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  • It’s hard to imagine just how tiny atoms are.

  • One sheet of paper is roughly half a million atoms thick.

  • Volume-wise, one atom is as small compared

  • to an apple as that apple is to the entire earth.

  • So you might be surprised to learn that

  • chemists can actually see atoms.

  • Not with their eyes.

  • With incredibly precise tools.

  • [Legends of Chemistry intro]

  • The idea of atoms stretches back to ancient Greece,

  • when the philosopher Democritus declared that

  • all matter is made of tiny particles.

  • The philosopher Plato even decidedwronglythat

  • different substances had differently

  • shaped atoms, like pyramids or cubes.

  • The first modern evidence for atoms appeared

  • in the early 1800s, when British chemist

  • John Dalton discovered that chemicals always

  • contain whole-number ratios of elements.

  • That’s why it’s H2O and not H2.4O or H√17O.

  • The reason for these whole numbers, Dalton

  • suggested, was because you can’t have a half

  • an atom or point-two atoms, only whole atoms.

  • It’s hard to imagine chemistry today without Dalton’s insight.

  • But it was actually controversial in its day.

  • Why?

  • Because chemists couldn’t see atoms.

  • Many considered them like negative numbers

  • or ideal gases: useful for calculating things,

  • but not existing in the real world.

  • Even Dmitri Mendeleev, father of the periodic table,

  • refused to believe in atoms for many years.

  • Why didn’t chemists just look for atoms under microscopes?

  • To see something under a microscope, the wavelength

  • of light youre shining through the microscope

  • can't be larger than whatever youre looking at.

  • Unfortunately, visible light is thousands of times bigger than atoms.

  • So chemists had to wait for light with

  • shorter wavelengths, like x-rays.

  • X-rays were discovered in the 1890s by

  • German scientist Wilhelmntgen, who

  • realized that photographs taken with x-rays

  • allowed him to see through objects.

  • Roentgen thought he’d gone insane when

  • he saw this, but today were all familiar with

  • x-rays from trips to the dentist and doctor.

  • Chemists don’t use x-rays to see through things.

  • Instead, they bounce x-rays off things like crystals,

  • which are solids with layers of atoms. When x-rays

  • hit an atom in a crystal, they bounce back.

  • Others slip through and bounce off the second layer down.

  • Or the third layer, or deeper.

  • After being reflected, these x-rays strike a detector

  • screen, like the ball bouncing back in Pong.

  • And based on where the x-rays came from

  • and how they interacted with each other,

  • scientists can work backward and figure out

  • the arrangement of atoms in the crystal.

  • This reflection and interaction of light rays is called diffraction.

  • X-ray diffraction, sometimes called x-ray

  • crystallography, has led to dozens of

  • Nobel Prizes for chemists since the 1920s.

  • It also led to one of the biggest discoveries in science

  • history, the structure of DNA. James Watson and

  • Francis Crick get credit nowadays, but they based

  • their work on the work of Rosalind Franklin,

  • a crystallographer in England.

  • She began taking x-ray pictures of DNA in 1952,

  • and Watson’s glimpse of one picturephotograph 51.

  • was the vital clue in determining that

  • DNA was a double helix.

  • This incident remains controversial today

  • Because Franklin never gave Watson

  • permission to view photograph 51.

  • If x-rays let chemists peer at the structure of atoms,

  • scanning tunneling microscopes

  • finally revealed atoms themselves.

  • Rather than bounce light off something,

  • an STM runs a sharp needle over its surface.

  • It’s like chemical Braille, except

  • the tip never quite touches.

  • As the tip moves along the surface, scientists

  • can reconstruct the atomic landscapemaking

  • individual atoms visible at last in the early 1980s.

  • Lo and behold, the atoms weren’t Plato’s cubes

  • and pyramids, but spheres of different sizes.

  • By 1989 a few scientists had even adapted

  • STM technology to manipulate single

  • xenon atoms and spell out words.

  • Well let you guess what company they worked for.

  • Also in 1989, the chemist Ahmed Zewail moved

  • beyond looking at stationary atoms and

  • developed tools to see atoms in action.

  • Zewail wanted to study how atoms break bonds

  • and swap partners during reactions.

  • So he developed the world’s fastest camera,

  • which shoots pulses of laser light a few femtoseconds

  • long—a few billionths of a microsecond.

  • If you stretched one femtosecond to a full second,

  • it would be like stretching a single

  • second out to 32 million years.

  • While Zewail’s laser flashed like a strobe, his camera snapped pictures.

  • Zewail then ran the pictures together

  • like a slow-motion replay.

  • Since then femtochemistry had provided insight into

  • everything from ozone depletion to the workings

  • of the human retina. Zewail won a Nobel Prize

  • in chemistry for his work in 1999.

  • The ancient Greeks dreamed up fanciful shapes for atoms.

  • But it took 2,400 years before scientists could see

  • them for real and study their behavior.

  • Seeing truly is believing for human beings, and it was

  • chemists and other scientists who fulfilled this need

  • and finally revealed what our universe is made of.

  • Thanks for watching chemheads.

  • Be sure to check out other videos in the

  • Legends of Chemistry series, Like the Woman

  • Who Saved the U.S. Space Program, and

  • the crafty scientists who tricked the Nazis.

  • Don’t forget to hit the subscribe button

  • for weekly chemistry awesomeness.

It’s hard to imagine just how tiny atoms are.

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