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GCSE/Combined Science/AQA

P4.1Atoms and isotopes: atomic structure, mass and atomic numbers and the development of the model of the atom

Notes

P4.1 Atoms and Isotopes

Structure of the atom

Every atom has a nucleus (tiny, dense, positively charged) surrounded by electrons (negatively charged, very low mass, in shells/energy levels).

ParticleRelative massRelative chargeLocation
Proton1+1Nucleus
Neutron10Nucleus
Electron1/1836 (~0)−1Shells around nucleus

The nucleus occupies a tiny fraction of the atom's volume — approximately 1/10,000 of the atomic radius — yet contains almost all the mass.

Atomic number, mass number and isotopes

Atomic number (Z): number of protons in the nucleus. Defines which element it is.

Mass number A: total number of protons + neutrons (nucleons).

Number of neutrons = A − Z

Standard notation:

$$^{A}_{Z}X$$ where X is the chemical symbol.

Isotopes

Isotopes are atoms of the same element (same Z) with different numbers of neutrons (different A).

  • They have identical chemical properties (same number of electrons → same bonding behaviour).
  • They have different physical properties (different mass; some are radioactive).

Example — Carbon isotopes:

IsotopeZANeutronsStable?
¹²C6126Yes
¹³C6137Yes
¹⁴C6148No — radioactive; used in carbon dating

Example — Uranium isotopes:

IsotopeZANeutrons
²³⁵U92235143
²³⁸U92238146

Development of the atomic model

The model of the atom has changed as new experimental evidence emerged:

  1. Solid sphere model (Dalton, ~1800): Atoms as indivisible solid balls.
  2. Plum pudding model (Thomson, 1897): Electrons embedded in a positive "pudding" — after discovery of the electron.
  3. Nuclear model (Rutherford, 1911): Geiger–Marsden gold foil experiment showed that most alpha particles pass straight through, but a few are deflected at large angles (including back-scatter). Conclusion: mass and positive charge concentrated in a tiny nucleus; most of the atom is empty space.
  4. Bohr model (1913): Electrons orbit in fixed energy levels (shells). Explained line spectra. Electrons can jump between levels by absorbing/emitting photons.
  5. Modern quantum model: Electrons described by probability distributions (orbitals), not fixed orbits. Beyond GCSE detail.

Rutherford's gold foil experiment — key observations

  • Most alpha particles passed straight through → atom is mostly empty space.
  • Small fraction deflected slightly → nucleus is positively charged.
  • Very small fraction deflected through large angles / bounced back → nucleus is tiny and very dense.

Common exam errors

  1. Saying mass number = number of neutrons. It's protons + neutrons.
  2. Confusing isotopes with different elements. Same element = same Z.
  3. Saying the Rutherford experiment "disproved" the plum pudding model without explaining what the evidence showed.

AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-deep-combined-science

Practice questions

Try each before peeking at the worked solution.

  1. Question 14 marks

    Atomic structure notation

    An atom is written as ²³⁵₉₂U.

    (a) State the number of protons, neutrons and electrons in a neutral ²³⁵U atom. [3]
    (b) Write the notation for an isotope of uranium with 3 more neutrons. [1]

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  2. Question 24 marks

    Isotopes definition and properties

    (a) Define the term "isotope". [2]
    (b) Explain why isotopes of the same element have the same chemical properties but different physical properties. [2]

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  3. Question 35 marks

    Rutherford gold foil experiment

    In Rutherford's gold foil experiment, a beam of alpha particles was directed at a thin gold foil.

    (a) Most alpha particles passed straight through. What does this tell you about the structure of the atom? [1]
    (b) A small number of alpha particles were deflected through large angles. What does this tell you? [2]
    (c) How did this experiment lead to the nuclear model replacing the plum pudding model? [2]

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  4. Question 43 marks

    Development of atomic model

    Describe how the model of the atom changed from Dalton to Rutherford. [3]

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  5. Question 53 marks

    Carbon isotopes

    Carbon-12 (¹²C) and Carbon-14 (¹⁴C) are isotopes of carbon.

    (a) What do both atoms have in common? [1]
    (b) How do they differ? [1]
    (c) Carbon-14 is used in radiocarbon dating. Suggest why carbon-12 is not used for this purpose. [1]

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Flashcards

P4.1 — Atoms and isotopes

11-card SR deck for AQA Combined Science topic P4.1

11 cards · spaced repetition (SM-2)