University of the Philippines Manila                                     How did our present-day concept of the atom evolve?
Biology 124 – Radiation Biology                                           • 1897 – British chemist J.J. Thompson showed that the atom was
Prof. Marla Endriga                                                          not indivisible after all, but was made up of even smaller parts
The Atom                                                                     o Performed experiments using a cathode-ray tube
                                                                             o Discovered the existence of particles that have negative
Transcribed by: Alyanna Ysabel L. Salvador
                                                                                 electric charges
Atom                                                                             § called the negatively charged particles “corpuscles” (now
 • Atoms are the basic units of matter and the defining structure of                  electrons)
     elements.                                                               o created a model (Raisin Pudding Theory) where he
                                                                                 described the atom as a positively charged sphere with
Molecule                                                                         electrons embedded in it as far apart as possible
                                                                                 § mass of positive charge = pudding
 • Combining atoms of the same kind or different kinds makes
                                                                                      electrons = raisins
     molecules.
                                                                          • 1911 – British physicist Ernest Rutherford carried out
 • The kind of molecules depends on which atoms combine.
                                                                             experiments to test whether atoms are solid
                                                                             o Bombarded a thin sheet of gold foil with tiny positively
Element
                                                                                 charged particles called alpha particles (later found to be
  • The molecule contains only one kind of atoms
                                                                                 helium nuclei)
  • E.g. hydrogen, carbon, gold and oxygen gas                               o Examined the fluorescent screen placed behind the foil
                                                                             o Found that most of the alpha particles passed right through
Compound                                                                         the gold foil. While a few were deflected
 • Molecule contains two or more kinds of atoms, and are actually            o Led to conclusion that the atom is mostly empty space with
    linked together in a chemical bond                                           a core or nucleus where all the positive charges are
 • E.g. water                                                                    concentrated. Electrons travel around the nucleus like
                                                                                 planets around the sun, but their exact places cannot be
Mixture                                                                          described.
 • The molecules are simply jumbled together (and are not                 • 1913 – Danish physicist Niels Bohr proposed a model of the
     chemically combined)                                                    atom which adopted Rutherford’s nuclear atom
 • E.g. air (a mixture of oxygen and nitrogen molecules and other            o Determined that electrons are not randomly located around
     gases)                                                                      the nucleus but that they travel around the nucleus in specific
                                                                                 shells or layers
What is inside the atom?                                                         § Shells or layers are found at certain fixed distance from
 • Proton – positive electrical charge; approximately 1837 times                      the nucleus
     heavier than the electron                                               o Also said that atoms absorb or give off energy as a photon
 • Electron – negative electric charge; approximately 1837 times                 of light or radiation when the electrons move from one shell
     lighter than a neutron or proton                                            to another
 • Neutron – neutral particle; has no electrical charge; has about        • 1932 – British physicist James Chadwick discovered the neutron
     the same mass of a proton and an electron combined                      o Has about the same size as the proton but with no electrical
                                                                                 charge
Historical Perspective of the Atom                                           o Discovery explained why atoms were heavier than the total
  • Ancient Greek philosophers:                                                  mass of their protons and electrons
     o Wondered what would happen if a piece of matter – like a           • Modern model of an atom
         stone – was split into smaller and smaller particles                o A result of the work of many scientists from the 1920s to the
     o No matter how tiny the particles became, it would be possible             present
         to break them up into smaller particles                             o Current model says that electrons do not travel in definite
     o Democritus: argued that no matter how hard or long you                    paths and the exact path of a moving electron cannot be
         divide a piece of matter; you will eventually come to a piece           predicted
         so very small that it could not be divided or split further         o There are regions inside the atom where electrons are likely
         § Called this indivisible particle an atom                              to be found. These regions are called electron clouds.
         § Atom – from the Greek word atomos meaning “can’t be
              cut” or “indivisible”                                      Atomic Number (Z)
  • For thousands of years, no one had anything new or important          • The number of protons in the nucleus of an atom
     to say about the atom                                                • This number determines the chemical identity of an atom
  • 1803 – British chemist and physicist John Dalton introduced his
     atomic theory based on experiments                                  Atomic Mass/Mass Number (A)
  • Dalton’s Atomic Theory                                                • Equal the total number of protons (Z) and neutrons (N) in the
     o All substances are made of atoms; atoms are small particles           nucleus of an atom
         that cannot be created, divided nor destroyed
     o Atoms join with other atoms to make new substances                Nuclide
     o Atoms of the same element are exactly alike, while atoms of        • Any atomic species characterized by the number of protons and
         different elements vary in weight and other properties               number of neutrons
  • Dalton imagined atoms as tiny solid balls.
Isotopes                                                                Half-life
  • Atoms of the same element having different number of neutrons,       • The time it takes for an original number of atoms in a sample of
     in combination with the fixed number of protons                          radioactive material to decay or disintegrate to one half this
  • Practically all elements have more than one isotope                       number
  • Isotopes of a given element have the same chemical properties,       • Range from less than a second to billions of years
     but they may differ in their nuclear properties                     • Unaffected by the physical and chemical state of the radioactive
                                                                              material, temperature, pressure and other physical changes
Classification
  • Stable
     o Do not spontaneously emit energy in the form of rays or
          particles
 • Unstable or Radioisotope
   o Unstable nuclei stabilize themselves by emitting or shooting
      energy rays called gamma rays, similar to x-rays
   o Others may emit particles from their nuclei and change to
      different elements
   o Source of instability of atoms is the unbalanced number of
      protons and neutrons in their nuclei.
      § If the nucleus of an atom has too many neutrons or
           protons, as compared to the optimum ratio of neutrons
           to protons, then this atom becomes unstable.
                                                                         Half-Lives of Some Radioactive Elements
                                                                            Element         Half-Life      Element            Half-Life
                                                                         Polonium-216     0.6 seconds    Californium-         2.2 years
                                                                                                             252
 Classification of Radioisotopes                                          Iridium-131     4.9 seconds      Cobalt-60         5.26 years
 • Natural                                                                  Sulfur-38    2 hrs 52 mins    Krypton-85         10.6 years
     o E.g. carbon-14, potassium-40                                       Technetium-      6.01 hours    Hydrogen-3          12.26 years
 • Artificial                                                                  99m                         (Tritium)
     o Most produced artificially in special nuclear devices such as       Sodium-24        15 hours       Lead-210          22.3 years
         a nuclear reactor by neutron bombardment                           Gold-198        2.7 days     Cesium-137           30 years
Radioisotope production                                                     Radon-22       3.82 days      Plutonium-         87.74 years
 • Radioisotope is produced by neutron bombardment                                                           238
                                                                           Iodine-131        8 days       Americium-         432.7 years
                                                                                                             241
 • Cerenkov Effect – cobalt 60 has gamma rays. When underwater,           Radium-223      11.43 days     Radium-226          1,600 years
   it has a different velocity compared to when in air – thus            Phosphorus-       14.3 days      Carbon-14          5,730 years
   exhibiting glow.                                                             32
                                                                         Strontium-90      28.8 days     Chlorine-36        400,000 years
Do radioisotopes remain unstable or radioactive all the time?             Iridium0192       74 days      Uranium-235         710 million
 • Unstable (radioactive) atoms undergo spontaneous decay into a                                                                years
     more stable form (usually a different element) by emitting or          Sulfur-35       87.2 days      Potassium-40      1.28 billion
     shooting out gamma rays or particles from their nucleus.                                                                   years
 • Ionizing radiation = rays and particles                                Calcium-45         164 days       Uranium-238       4.5 billion
 • Radioactivity – the property of radioisotopes which emit radiation                                                           years
     spontaneously                                                       Cadmium-199         463 days       Thorium-232      1.41 x 1010
 • Radioactive Material – any material that exhibits the property of                                                            years
     radioactivity
 • Radioactive decay – the process of emitting ionizing radiation