Physics Topic Notes - 06 Atoms
Physics Topic Notes - 06 Atoms
● Introduction
All matter is made up of tiny particles called atoms. Living as well as non-living things
are made up of atoms. There are different types of atoms. For example there are Oxygen
atoms, Carbon atoms, Iron atoms, etc. All the different types of atoms are found in the
Periodic Table.
An Atom is the smallest part of an Element that still has its same properties and can take
part in a chemical reaction.
An Element is a substance that is made up of only one type of atom. Iron, Carbon,
Sulphur, Oxygen are all elements.
● History
Around 400 years before the time of CHRIST, the Greek philosopher Democritus
proposed that if one kept dividing matter into small pieces, there will come a point
where it would not be able to divide again. He said that these were the smallest
possible particles (Indivisible Spheres). This is where the word Atom comes from
the Greek word ‘Atomon’ (indivisible or uncuttable).
● Continuous Ether – Aristotle ~350bc
About 40 years after Democritus, another Greek philosopher came up with an idea
that disagreed with him. He said that matter was made up of substances that could
continuously be divided. This delayed the development of the atomic theory for
almost 2000 years.
After examining the results of the experiment done in combining elements, Dalton
realised the following. (1) The total mass of the combining elements at the
beginning of a reaction was
The same as the mass of the substance formed at the end of the reaction; and (2)
their combining masses were in simple whole-number ratios.
This led him to conclude that there must be a basic unit of the element and that this
basic unit did not break up in chemical reactions. He pictured the atoms as Pool
Balls.
James John Thomson discovered the Electron in 1897 by doing experiments with
Cathode-Ray Tubes. He then derived a new description of the Atom called the
Plum Pudding model.
After finding the electron he came up with a new description (model) of the
atom. Unlike Dalton’s Pool Ball Model, his model had smaller particles in the
atom.
His Model is the Plum Pudding Model. A plum pudding is a pudding with
Plums (prunes or raisins) in it. However it would be easier to explain as a
Water Melon. The Seed would represent the Electrons (since he knew electrons
were particles) and the rest of the Flesh represented the Positive Charge.
● Geiger-Marsden Experiment
Geiger and Marsden performed the experiment that led Rutherford to discover
the Nucleus.
● Procedure
They observed that [1] Most (99.88%) went straight through; [2] Few (1%)
were slightly deflected by small angles; and [3] Very Few bounced back.
● Conclusion
Rutherford used these results to conclude that [1] Most of the atom is
empty space; [2] 99.9% of the mass of the atom is concentrated in a very
small positive place called the nucleus in the centre of the atom; and [3]
the electrons are found in the empty space outside of the nucleus.
● Planetary Model
From the findings above Rutherford came up with a new description of the
atom called the Planetary Model. In this model the sun represented the nucleus
and the planets represented electrons going around the nucleus.
● Discovery Of The Proton
While Rutherford’s planetary Model was great, there were flaws. The Electron
should fall into the nucleus.
Bohr proposed a better Model. It is called the Shell Model. Instead of each electron
having its own orbit, electrons orbited in groups at specific radii called shells.
When Rutherford measured elements Rutherford realised that the mass was more
than the charge. This meant that there was another particle in the nucleus providing
mass but no charge. He knew that the particle existed but had no evidence to
support it.
Later on James Chadwick did an experiment which detected this neutral particle
being emitted from Beryllium when it was bombarded with Alpha particles.
● Comparison of Models
● Structure
There are three types of particles in the atom (subatomic particles): Protons,
Neutrons and Electrons. The properties are shown below.
Electron e -1 1 Shell
There are relationships between the numbers of subatomic particles. Proton Number
and Electron Number are the same. Proton Number and Neutron Number add up to
give the Mass Number.
● Proton Number (Z): This number is unique for every element. If two atoms
have the same number of protons then they belong to the same element. For
example all atoms with 6 protons are Carbon atoms. If two atoms have
different numbers of protons then they belong to different atoms. An atom with
7 protons is Nitrogen while an atom with 8 protons is oxygen.
Because of this the Proton Number is also called the Atomic Number.
● Electron Number (E): An atom is neutral – it has no charge. This means that
the number of positive charges is the same as the number of negative charges.
Thus the Electron Number always equal to the Proton Number for a normal
atom. E=Z.
● Mass Number (A): Most of the mass of an atom is in it nucleus. So the Mass
Number is the number of Particles in the Nucleus. Hence another name for
Mass Number is Nucleon Number.
This means that the Mass Number is the sum of the Proton Number and
Neutron Number. A=Z+N
● Neutron Number (N): Both neutrons and protons have mass and are found in
the nucleus. Their total is called the Mass Number.
● Notation
Atom are represented in the form: ZAX . The Mass Number (A) is placed at the top
and the Atomic Number (Z) is placed below.
● Electronic Configuration
19
p
20
n
When drawing the atom a circle is placed to represent the nucleus. The number of
protons and neutrons are placed inside. The protons and neutrons can also be drawn
as and respectively. Outer circles are drawn to represent each shell. The
electrons are placed on the shell as . Use electronic configuration to get how much
electron on each shell.
● Isotopes
The number of protons in the atom of a particular element is the same for all its atoms.
However the number of neutrons can vary for the different atoms of the same element.
For example: while most Carbon atoms have 6p, 6n & 6e, there are some with 6p, 8n &
6e. The first Type of Carbon has a mass number of 12 while the second has a mass
number of 14. Hence their symbols are 6 12 C and 6 14 C respectively. The Different
types of Carbons are called Isotopes of Carbon.
● Definition
Isotopes are different atoms of the same element that have the same number of
protons but different number of neutrons.
OR
Isotopes are different atoms of the same element with the same Atomic number but
different Mass Number.
● Notation
● Periodic Table
The Periodic Table is a table of elements in which elements are placed in Rows and
Columns based on the Number of Shells and the Number of Electrons on its Last Shell.
The Rows are called Periods and the Columns are called Groups.
The Period (Row) where an element is placed is its Number of Shells and the Group
(Column) where an element is placed is its Number of electrons on its Last Shell.
For example Potassium has 19 electrons and its Electronic Configuration is 2,8,8,1.
Therefore it has 3 shells and 1 in its last shell. Therefore it is in Period 4 and Group1.
The table below is the periodic Table for the first 20 element. NB: for bigger element it
more complicated than explained above.
Period 1H 2 He
1
Period 3 Li 4 Be 5B 6C 7N 8O 9F 10 Ne
2
Period 11 12 13 Al 14 Si 15 P 16 S 17 Cl 18 Ar
3 Na Mg
Period 19 K 20 Ca
4
● Questions
The table below show elements and the numbers of the subatomic particles.
Electron Electronic
Element Atomic # Mass # Neutron #
# Config.
Hydrogen 1 1
Carbon 12 6
8 6
Oxygen 8 2,6
Sodium 11 12
Chlorine 35 17
Krypton 2,8,18,8
● Which Period (row) and Group (column) of the Periodic Table does Chlorine
belong?
● Nuclear Reactions
● Definition
A nuclear reaction is a change in the nucleus of an atom. This change can involve the
nucleus giving up a small particle and thus become a different element. It can also
involve the nucleus splitting into two other nuclei. The final way involves two small
nuclei joining to form a larger nucleus.
● Nuclear Equations
● General Format
Nuclear Equations have two main parts separated by an arrow. On the left is the
Reactants (the nuclei that present at the beginning – before the reaction) and on the
right are the Products (the nuclei present at the end – after the reaction). The arrow
represents the reaction (change).
〈 Reactants 〉 → 〈 Products 〉
● Examples
78190 Pt →76186 Os+24 w
94239 Pu+01 n→ 54134 Xe+ 40103 Zr +301 n
12 H+ 13 H → 24 He+01 n
● Balancing Nuclear Equations
To Balance nuclear equation we must ensure that the Mass Number and Atomic
Number on the Left-Side is the same as the Mass Number and Atomic Number on
the Right-Side.
● 12 H+ 12 H →2 cHe+ d 1 n
● 1228 Mg → e 28 Al±1 fx
28=28+f f =28−28=0
12=e±1 e=12−−1=13
● c 223 Ra → 88 dRn+ 24 z
● 13 H +1 gH → h 4 He+201 n
● Radioactivity
● Discovery
● Becquerel
One cloudy day in 1896, Henri Becquerel, a French scientist, made an amazing
discovery. He had rested some uranium samples on a covered photographic
film in a closed drawer for four days. On developing the film, he noticed that
patches of the film had been exposed as if light had struck it. He guessed that
the uranium sample must have been living off something invisible that had
passed through the opaque cover of the film. For a while, the emissions were
called ‘Becquerel’s rays’.
● Rutherford
● Marie Curie
Marie Curie and her husband Pierre Curie started conducting experiments on
other substance besides Uranium.
These experiment revealed the important principle that the rate of radiation
emitted depended only on the amount of radioactive substance present and not
on external factors like temperature.
She was also able to discover the elements Radium and Polonium. Later she
purified Radium. Finally she realized that these three substances, Radium,
Polonium and Thorium, were much more radioactive than Uranium.
Notice that two key things happen. [1] An emission is given off. This is called
radioactive emission or nuclear radiation. [2] The nucleus changes into something
else. For example Carbon can change to Nitrogen by emitting radioactivity.
Radioactive
Emission
Unstable Parent
Nucleus More
Stable
Daught
er
Nucleus
As said above Pierre and Marie Curie discovered that the Rate of Decay of a
radioactive sample depends only on the Number of Radioactive Particles.
o
r
R
a
Tim
t
e e
)
● Radioactive Emissions
● Alpha
● Beta
A Beta (β) Particle is a high speed Electron (0-1e) moving close to the speed of
light. Therefore its Mass is 0.002 and its Charge is -1.
● Gamma
● Comparison
α-Particle β-Particles γ-Rays
Mass/u 4 0.0005 0
Charge +2 -1 0
γ
PaperAluminiumLead
It has a tube-like shape and mad of a glass casing. It contains gas at low
pressure. There is a positive rod at the centre of the tube which is
surrounded by a negative cylindrical metal. The gas, which is an insulator
separates the rod from the cylinder so no current can flow.
Speak
Amplif er
ier
When the radioactive emissions enter the tube, they ionise the gas inside
by knocking electrons off them. The electrons move to the positive rod and
create a pulse of current. The current is amplified and sent to a Speaker or
Pulse Counter. If a speaker is used clicks would be heard – the faster the
clicks the higher the Intensity. If a Counter is used, it will display the Rate.
● Cloud Chamber
The device is able to show the path that radioactive emission will take as
they travel. As the radiation travels through it leaves tracks inside the
device. The type of track can tell the type of radiation.
It consists of a Cold Chamber that is fill with Gas and Alcohol vapour. As
the radiation travels through the chamber it ionises the gas. Alcohol vapour
then condenses on the ions to form Cloud-like track (similar to those left
by Jet Planes).
Alpha creates thick straight tracks because of it high ionising ability and its
heavy mass. Beta creates thin squiggly bent tracks because of it low
ionising ability and light mass. Gamma creates very thin scattered tracks
because of its very low ionising ability and zero mass.
● Radioisotopes
● Uses
● Smoke Detectors: An alpha source ionises the air and causes current to
flow through it. When smoke is in the air it blocks the alpha particles from
ionising the air. This stops the current from flowing and the alarm sounds.
● Cancer Treatment: Gamma sources can be used to burn cancer cells deep
in the body. The Gamma radiation is aimed at the cancer cells while the
body is rotated. This ensures that the cancer cells always receive radiation
while the body cells receive it only some of the time.
● Dangers
● Safety
● Half-Life
Recall that there are Three (3) Properties of a radioactive sample that decreases as it
decays. They are its Number of Atoms, Mass and Rate of Decay. From here I will
use the term ‘Amount’ to refer to them.
The time that the Amount of a Sample of a Specific Radioisotope takes to decay to
half remains the same no matter what amount you start with. So if sample of
Iodine-131 takes 8 days to decay from 100g to 50g, it will also take 8 days to decay
from 40g to 20g.
This constant time is called Half-Life. ‘Half-Life is the Time taken for the Amount
of a Radioisotope the decrease to Half of its original amount.”
Every radioisotope has its own half-life. For example the half-life of Iodine-131 is 8
days while that of Carbon-14 is 5600 years.
● Examples
# of Half-live = 40/8 = 5
Do the Decay Diagram: 480g → 240g → 120g → 60g → 30g → 15g.
● Phosphorus-32 has a half-life of 14 days. How long will it take for the Rate
to reach 1/8 of its original amount?
Time = 3 × 14 = 42 days.
# of Half-live = 6
● Questions
● Nuclear Fission
Some Isotopes of heavy elements can be made unstable by hitting them with
particles like neutrons. When this is done the particles usually splits up.
‘Nuclear Fission is the splitting up of a heavy nucleus into two smaller nuclei.”
● Chain Reactions
The 3 neutrons that are emitted then hit 3 other nuclei. They then emit 3 neutrons
each (9 in all). These 9 neutrons can then hit 9 other nuclei. They would then eject
27 neutrons. This continues until most of the nuclei split up.
This is called a chain reaction. The name is because one event leads to another,
which leads to another, which leads to another, and so on; like a chain. Think of the
Domino Effect.
However if the Mass is too low the neutrons easily escape the surface without
hitting any nuclei (remember the atom is mainly empty space) and therefore the
reaction stops early. The lowest mass of a substance which can have a chain
reaction is called its Critical Mass.
● Examples
92235 U +01 n →3690 Kr +56144 Ba+201 n
92235 U +01 n →3690 Kr +56143 Ba+301 n
92235 U +01 n →3790 Rb+55143 Cs+301 n
92235 U +01 n →3890 Sr +54143 Xe+301 n
94239 Pu+01 n→ 40103 Zr +54134 Xe+301 n
● Nuclear Fusion
Nuclear Fusion is the joining (fusing) of small nuclei to form a heavier nucleus.
● Explanation
Whenever a nuclear reaction occur a small amount of mass is lost. That means that
the Mass of the Product (mP) is less than the Mass of the Reactants (mR).
This missing or lost is called the Mass Defect or Mass Deficit (Δm).
● Formulas
Mass Defect=Mass of Reactants−Mass of Products∨Δ m=mR −mP
NB: If the Masses are∈ Atomic MassUnits ( u ) then Δm must be converted ¿ kg .
● Example
● Problems
Calculate the energy released in the nuclear reactions below. Use the data in the
table above.
● 12 H+ 13 H → 24 He+01 n
Nuclear Energy can be used to produce Electricity. Uranium-235 is the main fuel
used in Nuclear Energy Production. The Uranium produces Nuclear Energy by the
Fission reaction 92235 U +01 n → Products+ Energy . The products may vary. The
converts to Heat and is transferred to water boiling it to Steam. The steam turns an
Electric Generator to produce Electricity.
● Diagram
The Fuel Rods contain Uranium-235. When the Fuel rods are bombarded with
slow moving neutrons, the Uranium nuclei split up triggering a chain reaction
as discussed above. These nuclear reactions produce a lot of heat.
The Moderators are made of graphite. It helps to slow down the neutron to
ensure that they are captured by the uranium and cause fission. This keeps the
chain reaction going.
The Control Rods are made of Boron. They can absorb neutron. They are move
up or down to speed up or slow down the reaction. Thus they can control the
speed of the reaction. It keeps it steady.
A Coolant (liquid which can store a lot of heat) flow through the core and
absorbs the heat energy. This does two things (1) it keeps the core from
overheating and (2) it transfers Heat Energy to the Heat Exchanger.
Control
Rod
Hot Coolant Out
Moderato
r
Fuel Rod
Cold
Cool
ant
In
● Heat exchanger
When the coolant gets back to the Heat Exchanger, it transfers its heat to water.
The coolant cools down and the water heats up thus changing to steam This is
why it is called a Heat Exchanger – because the coolant and the water
exchange temperatures. The steam now rushes to the Generator.
Hot Coolant
In
Cold Coolant
Out
● Electric Generator
At the generator the steam turns a turbine. Then turbine turns the Generator.
After which the generator produces electricity.
● Pros (Advantages)
● Nuclear fuels produce much more energy than the same mass of fossil fuel.
The energy produced by 1kg of nuclear fuel would require 50000kg of
fossil fuel to produce.
● Cons (Disadvantages)
● Nuclear fuel is radioactive. Even Uranium-235 is not highly radioactive,
many of the other isotopes are very radioactive and are always found with
it. The radiation emitted by them is very dangerous to human health.