 162 – 168, create a
timeline to show the history of the
atom.