Three ways of classifying atoms by comparing their numbers of protons (atomic number), mass number (protons plus neutrons), and neutrons.
The clean distinctions (isotopes same element, isobars same mass number, isotones same neutrons) and stock examples such as carbon isotopes and uranium isotopes are recurring chemistry facts, with links to nuclear technology.
Isotopes share the atomic number (protons) but differ in mass; isobars share the mass number but differ in protons; do not reverse the two. Isotopes of an element behave the same chemically, so they cannot be separated by ordinary chemical reactions, only by physical methods based on mass.
Isotopes: same protons, different neutrons (carbon-12 and carbon-14); isobars: same mass number, different elements; isotones: same number of neutrons.
concept radioactivity, concept nuclear fission and fusion, concept acids bases and salts