The Structure of the Atom (Oxford AQA IGCSE Chemistry)

Revision Note

Richard Boole

Expertise

Chemistry

The Atomic Model

How the atomic model has changed over time

  • In 1803, the atomic model proposed by John Dalton was a simple sphere of matter

  • At the time, the theory was correct but new experimental evidence, from scientific advances, led to the atomic model developing over time

    • This is a fundamental feature of science: new experimental evidence leads to scientific models being changed or replaced

 The evolution of atomic models

Timeline showing how the atomic model has developed from a simple sphere to the current model of a central nucleus, containing protons and neutrons, surrounded by shells of electrons
The atomic model has developed from a simple sphere to the current model

Atomic Structure

  • Atoms are tiny particles of matter, which are the building blocks of all matter

  • Each atom is made of subatomic particles called:

    1. Protons

    2. Neutrons

    3. Electrons

The structure of a carbon atom

Diagram showing the structure of a carbon atom with a nucleus, containing 6 protons and 6 neutrons, surrounded by 6 electrons arranged in shells
A carbon atom has a nucleus, containing protons and neutrons, surrounded by shells of electrons
  • Most of an atom is empty space

  • The centre of an atom is called the nucleus

    • The nucleus consists of protons and neutrons

    • The nucleus is positively charged 

  • The electrons surround the nucleus in shells

    • Electrons have almost no mass, so most of the mass of an atom is located in the nucleus

Exam Tip

  • The atom is the smallest part of an element that exists and still has the properties of the element - the subatomic particles do not.

Relative Charges of the Proton, Electron & Neutron

  • Protonsneutrons and electrons are so small that it is not practical to measure their charges using conventional units, such as coulombs

  • Instead, their charges are compared to each other

    • This is why they are called relative electrical charges

  • The relative electrical charges of the subatomic particles are:

Table of relative electrical charges

Sub-atomic particle

Relative electrical charge

Proton

+1

Neutron

0 (neutral)

Electron

-1

  • Atoms have no overall charge

  • This is because they have the same number of positive protons as negative electrons

    • The negative charge of one electron exactly cancels out the positive charge of one proton

  • Ions are formed when an atom loses or gains electrons to achieve a full outer shell 

    • If an atom loses one negative electron, it forms a positively charged 1+ ion 

    • If an atom gains one negative electron, it forms a negatively charged 1- ion

Worked Example

Explain why a magnesium ion has a 2+ charge. 

Answer:

  • A magnesium atom has:

    • 12 positive protons
      AND
      12 negative electrons

  • Magnesium loses 2 electrons to form a magnesium ion 

  • This means it now has:

    • 12 positive protons
      AND
      10 negative electrons 

  • Therefore, the overall charge is 2+ 

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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.