atom Studies of the properties of atomsmatter

Development of atomic theory » Studies of the properties of atoms » Size of atoms

The first modern estimates of the size of atoms and the numbers of atoms in a given volume were made by the German chemist Joseph Loschmidt in 1865. Loschmidt used the results of kinetic theory and some rough estimates to do his calculation. The size of the atoms and the distance between them in the gaseous state are related both to the contraction of gas upon liquefaction and to the mean free path traveled by molecules in a gas. The mean free path, in turn, can be found from the thermal conductivity and diffusion rates in the gas. Loschmidt calculated the size of the atom and the spacing between atoms by finding a solution common to these relationships. His result for Avogadro’s number is remarkably close to the present accepted value of about 6.022 × 1023. The precise definition of Avogadro’s number is the number of atoms in 12 grams of the carbon isotope C-12. Loschmidt’s result for the diameter of an atom was approximately 10−8 cm.

Much later, in 1908, the French physicist Jean Perrin used Brownian motion to determine Avogadro’s number. Brownian motion, first observed in 1827 by the Scottish botanist Robert Brown, is the continuous movement of tiny particles suspended in water. Their movement is caused by the thermal motion of water molecules bumping into the particles. Perrin’s argument for determining Avogadro’s number makes an analogy between particles in the liquid and molecules in the atmosphere. The thinning of air at high altitudes depends on the balance between the gravitational force pulling the molecules down and their thermal motion forcing them up. The relationship between the weight of the particles and the height of the atmosphere would be the same for Brownian particles suspended in water. Perrin counted particles of gum mastic at different heights in his water sample and inferred the mass of atoms from the rate of decrease. He then divided the result into the molar weight of atoms to determine Avogadro’s number. After Perrin, few scientists could disbelieve the existence of atoms.

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