Atomic Structure
The groups
1. Alkali metals 2. Alkaline earth metals 3. rare earth metals 3-12. transistion metals 13. boron group 14. carbon group 15. nitrogen group 16. oxygen group 17. halogens 18. noble gases
John Dalton
1803-atomic theory, law of multiple proportions
Dmitri Mendeleev
1869-Created the periodic table
JJ Thomson
1904-discovered the electron, plum pudding model
Ernest Rutherford
1911-Gold foil experiment, discovered nucleus
Niels Bohr
1913- discovered that electrons move around the nucleus in orbits called electron shells.
Henry Moseley
1913-Arranged the periodic table by atomic number instead of mass number
Democritus
400bc-First to name the atom, atomos
Isotopes
Atoms of the same element that have different numbers of neutrons
valence electrons
Electrons on the outermost energy level of an atom
Aristotle
Greek philosopher
Periods
Horizontal rows on the periodic table
Atom
Smallest particle of an element
Groups
Vertical columns on the periodic table
electron cloud
area around the nucleus of an atom where the atom's electrons are most likely to be found
What holds it together?
attractive force between +nucleus and -electron cloud repulsive force between electrons] repulsive force between protons
Schrodinger and Heisenberg
contributed to modern theory, said electrons do not travel in definite paths
hyphen form
element-mass
Nuclear form
mass number Symbol
Bohr Model
model of the atom in which electrons move rapidly around the nucleus in paths called orbits
Electron
negatively charged particle
Neutron
no charge
Quarks
particles of matter that make up protons and neutrons
Proton
positively charged particle
The number of electrons
same as the number of protons
atomic number
the number of protons in an atom
Mass number
the sum of the number of neutrons and protons in an atomic nucleus
average atomic mass
the weighted average of the atomic masses of the naturally occurring isotopes of an element