1.1 STRUCTURE OF THE ATOM
It used to be a common thing for
people to say ‘We all use electricity, but no one knows what it really
is’. This is no longer true, ever since,
at about the turn of the century, Lord Rutherford gave to the world his theory
of the structure of the atom, shown in Figure 1.1.
Figure 1.1 NEON ATOM
He said that every atom had a
nucleus carrying positive electric charges, and around it, circulating in
orbit, were one or more electrons each carrying a single negative electric
charge. Moreover the number of negative
electrons were such as exactly to neutralise the positive charge on the
nucleus. The attraction between the
negative electrons and the positive nucleus keeps the fast-moving electrons in
orbit exactly like the gravitational attraction between the planets and the
sun. And, like in the solar system, the
electrons (planets), coloured blue in the figure, are much smaller than the
nucleus, being about one-thousandth of its size.
The nucleus itself is not a single
element but consists of many particles called ‘protons’, each one carrying a
single positive electric charge. The
protons are shown coloured red in the figure, so that normally in all matter
there are equal numbers of protons in the nucleus and of the orbiting
electrons.
Later it was discovered there was a
third type of nuclear element - the ‘neutron’. This is a particle, about the
same size as a proton, but without any electrical charge, so that it has no
effect on the number of orbiting electrons but merely makes the atom
heavier. These neutrons appear white in
the nucleus of the figure.
The chemical behavior of all the
elements which constitute matter depends on the number of orbiting electrons.
This number varies from 1 in the lightest element (hydrogen) to 92 in the
heaviest (uranium). Until recently it
was thought that the list stopped there, but advances in nuclear physics have
identified elements with up to 103 electrons in man-made matter; plutonium has
94.
Figure 1.2 shows the first eleven
elements of the list. The lightest,
hydrogen, has one proton and one electron.
The next, helium, has two of each, then comes lithium with three,
beryllium with four, and so on to the metal sodium (Na) with eleven. Some of these elements are well known
(hydrogen (1), carbon (6), nitrogen (7), oxygen (8)); others are less
common. The figure shows only the
protons in the nucleus. There are in
most cases also neutrons, but as they do not affect the orbiting electrons they
are not shown.
One peculiar thing should be noted
about the electron orbits: they form themselves into rings (or more strictly
‘shells’). The innermost ring cannot
contain more than two electrons. Any
additional ones go into a second ring (like lithium) until that ring is full,
It cannot contain more than eight (neon), after which a third ring begins to
fill (sodium). That too cannot contain
more than eight, after which a fourth ring begins to fill. This has a most important effect on the behavior
of electricity.
When a ring is full, such as with
helium (2) or neon (10), the electrons are tightly bound together and are
difficult to displace. In the upper part
of Figure 1.3 a neon atom is shown under the influence of a strong electric field. The negative electrons are attracted towards
the positive end, but, though their orbits are distorted, they are not broken
up. Such elements form the ‘inert gases’
such as helium, neon, argon, which will not combine with anything.
In the lower half of the figure is
a sodium atom in the same electric field.
Here there is a lone electron in the third ring, and it is quite loosely
bound to the nucleus. Quite a small
electric field is sufficient to break it out of its orbit and cause it to seek
the positive pole. Such elements, where
electrons can move easily, form many of the ‘metals’; they are used for most
electric conductors.
It is easy to see now why metals
conduct electrons easily whereas many other elements do not - the latter are
called ‘insulators’.
Figure 1.4 shows a conductor
between two poles of an electric field.
This field is maintained by an electron ‘pump’, or generator, which is
driving them round from left to right in the pump and from right to left in the
conductor. If the conductor is a metal,
the electric field continually breaks off electrons which pass from one atom to
the next and so on back to the pump.
There is a continuous flow of electrons through the conductor and round
the loop - we say there is an ‘electric current’ in the circuit.
For reasons going back into history
the charge on an electron was found to be negative, so it is always attracted
towards the positive pole - that is to say, in Figure 1.4 the electron flow in
the conductor is from right to left, and the left-hand pole must be the
positive. But convention has ordained
that currents flow from positive to negative, and therefore the conventional
electric current is said to be from left to right - that is, against the electron
flow. The original decision was a disaster,
but it is too late to change now, and this is a cross we just have to
bear. In these manuals current will
always be considered as flowing from positive to negative.
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