www.whyville.net Jan 23, 2004 Weekly Issue



JasmineK
Times Writer

What the Heck is an Ion?

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Drumroll please! *Drrrrrrr*

Hello and welcome to the show! This is JasmineK, with her FIRST SCIENCE ARTICLE EVER (how did the Editor let me get away with this??? LOL)

Ok, now on to the science. Today's topics is -- IONS! Yes! Ions! Those things that... you first heard of when you read Deriko's article about the new Ion Engine Game?!? BINGO, you've won a million dollars and a goat!!! Haha, just kidding.

All right, so what is an ion, really? Basically, it's an atom. Only, that's not exactly it. LOL, this is my first show, you know... but let me explain.

As you may know, atoms are extremely tiny things that make up all matter. I'm made of atoms. You're made of atoms. Your computer screen is made of atoms. The air you're breathing right now is made of atoms. Trillions of them.

Atoms may be tiny, but they are very complex. In the middle, they each have a nucleus. The nucleus contains some even tinier things called protons and neutrons. And outside of the nucleus, these even tinier things called electrons are buzzing around in the electron shell. The shell has different layers. The first layer is very small, it can only hold up to two electrons. So if there's more than two electrons, the atom adds another layer, which holds up to eight electrons. And then the next holds 16. And so on.

So, each atom has protons, neutrons and electrons. But different elements have different numbers of these parts. That's why oxygen is different from, say, gold (too bad, eh?). However, no matter the number, all protons are positively charged and all electrons are negatively charged. (Well, unless you get into some really complicated physics, which I'm not going to get into here.) Luckily, atoms usually have the same number of electrons as protons. So the positive and negative charges cancel each other out; the atom is neutral.

However, atoms are fickle things, hard to please. They want to have exactly eight electrons in the outermost layer of their electron shell. Don't ask me why... puh-lease, this isn't AP Chemistry! Just remember, for an atom, eight is happiness. So to test this, let's say you have an atom of fluorine. Flourine has nine protons and nine electrons. It's neutral. For now.

Where do those nine electrons go? Two fit in the first layer, and the other seven go in the second layer. "But wait!" the atom screams. "I WANT EIGHT ELECTRONS IN THAT LAYER!" It needs another electron! How's it going to get one? It's going to STEAL one. Yes, that's right. It will steal. But maybe it can find an atom that's willing to donate... hmm... a sodium atom, perhaps?

Sodium atoms have 11 electrons. Two go in the first layer. Eight go in the next layer. And then there's one left over in the third layer. Sodium really doesn't want that extra electron. If it wasn't there, it could get rid of that third layer and have eight in the outermost layer! So sodium and fluorine get together and have a very special hug... er, bond. An IONIC bond, to be exact. Sodium gives fluorine an atom. Now they both have eight atoms in their outermost layer! Yay! *Happiness*

But we forgot one thing. Fluorine used to be neutral... it had nine protons and nine electrons. But now it just got another electron. So it has more negative charge than positive. THE ATOM IS NOW NEGATIVELY CHARGED! And an atom with a charge isn't an atom anymore... IT'S AN ION! Our fluorine atom has become a negative fluorine ion!!!

And meanwhile, over in sodium-land, we've got a different problem. Sodium just gave away an electron. Now it's got more protons than electrons, more positive charge than negative charge. It's positive! It's a POSITIVE SODIUM ION!

But the two atoms were happy being ions and they lived happily ever after... THE END.

There you go, the SUPER-DUPER JASMINEK SCIENCE SHOW IS NOW OVER! But any good show needs a good theme song. Hmm, maybe I should have done this at the beginning. Oh well, better late than never! Here goes:

Here's the story... Of a lovely atom
It was a fluorine atom so you know
It had nine protons... and nine electrons
One too few for it

Here's the story... Of another atom
Except this one, was called Sodium
It had eleven protons... and eleven electrons
But had one too many

Till the one day when the fluorine met the sodium
And they knew that it was much more than a hunch.
That these two, would someday form an ionic bond
That's the way they both became charged ions
Charged ions, charged ions

That's the way they became charged ions.

*Doot doo doo doot doot -- doot doot!*

-JasmineK ;-)
*Humming*

 

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