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Unit 6 Unit 6 Unit 6 Unit Unit 6 Unit 6 Unit 6 Unit

Unit 6 Unit 6 Unit 6 Unit - PowerPoint Presentation

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Unit 6 Unit 6 Unit 6 Unit - PPT Presentation

6 Particles with Internal Structure The Role of Charge Q What is the nature of electrical forces and electrical charges We are going to look at the interaction between Top tape T Bottom tape B ID: 743847

paper foil bottom top foil paper top bottom electrical charge tape charges negative model forces pvc metals electrons nature

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Slide1

Unit 6Slide2

Unit 6Slide3

Unit 6Slide4

Unit 6: Particles with Internal Structure

The Role of ChargeSlide5

Q: What is the nature of electrical forces and electrical charges?

We are going to look at the interaction between:

Top tape (T)

Bottom tape (B)

Paper (P)

Aluminum foil (F)

?????

Observations need to be written, drawn, and recorded

Top

Bottom

Paper

Foil

Top

Bottom

Paper

Foil

PVC (

nr

)

PVC (rub)Slide6

A compound is found to 40.1% sulfur and 59.9% oxygen. Its molecular mass is 80.1

amu

.

What is the empirical formula?

What is the molecular formula?

Warm Up 1/26-27Slide7

Q: What is the nature of electrical forces and electrical charges?

We looked at the interaction between:

Top tape (T)

Bottom tape (B)

Paper (P)

Aluminum foil (F)

What did we observe?

Top

Bottom

Paper

Foil

Top

Bottom

Paper

Foil

PVC (nr)

PVC (rub)Slide8

Q: What is the nature of electrical forces and electrical charges?

Notice that the interactions fall into one of two categories:

a) three attractions (one strong) and one repulsion

b) two attractions and two no effects

Top

Bottom

Paper

Foil

Top

R

A

A

A

Bottom

A

R

A

A

Paper

A

A

0

0

Foil

A

A

0

0

PVC (nr)

PVC (rub)Slide9

Q: What is the nature of electrical forces and electrical charges?

There is something unique about the repulsions

If it is repelled from either T or B, it will be attracted to all the three other strips

If it is attracted by both, it will not interact with the paper or foil.

What

s up with that?

Top

Bottom

Paper

Foil

Top

R

A

A

A

Bottom

A

R

A

A

PaperAA00FoilAA00PlasticSlide10

Q: What is the nature of electrical forces and electrical charges?

Scientists have assigned a negative charge to PVC rubbed w/wool

Based on your observations from using the rod, label the T and B tapes as either a (+) or (–).

Make a duplicate table and enter the following:

assign a positive (+) charge to objects which repel the top tape

assign a negative (–) charge to objects which repel the bottom tape

assign a neutral (0) charge to objects that do not repel either.

Top

( )

Bottom

( )

Paper

( )

Foil

( )

Top

( )

Bottom

( )

Paper

( )Foil ( )Plastic ( )Slide11

Q: What is the nature of electrical forces and electrical charges?

How can you be sure something has a net charge?

What happened to the force of the interaction as the objects approached each other?

Does that fit with our particle model and

E

ph

?Slide12

Model Summary Update

What

s new?

There is something smaller than the atom

Evidence of internal structure for our atoms

Particle with charge

Assume atoms contain both positive and negative charges that normally cancel each other.

HDYK that is the case?

We will use the Thomson model of the atom

a massive positive core

a small number of mobile, negatively charged particles we call

electrons

. (He called them corpuscles)

AKA: Plum pudding Model

Evidence led J. J. Thomson to propose that in solids

only the negative charges are free to move

these charges are much smaller than an atom and contribute a negligible fraction of its massSlide13

Plum Pudding Model

A visual representation of this model is the

plum pudding

model–

Positive cores are represented by bowls of pudding, which attract the negative electrons represented by plums.

The attraction of the plums to some bowls is stronger than to others

Some bowls are “stickier”

The plums can move from one bowl to another because of differences in attraction (stickiness).

Since plums also repel one another, you cannot put too many plums in the same bowl.

Can this model explain the tapes?

Top

Bottom

Before

In-contact

SeparatedSlide14

Applying the PPM

The T tape becomes positively charged because electrons are transferred to the B tape.

The overall number of electrons does not change, just their

distribution

on the tapes.

Neutral atoms have the same amount of (+) and (–) charge.

Which has a stronger attraction for the electrons, e

-

?

Sticky side?

Dull side?

Notice that we once again used macroscopic behavior to explain microscopic behavior Slide15

What about the foil and paper?

How were they similar?

How were they different?

How can we explain the difference?

Charge must already be there.

foil

paper

What is the effect of distance on the electrical force?

What if a negative charge is brought nearby?Slide16

Some ideasSlide17

https://phet.colorado.edu1) Balloons and Static Electricity2) John Travoltage

ExamplesSlide18

In the sticky tape lab, which side has a stronger attraction for the electrons—sticky or dull?Explain how you know (What evidence do you have?)

Warm Up 2/1Slide19

JJ Thomson’

s BIG Idea

He observed a cathode ray tube and noticed that he could change the path of the

corpuscles

with a magnet

The direction of the deflection indicated a negative charge for the corpuscles

What were Thomson

’s corpuscles?electrons

cathode

anode

glass tubeSlide20

How do we apply this model to compounds?

We can propose that electrical forces are involved in holding together the particles that make up pure substances.

Perhaps the mobile negative charge is freer to move in some substances than in others.

Foil vs. paper

Metals and non-metals

Conductors and insulatorsSlide21

Overview of the Modern Periodic Table

Two distinct regions of note:

Metals (M)

Good conductor of electricity

2/3 of table are metals

Includes transition elements (Groups 3-12)

Non-metals (NM)

Poor conductors of electricity

All of groups 17 & 18; some of groups 14-16

Exhibit a wide range of propertiesSlide22

Warm Up 2/2-3

Which of the above diagrams shows atoms of a metal? HDYK?

Which of the above diagrams shows atoms of a non-metal? HDYK?Slide23

Lab 6.2: Conductivity of substances and solutionsSlide24
Slide25
Slide26

Analyze your Lab 6.2 DataLook for patterns

Position on the periodic table

Metals/Non-metals

Write a conclusion in your journal

Claim

Evidence

Reasoning

AssignmentSlide27

1) Based on your data from today’s lab, make a CLAIM.

2) What

EVIDENCE

(data) do you have to support your claim?

3) Support your conclusion with

REASONING

.

Exit Ticket 2/2-3