1) Atoms contain a nucleus with protons and neutrons, and electrons outside the nucleus. The atomic number is the number of protons, and the mass number is the total of protons and neutrons.
2) Isotopes are atoms of the same element with different numbers of neutrons. Ions are formed when atoms gain or lose electrons.
3) Electrons occupy discrete regions called orbitals, which combine to form energy levels or shells. The order electrons fill these shells explains elements' chemical properties.
2. Atomic Structure
The nucleus contains almost all of the mass of an atom as that is where the protons and neutrons are
found
The nucleus of an atom contains all of the positive charge
The electrons are outside the nucleus and, therefore, so is the negative charge
Atomic number
= number of protons in the nucleus
Mass number
= number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus
Number of neutrons
= mass number atomic number
Number of electrons
= number of protons (in a neutral atom)
9 Mass number = 9, Atomic number = 4
Be
4 4 protons, 5 neutrons, 4 electrons
Relative mass
Relative charge
Proton
1
+1
Neutron
1
0
Electron
1/2000
-1
3. Isotopes and ions
Isotopes are atoms with the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons
(and different masses)
For example, chlorine has two isotopes 35Cl and 37Cl. Both have 17 protons but they have 18
and 20 neutrons, respectively
Isotopes of an element have the same chemical properties because they have the same
electron arrangement
Ions are formed when atoms gain or lose electrons.
As an atom Cl has 17 electrons. A Cl- ion has gained one electron so it now has 18.
As an atom Na has 11 electrons. A Na+ ion has lost one electron so it now has 10.
4. Relative atomic mass
Relative atomic mass is the average mass of an atom of an element taking the mixture of
isotopes into account. However, learn the technical definition from definitions sheet
To calculate relative atomic mass, add together (mass number x percentage/100) for each
isotope
Example:
75% of Cl atoms have a mass number of 35
25% of Cl atoms have a mass number of 37
Average mass of a Cl atom
= (mass no x percent/100) + (mass no x percent/100)
= (35 x 75/100) + (37 x 25/100)
= 35.5
For simple molecules, such as O2 and H2O, the relative molecular mass is calculated by adding
the relative atomic masses of the elements involved, giving 32.0 for O2 and 18.0 for H2O
For giant structures, such as Na2S and SiO2, the relative formula mass is calculated by adding
the relative atomic masses of the elements involved, giving 68.1 for Na2S and 60.1 for SiO2
5. Orbitals
An orbital is a region that can hold up to two electrons.
Orbitals have different shapes called s, p, d, and f (but f orbitals are beyond our syllabus)
S orbitals are spherical in shape and come in sets of one (which can hold up to 2 electrons)
P orbitals are hour-glass or egg-timer shaped and come in sets of three (which can hold up to
6 electrons)
D orbitals come in sets of five which can hold up to 10 electrons
6. Energy levels (or shells)
The first energy level (or shell) only contains an s orbital, labelled 1s
The first shell can hold up to 2 electrons
The second energy level contains an s orbital (labelled 2s) and three p orbitals (labelled 2p)
The second shell can hold up to 8 electrons
The third energy level contains an s orbital, three p orbitals and five d orbitals
The third shell can hold up to 18 electrons
The order in which the orbitals are filled is as follows: 1s 2s 2p 3s 3p 4s 3d 4p
Note that the 4s fills before the 3d
Some examples of electronic structures are shown below.
Hydrogen
1 electron 1s1
Nitrogen
7 electrons1s2 2s2 2p3
Sodium
11 electrons
1s2 2s2 2p6 3s1
Sulphur
16 electrons
1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p4
Calcium
20 electrons
1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s2
Iron
26 electrons
1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s2 3d6
7. Energy levels (or shells) cont.
In a Cl- ion, the 18 electrons are arranged 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6
In a Na+ ion, the 10 electrons are arranged 1s2 2s2 2p6
Transition metals, like iron, lose their 4s electrons first (before 3d). Fe3+, with 23 electrons, is
1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s0 3d5
The diagram below shows the relative energies of the orbitals from 1s to 4f
8. Successive Ionisation Energies
Evidence that electrons are arranged in shells or energy levels can be obtained by measuring the
successive ionisation energies of an element
The first ionisation energy of an element is the energy needed to remove one mole of electrons
from one mole of gaseous atoms i.e.
M(g) M+(g) + eNote - State symbols are essential in ionisation equations
In general, ionisation is easier if the nuclear charge is smaller, the electron is further away from the
nucleus and there is more shielding from inner electron shells.
For an element, successive ionisation energies get bigger because the remaining electrons are held
more tightly by the unchanged nuclear charge.
Jumps in ionisation energies occur when going from one energy level (shell) to another. This tells
you which group the element is in. The jump in energy occurs because the new energy level is
closer to nucleus and less shielded.
9. Blocks in the Periodic Table
An element can be assigned to the s, p or d block by working out which type of orbital its
outermost electron is in
The s block is groups 1 and 2
The p block is groups 3 to 8
The d block is between the s and p blocks