GCSE Chemistry - Elements, Isotopes & Relative Atomic Mass

GCSE Chemistry - Elements, Isotopes & Relative Atomic Mass

Understanding Atomic Structure and Isotopes

The Basics of Atoms

  • An atom consists of a central nucleus made up of protons and neutrons, with electrons orbiting around it.
  • The number of protons in the nucleus determines the element; hydrogen is the smallest element with one proton.
  • Helium follows with two protons and two neutrons, making it the next smallest element.

The Periodic Table

  • There are approximately 100 different elements organized in the periodic table, where each box represents a unique element.
  • Each box contains a nuclear symbol; the atomic number (bottom left) indicates the number of protons specific to that element.

Identifying Elements by Protons

  • For example, helium has an atomic number of 2 (two protons), while carbon has an atomic number of 6 (six protons).
  • An atom with three protons cannot be carbon; it must be lithium, which has an atomic number of 3.

Understanding Isotopes

  • Isotopes are variations of an element that have the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons.
  • Carbon's most common isotope is carbon-12 (6 protons, 6 neutrons), while carbon-13 has 7 neutrons but still retains its identity as carbon.

Calculating Relative Atomic Mass

  • Different isotopes have varying masses due to neutron differences. To find average mass across isotopes, we calculate relative atomic mass.
  • Copper has two stable isotopes: copper-63 (69.2% abundance) and copper-65 (30.8% abundance).

Example Calculation for Copper

  • The formula for relative atomic mass involves multiplying each isotope's abundance by its mass and dividing by total abundances.
  • For copper: textRelative Atomic Mass = (69.2 times 63 + 30.8 times 65)/100

Final Steps in Calculation

  • After calculating individual contributions from both isotopes:
  • Copper-63 contributes approximately 4359.6,
  • Copper-65 contributes about 2002,
  • Totaling to approximately 6361.69 when summed together.

Result Interpretation

Video description

This video covers: 0:16 - What an element is 2:23 - What isotopes are 3:37 - How to calculate relative atomic mass This video is suitable for: - All tiers - All exam boards - Triple and combined science Related videos/topics: The structure of an atom - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fN8kH9Vvqo0&t=210s GCSE Chemistry playlist: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fN8kH9Vvqo0&list=PLidqqIGKox7WeOKVGHxcd69kKqtwrKl8W GCSE Biology Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=--dIBinUdeU&list=PLidqqIGKox7X5UFT-expKIuR-i-BN3Q1g GCSE Physics Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aHVJfRxeAxo&list=PLidqqIGKox7UVC-8WC9djoeBzwxPeXph7