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GCSE/Combined Science/WJEC

P4.1Atomic structure, isotopes and the development of the atomic model

Notes

Atomic structure, isotopes and the development of the atomic model

WJEC Physics asks both for current atomic structure and for how the model evolved over time.

Modern atomic structure

An atom has a tiny dense nucleus made of protons and neutrons, with electrons orbiting in shells.

ParticleRelative massRelative chargeLocation
Proton1+1Nucleus
Neutron10Nucleus
Electron1/1836 (~0)-1Shells
  • Atomic (proton) number, Z — number of protons. Defines the element.
  • Mass number, A — protons + neutrons.
  • Electrons in a neutral atom = Z.
  • The nucleus contains over 99.95% of the mass but only ~1/100,000 of the diameter.

Isotopes

Isotopes are atoms of the same element with the same proton number but different numbers of neutrons. They have identical chemistry but different masses, and some are radioactive.

Example: carbon-12 (6p, 6n) and carbon-14 (6p, 8n). Carbon-14 is unstable and used in radiocarbon dating.

How the model developed

  1. Dalton (early 1800s) — atoms are tiny indivisible spheres.
  2. Thomson (1897) — discovered the electron; proposed the "plum pudding" model: positive sphere with embedded electrons.
  3. Rutherford (1909, gold-foil/alpha-scattering) — most alpha particles passed through, a few deflected sharply. Conclusion: atom is mostly empty space with a small dense positive nucleus. This replaced the plum pudding model.
  4. Bohr (1913) — electrons orbit in fixed shells/energy levels; explained line spectra.
  5. Chadwick (1932) — discovered the neutron, completing the modern picture.

WJEC exam tip

When asked to describe how Rutherford's experiment changed the model, name the observation (most alphas passed straight through, a few deflected at large angles) AND the conclusion (mostly empty space, small dense positive nucleus). Both halves are needed for full credit.

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Practice questions

Try each before peeking at the worked solution.

  1. Question 15 marks

    Particles in an isotope

    WJEC Unit 2 Physics — Foundation tier

    An atom of magnesium can be written as Mg-25 with proton number 12.

    (a) State how many protons, neutrons and electrons it contains. (3 marks)
    (b) Magnesium also exists as Mg-24. Explain what is meant by the term "isotope". (2 marks)

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  2. Question 25 marks

    Rutherford alpha-scattering

    WJEC Unit 2 Physics — Higher tier

    Rutherford's gold-foil experiment fired alpha particles at a thin gold foil. Most particles passed straight through, but a small number were deflected through large angles.

    (a) State what was concluded about the structure of the atom from this observation. (3 marks)
    (b) Explain how this evidence overturned the earlier "plum pudding" model. (2 marks)

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  3. Question 34 marks

    Compare relative masses and charges

    WJEC Unit 2 Physics — Foundation tier

    Complete the table for the three subatomic particles in an atom.

    (a) Give the relative charge of a proton, a neutron and an electron. (3 marks)
    (b) Explain why an atom is overall electrically neutral. (1 mark)

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Flashcards

P4.1 — Atomic structure, isotopes and the development of the atomic model

7-card SR deck for WJEC GCSE Combined Science (Double Award) — Leaves Batch 1 topic P4.1

7 cards · spaced repetition (SM-2)