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2.1: introduction to atoms, elements, and ions

basics of atomic history

  • Democritus (460-370 BCE)—coined term atomus (“indivisible”)

    • not backed by Aristotle, who pushed elemental (water, air, earth, fire) theory which was developed by Empedocles; politics has always been involved with science

  • Antoine Lavoisier—developed law of conservation of mass (1789): the total mass of substance present at the end of a chemical process is the same as the mass of substances present before the process took place

  • John Dalton—developed atomic theory of matter (1803): atoms are the fundamental building block of matter

    • Dalton was the first modern scientist (used scientific method)

    • developed four postulates:

      • all matter is composed of indivisible particles, atoms (Democritus)

      • chemical reactions combine or recombine atoms, they do not destroy them (Lavoisier)

      • all atoms of an element are identical atoms of different elements are different

      • when elements react to form compounds, they react in defined, whole-number ratios

        of protons dictate which element is which

    • modeled using the “billiard ball” model

    • law of multiple proportions: if two or more compounds can be made from elements A and B, the masses of B that combine with a given mass of A are in the ratio of small whole numbers

    • when two or more compounds exist from the same elements, they cannot have the same relative number of atoms

  • radioactivity: the spontaneous emission of high levels of energy

    • discovered by Marie Curie (1867-1934)

    • eventually used to discover that atoms are not the smallest particles (protons, neutrons, etc. exist—subatomic particles)

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2.1: introduction to atoms, elements, and ions

basics of atomic history

  • Democritus (460-370 BCE)—coined term atomus (“indivisible”)

    • not backed by Aristotle, who pushed elemental (water, air, earth, fire) theory which was developed by Empedocles; politics has always been involved with science

  • Antoine Lavoisier—developed law of conservation of mass (1789): the total mass of substance present at the end of a chemical process is the same as the mass of substances present before the process took place

  • John Dalton—developed atomic theory of matter (1803): atoms are the fundamental building block of matter

    • Dalton was the first modern scientist (used scientific method)

    • developed four postulates:

      • all matter is composed of indivisible particles, atoms (Democritus)

      • chemical reactions combine or recombine atoms, they do not destroy them (Lavoisier)

      • all atoms of an element are identical atoms of different elements are different

      • when elements react to form compounds, they react in defined, whole-number ratios

        of protons dictate which element is which

    • modeled using the “billiard ball” model

    • law of multiple proportions: if two or more compounds can be made from elements A and B, the masses of B that combine with a given mass of A are in the ratio of small whole numbers

    • when two or more compounds exist from the same elements, they cannot have the same relative number of atoms

  • radioactivity: the spontaneous emission of high levels of energy

    • discovered by Marie Curie (1867-1934)

    • eventually used to discover that atoms are not the smallest particles (protons, neutrons, etc. exist—subatomic particles)