Title: Atomic Structure
1Chapter 5
Atomic Structure Atoms and Ions
2Michael Faraday
- Faraday discovered that ionic substances, such as
NaCl would not conduct electricity in the solid
state, but would conduct electricity when
dissolved in water or molten (melted). - He proposed that atoms could become charged and
move toward oppositely charged electrodes - He, and others, proposed that there may be a
fundamental particle of electricity. Stoney
called it the electron.
3Crookes Tube
- William Crookes, in the late 1800s, discovered
that if electrodes, connected to a high voltage
power supply, were separated and placed in a
vacuum tube, the tube would glow with a
yellow-green light. - It was discovered that the light was a ray that
came from the cathode (negative electrode) and
traveled to the anode (positive electrode). - The back end of the tube could be painted with a
luminous pigment and the path of the ray could be
studied. - The important work done with Crookes tube was
performed later by J.J. Thomson.
4Crookes Tube(Cathode Ray Tube)
5Crookes Tube (Cont.)
6Crookes Tube (Cont.)(Detecting positive
particles)
7Properties of Electrons
- The ray that Thomson studied was a beam of
electrons. He was able to determine that the
electron - Was negatively charged
- Was affected by a magnetic field
- Had a mass/charge ratio that he measured and
calculated - Robert Millikan (an American) used an oil-drop
experiment to measure the charge on oil droplets
falling between charged plates. The charge on
the droplets was a whole number multiple of the
charge on the electron.
8Millikans Oil Drop Experiment for Determining
the Charge on the Electron
9Calculation of the Properties of the Electron
- Thomson found that the mass to charge ratio of
the electron was -5.686x10-12 kg/C - Millikan found the charge on the electron was
-1.62 x 10-19 C. (C is the abbreviation for the
coulomb, a unit of charge.) - Therefore the mass of the electron can be
calculated mass charge x mass/charge - mass (-1.602x10-19C)(-5.686x10-12 kg/C)
- 9.1 x 10-31 kg 9.1 x 10-28 g
10How are negative and positive charges arranged in
the atom?
Thomson proposed a model of a spherical atom
composed of diffuse, positively charged matter or
field, in which electrons were embedded like
plum pudding.
Thomsons Plum Pudding Model of the Atom
11X-Rays
- Roentgen discovered X-rays which could penetrate
opaque materials. - He discovered X-rays while working with a cathode
ray tube. - These rays seemed to be emitted from the Cathode
Ray tube itself and could be detected in another
room.
12Radioactivity
- Becquerel discovered radioactivity.
- He left some uranium crystals on top of some
photographic film which was covered with opaque,
black paper. When he developed the film, he
observed spots due to rays coming from the
uranium crystals. The rays had penetrated the
paper!
13Radioactivity and the Curies
- Pierre and Marie Curie
- Marie named the effect observed by Becquerel
radioactivity. - Radioactivity is the spontaneous emission of
radiation from certain unstable elements. - Pierre and Marie discovered radium and polonium,
radioactive elements. - They discovered much about radioactivity and
radioactive elements
14Radioactivity (continued)
- Marie and Pierre Curie and Becquerel shared the
Nobel Prize in Physics in 1903. - Marie won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1911.
- It is generally believed that both Curies died as
a consequence of radiation poisoning - Their daughter, Irene, also won a Nobel prize in
1935
15Properties of alpha (a), beta (b), and gamma (g)
rays
16Method for Studying Emissions
17Rutherford set out to test Thomsons hypothesis
He bombarded gold foil with a particles. If
Thomsons plum pudding hypothesis were correct,
the a particles would be expected to be deflected
only to a small extent, if at all, because they
should act as dense, positively charged bullets
and go right through the gold atoms. The
embedded electrons could not deflect the a
particles any more than a bowling ball would be
deflected by ping pong balls.
18Rutherfords Alpha Scattering Experiment used to
Discover the Nucleus
19A Surprising Result Was Observed
- Although most of the particles went straight
through the gold foil, a few of them were
deflected by the foil at various angles. In fact
some of the a particles bounced right back at the
source. - Thomsons plum pudding model did not explain
this. What model would explain it?
20Rutherfords nuclear model of the atom.
- Atoms consisted of a central nucleus which had a
positive charge and which had a very small
volume, but it also contained most of the mass of
the atom. Surrounding the nucleus were
electrons, which had very little mass, but which
occupied most of the volume of the atom. - What was in the nucleus?
21Atomic Interpretation of the Alpha Particle
Scattering Experiment
22We already knew the atom contains electron(s)
- Goldstein discovered a positively charged
particle that had a charge equal to the electron,
but of opposite sign. It had a mass of 1 amu
(1837 times the mass of the electron. This
particle is called the proton. - Rutherford concluded that the nucleus contained
protons. He could account for the charge of the
nucleus, but the mass of was too large for the
number of protons.
23In 1932, Chadwick discovered a second nuclear
particle, the neutron
- Protons and neutrons make up most of the mass of
the atom and are in the nucleus. - Electrons are very light and are flying around
outside the nucleus.
24Rutherfords Nuclear Model of the Atom
- Despite the success of Rutherfords model at
explaining much of what was known about atomic
structure, there were problems. - The biggest problem was an apparent violation of
the laws of physics. A charged particle, when
accelerated, was known to emit electromagnetic
radiation. However, electrons, according to
Rutherford where orbiting in circular
(accelerating) orbits around the nucleus and did
not emit electromagnetic radiation. - It was apparent that a more sophisticated model
was needed.
25Electromagnetic Radiation
- Before we can explore our model of the atom
further, we need to look more closely at energy - Chemistry is the study of matter and energy. One
type of energy is electromagnetic radiation. Let
us look more closely at the properties of
electromagnetic waves. Electromagnetic waves
consist of oscillating, perpendicular electric
and magnetic fields. - The wavelength of radiation is the distance
between peaks in a wave. (?) - The frequency is the number of peaks that pass a
point in a second. (? )
26Wavelength of Light
27A Simple Frequency and Wavelength Formula
- ln c
- l c/n
- n c/l
- l is wavelength measured in length units (m, cm,
nm, etc.) - n is frequency measured in Hz (s-1).
- c is the velocity of light in vacuum
- 3.0 x108 ms-1
28Electromagnetic Spectrum
29Electromagnetic Waves
- Describe electromagnetic radiation and give
examples of it in relation to the electromagnetic
spectrum. - Type l (nm) n (Hz)
- radio (Rf) 108 - 1012 104-109
- microwave 106-108 109-1012
- infrared (IR) 750-106 1012-1014
- visible (vis) 400-750 1014-1015
- ultraviolet (UV) 10-400 1015-1016
- X-rays, g rays 10-4-1 1016-1022
30The Electromagnetic Spectrum
31Light Quanta and Photons
- Quantum- A packet of energy equal to hn. The
smallest quantity of energy that can be emitted
or absorbed. - Photon- A quantum of electromagnetic radiation.
- Thus light can be described as a particle
(photon) or as a wave with wavelength and
frequency. This is called wave-particle duality
(one of the most profound mysteries of science)
32Elemental Line Spectra
When certain elements are heated or
electronically excited, they emit light of
different colors. When the light is separated
into various colors by a spectroscope, a line
spectrum is observed.
33Bright Line Emission Spectrum from Excited Element
34Emission Spectrum
- Explain the emission line spectrum of light,
based on the Bohr model of the hydrogen atom. - Bohr explained the line spectrum by asserting
that the electrons in the atoms could be in
certain quantized energy levels. - The spectrum arose due to transitions between
quantized energy levels. The energy of the
emitted light was equal to the difference in
energies of the levels.
35Bohrs explanation of line spectra
- Bohr explained the line spectrum by asserting
that the electrons in the atoms could be in
certain quantized energy levels. - The spectrum arose due to transitions between
quantized energy levels. The energy of the
emitted light was equal to the difference in
energies of the levels. - Electrons in atoms can not have any energy. They
can only have certain amounts of energy. The
electrons are said to be quantized. The emission
(bright) line spectra are produced when electrons
fall from a high energy level (excited state) to
a lower energy level.
36Energy of emission lines
Ephoton DE Ehigh-Elow DE hn hc/l nlight
DE/h l hc/DE
Since Ehigh and Elow are discreet numbers, DE
must be a discreet number. Therefore, n and l
must be discreet numbers, giving rise to single
frequencies and wavelengths of light. Hence, the
line spectra.
37Emission Lines
38The Bohr Atom
- Bohr was able to accurately predict the energy
levels of the one-electron atom, hydrogen. - He suggested that multi-electron atoms would have
electrons placed in the energy levels described
by his theory. - A certain maximum number of electrons could be in
each level.
39Electrons in Energy Levels
- The maximum number of electrons in any energy
level is 2n2 - Level 2n2 maximum number of
electrons - 1 2(1)2 2
- 2 2(2)2 8
- 3 2(3)2 18
- 4 2(4)2 32
40Bohr Diagrams
- Illustrations of electrons in energy levels are
called Bohr Diagrams. - The electrons in the outer levels are called
valence electrons. - The valence electrons are those involved in
chemical bonding. - Examples of Bohr diagrams are shown on the next
slide
41Bohr Diagrams
42Valence Electrons
- The outer electrons in an atom can be represented
with dots in the Lewis electron dot symbol. Each
outer electron is represented by a dot around the
atomic symbol - Sodium has one valence electron, hence one dot
- Na
- Sodium ion has lost its valence electron, no
dots - Na
43Lewis Symbols
44Lewis Dot Structures for Main Group Elements are
Determined form the Group Number
- Group IA elements (alkali metals) have 1 valence
electron 1 dot Na - Group IIA elements (alkaline earths) have 2
valence electrons 2 dots Ca - Group VIII elements (noble gases) have eight
dots, an octet Ne - He, has only 2 electrons, 2 dots He
45Bohrs Model was improved upon in the 1920s with
the Quantum Mechanical Model.
- Since Bohrs model only worked for the hydrogen
atom, a more sophisticated model was needed. - The next breakthrough was made by Louis de
Broglie, who suggested that electrons, like
photons have wave properties - De Broglie thought that Bohrs energy levels were
created by the wave properties of the electron
46De Broglie suggested an electron could only have
a path that allowed a whole number of wave
patterns
47Other Contributors to the Quantum Mechanical Atom
- Schrödinger used de Broglies ideas to create
some powerful wave equations to describe the
electron. - Heisenberg used probability and matrices to
describe the electron. He stated a controversial
Uncertainty Principle. The path of an electron
can not be determined. It is uncertain. Thus a
specific orbit for an electron can not be known.
48Evolving Theories of the Atom
49In addition to the energy levels of Bohr, there
are sub-levels
- Bohrs energy levels were assigned a principal
quantum number, n, which could values of 1, 2, 3
This quantum number, n designates the energy
level and size of the region in space the
electrons might be found. - Within an energy level there are sublevels or
subshells, designated s, p, d, and f. These
subshell designations tell the shape of the
region in space the electrons might be found.
50Charge Cloud Representations of s Orbitals
51Shapes of p Orbitals
52 px, py, and pz Orbitals
A p subshell contains 3 p orbitals, each lies
perpendicular to the others on the X-Y-Z axes
53 s, p, d, and f Orbitals
54Orbitals
- Each orbital has its own set of quantum numbers.
- Each orbital can contain 2 electrons, one with
spin 1/2 the other with spin -1/2 - The quantum number and energy levels can be
described with an orbital diagram. - A summary of an orbital diagram is called an
electron configuration.
55Energies of Orbitals in Multi-Electron Atoms
- Several factors affect the energy of electrons in
multi electron atoms - Nuclear charge
- Electron repulsions
- Additional electrons in the same orbital
(shielding) - Additional electrons in inner orbitals
- Orbital shape (ml)
- spin (ms)
- Pauli Exclusion Principle No two electrons in
the same atom can have the same set of four
quantum numbers.
56Aufbau Principle
- Electrons arrangements are built-up by filling
various energy levels, starting with lower
energies, filling orbitals two at a time. They
go into the orbitals one with spin 1/2, the
other with spin - 1/2. - An orbital diagram is useful in showing this
arrangement.
57Orbital Diagrams
58Electronic Configurations
By adding electrons to the diagram, lowest energy
to highest, remembering Hunds rule and the
quantum rule that no orbital can hold more than
two electrons, an elcetronic configuration can be
created
59Electron Configurations can be Determined From
the Position in the Periodic Table
- Elements in group 1(1A) end in ns1.
- Elements in group 2 (2A) end in ns2
- Elements in group 13 (3A) end in ns2np1
- Elements in group 14 (4A) end in ns2np2
- Elements in group 15 (5A) end in ns2np3
- Elements in group 16 (6A) end in ns2np4
- Elements in group 17 (7A) end in ns2np5
- Elements in group 18 (8A) end in ns2np6
60Periodic Table Family Filling Diagram
61Periodic Table Orbital Block Diagram