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Qualitative introduction to quantum theory

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Title: Qualitative introduction to quantum theory


1
Qualitative introduction to quantum theory
BS1030, Chemistry for Life Scientists November
11, 2008
  • Prof. Judith Klein-Seetharaman
  • School of Biological Sciences
  • j.klein-seetharaman_at_rhul.ac.uk

2
Overview
  • Today Study of atomic structure - from classical
    mechanics to quantum theory
  • Energy is quantized
  • Wave-particle duality
  • Next week Application of quantum theory to
    describe atomic structure
  • The uncertainty principle
  • The Schroedinger equation
  • Quantum numbers
  • Atomic orbitals
  • Third week Bonding and shapes of molecules
  • Types of bonds
  • MO theory

Atkins Jones Chapter 1.1-1.6
Atkins Jones Chapter 1.7-1.22
Atkins Jones Chapter 23
3
Atomic Structure
  • Dalton

4
Atomic Structure
  • Dalton featureless spheres
  • J.J. Thomson discovery of the electron as the
    first sub-atomic particle (neg. charge)
  • Robert Millikan determined the charge of the
    electron
  • But atom is neutral
  • J.J. Thomson atom is a blob of a positively
    charged jelly with electrons like raisins
  • Ernest Rutherford shoot positive charges from
    atoms against a thin platinum foil
  • What do you expect to find? In JJ Thomsons
    model? In alternative models?

5
Shooting alpha particles on a thin foil
1 in 20,000 is deflected with very large angle
Most go through
6
Rutherfords Atom Model
  • Nucleus many times smaller than itself with
    electrons occupying the rest of the space
  • What are the electrons doing in the atom?

7
The answer came from
8
(No Transcript)
9
The answer came from
  • The study of light emitted by heated atoms

10
The answer came from
  • The study of light emitted by heated atoms

11
What is light?
  • electromagnetic radiation
  • Oscillating electric and magnetic fields
    traveling at the speed of light
  • of cycles is frequency
  • 1Hz s-1
  • One cycle per second
  • Amplitude
  • Wavelength

l v c
Wavelength x Frequency speed of light
12
What is the speed of light
  • In vacuum 2.998 108 m/s
  • Radar waves leave earth, bounce off the moon and
    come back in 2.5 seconds (478,000 miles)

13
Short or long wavelength?
14
What is the wavelength of red?of blue?which
frequency?other waves?
15
Continuous Spectrum
16
Atomic spectra
  • are LINE spectra

17
There are patterns in the lines
  • First Joseph Balmer, a swiss school teacher in
    1885
  • Then Johann Rydberg, a swedish spectroscopist

18
What does it mean?
19
What does it mean?
  • The electrons in an atom can only have certain
    energies.
  • Energy is quantized.

20
Next puzzle black body radiation
21
Next puzzle black body radiation
  • With increasing temperature, the total energy
    emitted increases and the maximum intensity
    shifts to shorter wavelengths.

22
Stefan-Boltzmann Law
Wiens Law
23
Can you determine the temperature on the surface
of the sun?
  • Max intensity at 490nm

24
A red giant is a late stage in the evolution of a
star. The average wavelength maximum is 700nm.
  • What is the temperature of the star?

25
What is the wavelength emitted by the human body?
26
Why does the wavelength shift with T?
  • Classical physics puts no restriction on how
    small a quantum can be transferred between matter
    and radiation
  • Thus, classical physics says any hot body should
    emit any wavelength
  • Even a human body would glow in the dark
  • There would be no darkness
  • Something is wrong! Ultraviolet catastrophe

27
Plancks answer
E hn
  • Energy exchange between matter and radiation is
    quantized
  • Low frequencies, not enough energy to stimulate
    oscillations
  • hPlanck constant
  • Can reproduce Wiens and Stefan-Boltzmann laws
    perfectly

28
The nail in the coffin Photoelectric effect
  • No electrons are ejected if the frequency of the
    radiation is below a threshold value
    characteristic of the metal.
  • Immediate ejection of electrons however low the
    intensity of the radiation.
  • The kinetic energy of the ejected electrons
    increases linearly with the frequency of the
    incident radiation.

29
Einsteins explanation
  • Einstein proposed that electromagnetic radiation
    consists of particles, which were later called
    photons
  • Each photon is a packet of energy
  • Questions
  • A. What is the energy of a photon e.g. of blue
    light?
  • B. Why kinetic energy linear?

30
Bohr Frequency Condition
  • The frequency in a line spectrum of an atom
    arises from transition between two energy levels

31
Light is also waves
  • Best evidence Diffraction

32
From waves to particles back to waves
  • Line spectrum of atoms
  • Bohrs frequency condition
  • Black body radiation
  • Plancks quantization of energy
  • Photoelectric effect
  • Einsteins particle interpretation
  • Diffraction
  • Clearly a wave-related property

33
Wave-Particle Duality
  • In the wave model, the intensity of the radiation
    is proportional to the square of the amplitude of
    the wave.
  • In the particle model, the intensity is
    proportional to the number of photons present.

34
Generalization to all particles
  • French scientist Louis de Broglie proposed that
    all particles should have wavelike properties

35
The wave-like behavior of electrons can be
experimentally observed
36
Electron Microscope
  • Electrons have wavelengths suitable to image
    biological samples down to near-atomic resolution

37
The Dr. Jekyll Mr. Hyde of Physics
The Electron Wave Particle
38
Crime Scene Investigators
Ernest Rutherford New Zealand Physicist
(1871-1937) Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1908
Max Planck German Physicist (1858-1947) Nobel
Prize in Physics 1918
Albert Einstein German Physicist
(1879-1955) Nobel Prize in Physics 1921
Robert Millikan American Physicist
(1868-1953) Nobel Prize in Physics 1923
Niels Bohr Danish Physicist (1885-1962) Nobel
Prize in Physics 1922
Joseph John Thomson British Physicist
(1856-1949) Nobel Prize in Physics 1906
39
Now you (should) know
  • Why we need quantum mechanics
  • That Energy is quantized
  • That matter shows particle/wave duality
  • What are characteristics of particles
  • What are characteristics of waves
  • How to calculate energies, frequencies,
    wavelengths
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