Grade 9 Chemistry, Lesson 4 - The History of Atomic Theory - Free Educational videos for Students in K-12 | Lumos Learning

Grade 9 Chemistry, Lesson 4 - The History of Atomic Theory - Free Educational videos for Students in k-12


Grade 9 Chemistry, Lesson 4 - The History of Atomic Theory - By Lumos Learning



Transcript
00:00 all right . This is Mr Lee Han teaches you
00:02 stuff . Grade nine Chemistry lesson for the history of
00:05 atomic theory . So we're gonna start off with ancient
00:09 theories . But before we do , I just wanted
00:12 to go over what we mean by a theory .
00:14 Now , in everyday life , a theory usually just
00:16 means a good guess about something like , Oh ,
00:18 I have a theory about where I left my keys
00:20 or I have a theory about what Harry Potter's parents
00:23 liked on their pizza . But these theories are not
00:27 the same as scientific theories . A scientific theory is
00:30 a model based on observations from experiments and scientific reasoning
00:37 . Um , that helps explain the world . It's
00:39 a framework by which we understand some aspect of the
00:43 world . And we use these theories to help us
00:47 , uh , make predictions and design experiments to help
00:51 us better understand that world . So anyways , the
00:56 Greeks had a theory about matter . The Greeks thought
00:59 that all matter was composed of four elements earth ,
01:02 air , fire and water . And these four elements
01:06 could combine in different ratios to produce the variety of
01:08 substances we see today . So , for instance ,
01:12 the Greeks thought that wood was made from some earth
01:18 , some air and some fire . And when you
01:22 set the wood on fire , the fire came out
01:24 and the smoke came out and that was aired coming
01:26 out . And then you had ash left over ,
01:28 and that was the dirt . So that's what they
01:31 thought . All the stuff on Earth was made from
01:33 those four elements , very similarly in ancient China .
01:39 The elements they thought made everything up was firewater ,
01:44 wood , metal and earth . Now you may think
01:47 it's a little silly that these ancient cultures thought there
01:49 was only four or five elements . Uh , but
01:53 really , if you think about it , all the
01:55 elements that we know of today are made of three
01:57 basic subatomic particles the proton , the neutron and electron
02:03 . So really , everything is made of only three
02:04 things . So the idea that everything might be made
02:07 of four or five things , you know , isn't
02:09 that far fetched . But as far as elements go
02:13 , we now know that there are over 100 elements
02:15 that make up all the matter around us . So
02:19 our first stop at a scientist happens at 4 40
02:22 b . C . With Democrats and Democrats came up
02:26 with a theory that as you broke materials down into
02:28 smaller and smaller particles , Eventually you get particles so
02:32 small that you could not break it down any further
02:34 . He called this particle an atom , and that's
02:38 still a pretty good explanation of what an atom is
02:40 today . So smart guy . Next up , we
02:44 have John Dalton . Dalton pictured atoms as very small
02:48 spheres with different properties , and he created a table
02:52 of elements with symbols to represent each one . So
02:56 this is his table of elements here . Now we
02:58 have a periodic table of elements today . It's not
03:02 based on his table , but good idea to have
03:05 a table with symbols on it . Now . What
03:07 John Dalton was really known for was his four point
03:10 theory to describe the nature of matter . So he
03:13 said that all matter is made of atoms . All
03:17 atoms of a certain element are identical and properties atoms
03:21 of different elements have different properties , and Adams can
03:25 combine to create new substances so somewhat similar to the
03:28 particle theory . But John Dalton came up with these
03:31 long time ago , and they all hold true today
03:33 . So smart guy , So next up on our
03:36 scientific tour through history , is J . J .
03:38 Thompson . It's got a nice moustache , uh ,
03:42 using something called a cathode ray to he caused elements
03:45 to give off a stream of negatively charged particles that
03:49 he called electrons . And he figured out there are
03:51 negatively charged because in his cathode ray tube , he
03:56 had an electric field generated , and when that electric
04:00 field was turned on , it deflected the stream of
04:02 particles , so he knew that it must therefore be
04:05 negatively charged . So since he knew that there was
04:09 negatively charged particles and atoms , he knew that there
04:14 must also be positive charges in there as well ,
04:17 because elements don't have an overall charge by themselves ,
04:21 right ? Atoms don't have an overall charge . Usually
04:24 so , Thompson figured , there must be positive particles
04:26 in the atoms as well . So he came up
04:29 with the idea that an atom is a positive mass
04:33 with negative electrons in it . And this is the
04:36 raisin bun model . So you're electrons are negatively charged
04:40 raisins in a positively charged button . So the whole
04:45 the whole atom was thought to be positively charged ,
04:47 with little specks of electrons scattered throughout . And then
04:53 along came Ernest Rutherford , who had an awesome moustache
04:56 as well . Um , and he discovered that the
04:58 protons are located in a central nucleus , so instead
05:01 of having the entire atom is sort of a bun
05:04 of positive energy , Rutherford found that all of the
05:08 positive protons are located in a central nucleus . So
05:13 this is the apparatus that Ernest Rutherford used to figure
05:16 this out . So he has an alpha particle emitter
05:19 , which actually shoots protons . That's what alpha particles
05:22 are , and it shoots the protons at a piece
05:25 of gold foil , and it's very , very thin
05:27 gold foil . So it's just a very , very
05:30 thin piece of gold , and the protons were supposed
05:32 to fly right through it . And then there's the
05:36 detecting screen , this green screen here , which will
05:39 light up when it gets hit by the protons .
05:42 So they fired the alpha particles through the screen ,
05:45 and it hits the back , just like they expected
05:48 . But unexpectedly , some some of the beams I
05:52 deflected and off to the side . They had bits
05:55 lighting up , which was very surprising . They didn't
05:58 expect this at all , but most surprising of all
06:02 was that some of the beams actually turned right around
06:04 and did like a 1 80 came right back at
06:06 them and lit up the detecting screen on the other
06:09 side . That was totally unexpected . In fact ,
06:14 Ernest Rutherford said , it was like firing a cannonball
06:17 at a piece of tissue paper and then having the
06:20 cannonball bounced back and hit you in the face .
06:22 That's how surprising it was . So , based on
06:27 what they knew at the time the raisin Bond model
06:31 , you had these negative electrons and a mostly positive
06:36 Adam . So if you fired these positively charged alpha
06:41 particles or protons Adam Adam , they should just fly
06:45 right through , because there's nothing especially positive anywhere or
06:48 especially negative to deflect it anyway . It should .
06:52 It should all balance out . So this is what
06:55 Rutherford expected based on the raisin bun model . So
06:58 that's why they expected to just fly straight through .
07:01 But what they saw was that most things went straight
07:03 through , but some deflected , and then some shot
07:07 right back at them . So based on this ,
07:11 Rutherford concluded that the atoms must have all the positive
07:14 charges clumped together in the middle of the atom ,
07:17 and that's the nucleus . So the next problem with
07:22 scientists had to figure out was why Adams had too
07:24 much mass , so they had discovered the atoms weighed
07:27 more than they should if there was only protons and
07:30 electrons in there . There are also isotopes of elements
07:34 that weighed different amounts but had the same charges .
07:37 A regular atom , so lead to four and lead
07:40 to six were both lead , but one of them
07:43 weighed slightly more than the other one , and they
07:44 didn't know why . Um , some scientists thought that
07:48 they the nucleus , held some extra protons , but
07:51 also extra electrons , and they canceled each other out
07:55 . That wasn't right . A guy by the name
07:57 of James Chadwick . I figured out that there was
08:00 another subatomic particle called a neutron , and the neutron
08:04 added weight to the atom but had no charge at
08:06 all . That's why it's called a neutron , because
08:08 it's neutral . So scientists then knew that there were
08:12 protons and neutrons in the nucleus with electrons orbiting around
08:16 it . So the model of the Adam at this
08:20 point looks something like this . So you've got a
08:24 central nucleus there , with electrons in orbit around these
08:27 protons and neutrons in the middle . But there were
08:32 still mysteries that scientists needed to figure out scientists knew
08:35 that when certain elements gained energy , they would release
08:38 that energy only in very specific amounts . And Niels
08:41 Bohr was the one that figured this all out .
08:44 So he figured out that the electrons could exist only
08:46 in very specific orbits around the nucleus . So this
08:51 Adam here on the left , this is neon ,
08:54 and the electrons orbiting the nucleus and neon cannot exist
08:58 in between the orbits . They can't sort of slowly
09:01 move up to the next orbit . They make jumps
09:05 . It's more like an elevator where you can get
09:06 off at one floor or the next floor or the
09:09 next floor . Electrons are the same way they can
09:11 be in one orbit or the next orbit or the
09:14 next orbit . They can't get off in between floors
09:17 . They have to go right up to the next
09:18 floor , right up to the next orbit . So
09:21 this led to the Bohr model of the atom .
09:22 That's the Bohr model on the left there , and
09:25 this helps explain why electrons or why atoms will give
09:30 off very specific amounts of energy , because when energy
09:34 comes in , it causes those electrons to jump up
09:38 to the next floor or the next orbit , and
09:42 then one of the energy goes away . Those electrons
09:45 will fall right back down , and they'll release a
09:47 very specific amount of energy , just the amount of
09:49 energy needed to make it go up to the next
09:52 level . So that explains why electric or why atoms
09:57 will give up very specific amounts of energy . So
10:01 the most current model we have is the quantum mechanical
10:03 model . And in this model of the atom ,
10:05 scientists have agreed that we don't know , and we
10:07 can't know where exactly an electron is or what momentum
10:11 it has , because if we try to figure that
10:15 out , we use some instrument , then will probably
10:17 alter where that electron is . And we have nothing
10:21 precise enough to figure out exactly where it is without
10:23 changing it . So you can kind of think of
10:26 it as a You had a room with several soccer
10:29 balls in it , and it was pitch black .
10:31 The only way you can figure out where those soccer
10:33 balls were , because if you walked around kicking stuff
10:37 well , eventually you run into one of those soccer
10:39 balls and you kick it and you'd say , Oh
10:41 , this is where it was . But you wouldn't
10:43 know where it is anymore because you've already kicked it
10:46 . So the same is sort of true of trying
10:48 to figure out where an atom or where an electron
10:50 is in an atom , because if you ever figure
10:54 out where it is , you've probably kicked it ,
10:56 and it's not there anymore . However , although scientists
11:00 have agreed that they don't know where electron is ,
11:03 they still want to do work using electron locations .
11:08 So to continue using equations based on their model of
11:11 the atom , scientists have come up with the idea
11:14 of a cloud of possible locations for the electrons electron
11:17 clouds . And these are based on the probability of
11:20 an electron being in any one spot . And it's
11:23 not that the electron exists as a cloud itself .
11:26 It's just that they think of the electron as a
11:30 cloud of probability so that they can continue to make
11:34 predictions . So that is it . For history of
11:38 atomic theory . Tune in for the next video elements
11:41 and the structure of the atom
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