1 - Electronics 1 Lecture 1
1 - Electronics 1 Lecture 1
Presented By
Mohanad Ghazi
Computer Engineering Department
2020 - 2021
Atomic Structure
The atom is the basic unit of matter that consists of a central nucleus surrounded by
a number of negatively charged electrons. The nucleus contains both positively
charged protons and neutral neutrons as shown in the figure below to the right. The electrons of an
atom are connected to the nucleus by the electromagnetic force. An atom containing an equal
number of protons and electrons is neutral, otherwise it is positively or negatively charged, and it is
known as an ion.
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Atomic Structure
Nucleus Charge à since the nucleus contains the protons that have +ve
charge and the neutrons that have neutral charge, then we can say that the
Nucleus has a +ve charge.
Atomic Mass Number à since the sum of neutrons and protons in the
nucleus of the atom is over 99% of the atom, then we can say the Atomic
Mass Number (A) of an element is equal to the sum of neutrons and protons
in its nucleus as shown in the figure to the right.
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Atomic Structure
Isotopes are variants of a particular chemical element which
differ in neutrons number, although all isotopes of a given
element have the same number of protons in each atom. For
example, carbon-12, carbon-13 and carbon-14 are three
isotopes of the carbon with mass numbers 12, 13 and 14
respectively. The atomic number of Carbon is 6, which means
that every carbon atom has 6 protons, and the neutron
numbers of these isotopes are 6, 7 and 8 respectively.
Example:
Determine the number of protons, electrons, neutrons, atomic no., and atomic weight of the Argon
element (18Ar40) assuming it’s neutral.
Thomson
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Atomic Models
2- Rutherford Model
In 1911 Rutherford presented his own physical model for
subatomic structure in which the atom is made up of a
central charge surrounded by a cloud of orbiting electrons.
Rutherford suggested that the central charge of an atom
might be "proportional" to its atomic mass. After
Rutherford's discovery, scientists started to realize that the
atom is not ultimately a single particle, but is made up of far
smaller subatomic particles.
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Atomic Models
3- Bohr Model
In 1913 Bohr proposed his quantized shell model of the atom to explain how electrons
can have stable orbits around the nucleus. Bohr modified the Rutherford model by
requiring that the electrons move in orbits of fixed size and energy. The energy of an
electron depends on the size of the orbit and is lower for smaller orbits. Radiation can
occur only when the electron jumps from one far orbit to another near orbit from the
center of the atom.
Bohr proposed that electrons are restricted to certain fixed (quantized) orbits. An
electron can jump between these orbits by absorbing or emitting a photon with the
appropriate wavelength.
For example, if an electron jumps one orbit closer to the nucleus, it must emit energy
equal to the difference of the energies of the two orbits. Similarly, when the electron
jumps to a larger orbit, it must absorb a photon equal in energy to the difference in
orbits.
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Atomic Models
Bohr began with an approach that assumes that the electron in a one-electron atom is moving in a circular
orbit with a radius of (r) from the nucleus.
where (m) is the mass of the electron, and (v) is its velocity. In order to
have a stable atom, it was assumed that this centrifugal force was
exactly matched by an opposing centripetal force, drawing the electron
inward through the electromagnetic attraction between the electron’s
negative charge and the positive charge in the nucleus.
This electromagnetic force of attraction is given by:
F electromagnetic = Ze2/r2
Equating these two forces, we have:
v = Z e2 / r m
The derivation of the energy equation starts with the assumption that the electron in its orbit has both kinetic energy (K)
and potential energy (U), E = K + U, where (K) that arises from electron motion, is:
K = (½) m v2
The (U) that arises from the attraction between the negative charge of the electron and the positive charge in the
nucleus, is given by:
U = – Z e2 / r.
The (-) sign in the above equation signifies that the force on the electron is in the –r direction (toward the nucleus).
Hence, the total energy can be given as the summation of both kinetic and potential energies:
> Equ. 4
By experiments on hydrogen atom, it is found that 13.6 e.v. is required to separate the atom into protons and electron.
So, we can say that for the hydrogen atom, The binding energy is 13.6 e.v.
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Atomic Models
4- Planck’s Model
Ground State: It is the state in which the electron rotate in its initial orbit.
Excited State: it is the state when the electron is excited to a higher energy level (through absorbing a photon for
example).
emission Energy: it is the amount of energy that is being emitted by the electron when it returns from the excited state
to the steady state.
Photon: A photon is a mass of energy associated with light. A photon has energy (E) that is proportional to the
frequency (f) of radiation.
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