Isotopes (Oxford AQA IGCSE Chemistry)

Revision Note

Richard Boole

Expertise

Chemistry

Isotopes

  • Isotopes are atoms of the same element that contain a different number of neutrons

    • Isotopes also contain the same number of protons and electrons

  • The symbol for an isotope is the chemical symbol (or word) followed by a dash and then the mass number

    • For example, carbon-14 or C-14 has the chemical symbol straight C presubscript 6 presuperscript 14

    • This means that it is the isotope of carbon with 6 protons

    • But, the 14 shows that it has 8 neutrons (14 - 6 = 8)

  • Isotopes display the same chemical properties

    • This is because they have the same number of electrons in their outer shells, and this is what determines their chemistry

Table to show the structures of isotopes of hydrogen

Isotope

Atomic Structure

Symbol

Hydrogen - 1

An atom of the hydrogen-1 isotope containing one proton and one electron
The chemical symbol of hydrogen-1

Hydrogen - 2

An atom of the hydrogen-2 isotope containing one proton, one neutron and one electron
The chemical symbol of hydrogen-2

Hydrogen - 3

An atom of the hydrogen-3 isotope containing one proton, two neutrons and one electron
The chemical symbol of hydrogen-3

Exam Tip

For atoms to be isotopes of each other, they must both be from the same element.

For example, carbon-13 and carbon-14 are isotopes whereas carbon-13 and hydrogen-2 are not.

Calculating PEN Numbers

Protons

  • The number of protons, p, is given by the atomic number

Electrons

  • Since atoms are neutral, the number of electrons, e, is the same as the number of protons

    • The number of electrons in an element is also given by the atomic number

  • Ions have a different number of electrons to the number of protons, depending on their charge

    • A positively charged ion has lost electrons and therefore has fewer electrons than protons

    • A negatively charged ion has gained electrons and therefore has more electrons than protons

Neutrons

  • The mass number is the number of protons plus neutrons

  • The number of neutrons , n, can be calculated by:

Number of neutrons = mass number - atomic number

  • For example, the chemical symbol for an atom of beryllium is:

The chemical symbol for beryllium, with a mass number of 9 and an atomic number of 4
The chemical symbol for beryllium
  • Beryllium has an atomic number of 4

    • So, it has 4 protons

  • Beryllium is an atom, it has not gained or lost any electrons

    • So, it has 4 electrons

  • The mass number of beryllium is 9

    • So it has 9 - 4 = 5 neutrons

  • So, the PEN numbers for beryllium are:

    • p = 4

    • e = 4

    • n = (9 - 4 =) 5

Worked Example

Determine the number of protons, neutrons and electrons in:

  1. An atom of carbon.

  2. An Na+ ion.

Answers:

  1. An atom of carbon contains:

    • 6 protons
      This is because the atomic number of carbon is 6

    • 6 electrons
      This is because an atom has no overall charge, so the number of protons = the number of electrons

    • 6 neutrons
      The mass number of carbon is 12
      Neutrons = mass number - atomic number
      So, 12 - 6 = 6

  2. An Na+ ion contains:

    • 11 protons
      This is because the atomic number of sodium is 11

    • 10 electrons
      This is because an Na atom would have 11 electrons but it has lost one electron to become Na+
      So, 11 - 1 = 10

    • 12 neutrons
      The mass number of sodium is 23
      Neutrons = mass number - atomic number
      So, 23 - 11 = 12

  • With the right information, the number of neutrons equation can be rearranged to determine the mass number or atomic number, e.g.:

Mass number = Number of neutrons + atomic number

Atomic number = Mass number - number of neutrons

Worked Example

Calculate the number of sub-atomic particles in an unknown atom of element X with mass number 63 and 34 neutrons.

Protons: ..........

Electrons: ..........

Answer:

  • Protons: 29
    Protons = mass number - neutrons

    Protons = 63 - 34 = 29

  • Electrons: 29
    The question is about an atom, so the number of electrons = the number of protons

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Richard Boole

Author: Richard Boole

Richard has taught Chemistry for over 15 years as well as working as a science tutor, examiner, content creator and author. He wasn’t the greatest at exams and only discovered how to revise in his final year at university. That knowledge made him want to help students learn how to revise, challenge them to think about what they actually know and hopefully succeed; so here he is, happily, at SME.