BackAtomic Structure and Isotopes: Foundations and Applications
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Historical Development of Atomic Theoryy
Ancient Greek philosophers believed matter was made of four elements (air, earth, fire, water), but Democritus proposed matter is composed of indivisible particles called atoms.
Antoine Lavoisier established the law of conservation of mass: mass is neither created nor destroyed in chemical reactions.
Joseph Proust demonstrated the law of definite proportions: compounds have constant composition by mass.
John Dalton's atomic theory (1808) stated:
All matter consists of solid, indivisible atoms.
Atoms are indestructible and retain identity in chemical reactions.
Atoms of the same element are identical; different elements have different atoms with different masses.
Compounds are formed from elements in small whole-number ratios.
Structure of the Atom
Atoms are made of three subatomic particles:
Protons (positive charge, in nucleus)
Neutrons (neutral, in nucleus)
Electrons (negative charge, outside nucleus)
Most of the atom's mass is in the tiny, dense nucleus; most of the atom's volume is empty space.
Electrons move around the nucleus, balancing the atom's overall charge.
Atomic charge is calculated as: Charge=#protons-#electrons
Defining Elements and Isotopes
Each atom has:
Atomic number (Z): number of protons (defines the element).
Mass number (A): total number of protons and neutrons (nucleons).
Changing the number of protons changes the element.
Atoms of the same element with different numbers of neutrons are called isotopes.
Most elements have more than one naturally occurring isotope.
Applications of Isotopes
Isotope ratios are used in fields like biology, geology, paleontology, and archaeology for tracing and dating samples.
Forensic example: 14C in tooth enamel can determine year of birth due to changes in atmospheric 14C from nuclear testing.
Measuring Isotopes: Mass Spectrometry
Mass spectrometry separates isotopes based on mass, producing a spectrum that shows the proportion of each isotope in a sample.
This technique allows determination of the isotopic composition of elements.
Average Atomic Mass
Most elements exist as mixtures of isotopes; the atomic mass on the periodic table is a weighted average of all naturally occurring isotopes.
Weighted average atomic mass is calculated as: Atomic mass=∑iisotopes(fractional abundance × isotope mass)
Example: Silicon has three isotopes with different abundances and masses; the average atomic mass is calculated using their relative abundances.