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ChemistryEasyMCQ2021 · 27 Jul Shift 2

Q33.The number of neutrons and electrons, respectively, present in the radioactive isotope of hydrogen is :- (1) 1 and 1 (2) 3 and 1 (3) 2 and 1 (4) 2 and 2

What This Question Tests

This question assesses basic knowledge about isotopes of hydrogen, specifically the number of neutrons and electrons in the radioactive isotope, tritium.

Concepts Tested

Atomic numberMass numberNumber of protons, neutrons, and electrons

Formulas Used

Number of neutrons = Mass number - Atomic number

📚 NCERT Sections This Tests

75.4And 24.6 Per Cent, Respectively. Thus, The Average Mass Of A Chlorine

Physics Class 12 · Chapter 75

80% match

75.4 and 24.6 per cent, respectively. Thus, the average mass of a chlorine atom is obtained by the weighted average of the masses of the two isotopes, which works out to be 75.4 × 34.98 + 24.6 × 36.98 = 100 = 35.47 u which agrees with the atomic mass of chlorine. Even the lightest element, hydrogen has three isotopes having masses 1.0078 u, 2.0141 u, and 3.0160 u. The nucleus of the lightest atom of hydrogen, which has a relative abundance of 99.985%, is called the proton. The mass of a proton is −27 m p = 1.00727 u = 1.67262 × 10 kg (13.2) This is equal to the mass of the hydrogen atom (= 1.00783u), minus the mass of a single electron (me = 0.00055 u). The other two isotopes of hydrogen are called deuterium and tritium. Tritium nuclei, being unstable, do not occur naturally and are produced artificially in laboratories. The positive charge in the nucleus is that of the protons. A proton carries one unit of fundamental charge and is stable. It was earlier thought that the nucleus may contain electrons, but this was ruled out later using arguments based on quantum theory. All the electrons of an atom are outside the nucleus. We know that the number of these electrons outside 307the nucleus of the atom is Z, the atomic number. The total charge of the Reprint 2025-26 Physics atomic electrons is thus (–Ze), and since the atom is neutral, the charge of the nucleus is (+Ze). The number of protons in the nucleus of the atom is, therefore, exactly Z, the atomic number. Discovery of Neutron Since the nuclei of deuterium and tritium are isotopes of hydrogen, they must contain only one proton each. But the masses of the nuclei of hydrogen, deuterium and tritium are in the ratio of 1:2:3. Therefore, the nuclei of deuterium and tritium must contain, in addition to a proton, some neutral matter. The amount of neutral matter present in the nuclei of these isotopes, expressed in units of mass of a proton, is approximately equal to one and two, respectively. This fact indicates that the nuclei of atoms contain, in addition to protons, neutral matter in multiples of a basic unit. This hypothesis was verified in 1932 by James Chadwick who observed emission of neutral radiation when beryllium nuclei were bombarded with alpha-particles (a-particles are helium nuclei, to be discussed in a later section). It was found that this neutral radiation could knock out protons from light nuclei such as those of helium, carbon and nitrogen. The only neutral radiation known at that time was photons (electromagnetic radiation). Application of the principles of conservation of energy and momentum showed that if the neutral radiation consisted of photons, the energy of photons would have to be much higher than is available from the bombardment of beryllium nuclei with a-particles. The clue to this puzzle, which Chadwick satisfactorily solved, was to assume that the neutral radiation consists of a new type of neutral particles called neutrons. From conservation of energy and momentum, he was able to determine the mass of new particle ‘as very nearly the same as mass of proton’. The mass of a neutron is now known to a high degree of accuracy. It is m n = 1.00866 u = 1.6749×10–27 kg (13.3) Chadwick was awarded the 1935 Nobel Prize in Physics for his discovery of the neutron. A free neutron, unlike a free proton, is unstable. It decays into a proton, an electron and a antineutrino (another elementary particle), and has a mean life of about 1000s. It is, however, stable inside the nucleus. The composition of a nucleus can now be described using the following terms and symbols: Z - atomic number = number of protons [13.4(a)] N - neutron number = number of neutrons [13.4(b)] A - mass number = Z + N = total number of protons and neutrons [13.4(c)] One also uses the term nucleon for a proton or a neutron. Thus the number of nucleons in an atom is its mass number A. Nuclear species or nuclides are shown by the notation ZA X where X is the chemical symbol of the species. For example, the nucleus of gold is denoted by 19779 Au . It contains 197 nucleons, of which 79 are protons 308 and the rest118 are neutrons. Reprint 2025-26 Nuclei The composition of isotopes of an element can now be readily explained. The nuclei of isotopes of a given element contain the same number of protons, but differ from each other in their number of neutrons. Deuterium, 12 H, which is an isotope of hydrogen, contains one proton and one neutron. Its other isotope tritium, 13 H, contains one proton and two neutrons. The element gold has 32 isotopes, ranging from A =173 to A = 204. We have already mentioned that chemical properties of elements depend on their electronic structure. As the atoms of isotopes have identical electronic structure they have identical chemical behaviour and are placed in the same location in the periodic table. All nuclides with same mass number A are called isobars. For example, the nuclides 13 H and 32He are isobars. Nuclides with same neutron number N but different atomic number Z, for example 19880 Hg and 19779 Au , are called isotones.

12.7The Radius Of The Innermost Electron Orbit Of A Hydrogen Atom Is

Physics Class 12 · Chapter 12

79% match

12.7 The radius of the innermost electron orbit of a hydrogen atom is 5.3×10–11 m. What are the radii of the n = 2 and n =3 orbits?

12.5A Hydrogen Atom Initially In The Ground Level Absorbs A Photon,

Physics Class 12 · Chapter 12

77% match

12.5 A hydrogen atom initially in the ground level absorbs a photon, which excites it to the n = 4 level. Determine the wavelength and frequency of photon.