Title: Electronic structure in atoms
1Electronic structure in atoms
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3- Bohrs theory cannot explain spectra for atoms
more complex than hydrogen, which show sub-lines. - In 1926 Erwin Schrodinger devised a theory to
describe more complicated atoms quantum
mechanics. - This classifies regions of atoms into SHELLS,
SUB-SHELLS and ORBITALS.
4Quantum numbers
- Each electron in an atom is described by 4
different quantum numbers - n, l, ml, ms
- The first three (n, l and ml) describe an atomic
orbital where an electron is found - 3 numbers because three dimensions
- A fourth quantum number describes the spin of an
electron
5Quantum Numbers 1 and 2
SHELLS
- 1. PRINCIPAL QUANTUM NUMBER (n) one on
which energy of an electron principally depends
orbitals with same n are in same shell also
determines size of an orbital values 1, 2, 3,
6Quantum Numbers 1 and 2
SUB-SHELLS
2. ANGULAR MOMENTUM QUANTUM NUMBER (l) energy of
an atom also depends to a small extent on l
distinguishes orbitals of same n by giving them
different shapes any integer value from 0 to
n-1 orbitals of same n but different l are in
different sub-shells
s p d f g
0 1 2 3
4 Example 2p indicates shell 2 (energy),
sub-level p (shape)
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9- Werner Heisenberg stated in 1927 that it is
impossible to know with precision both the
position and the momentum of an electron. - The observer affects the observed.
- Only noticeable on the sub-atomic scale (e.g. an
electron, not a baseball, nor dust). - It is not possible to define a point in space
where an electron will be found. - However, we can obtain the probability of finding
an electron at a certain point.
10An area where there is a greater than 90 chance
of finding an electron atomic orbital
11Quantum Number 3
ORBITALS
- 3. MAGNETIC QUANTUM NUMBER (ml)
distinguishes orbitals in same shell and subshell
(i.e. energy and shape) by giving them a
different orientation in space values -l to l
12s orbitals
13p orbitals
14d orbitals
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16SHELL
SUB-SHELL
ORBITAL
17Pauli Exclusion Principle
- No two electrons in any one atom can have the
same four quantum numbers - An orbital can hold at most two electrons, and
then only if the two electrons in that orbital
have opposite spins
18Quantum number 4
- 4. SPIN QUANTUM NUMBER (ms) each orbital can
hold 2 electrons, and each has a different
direction of spin, -½ and ½
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20Hunds Rule
- Electrons fill orbitals singly and with parallel
spins before pairing occurs.
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22Electronic configurations
Spectroscopic notation
Outer electrons, control chemical properties
23Practise
- Write electronic configurations (obital-box and
spectroscopic) for - Helium
- Beryllium
- Oxygen
- Aluminium
- Calcium
- Bromine
24Aufbau principle
- The Aufbau principle is a building up principle,
which helps you to write electronic
configurations - When electrons are placed in orbitals, the
energy levels are filled up in order of
increasing energy
25Filling orbitals
1s, 2s, 2p, 3s, 3p, 4s, 3d, 4p, 5s, 4d, 5p, 6s,
4f, 5d, 6p, 7s, 5f
26Energy depends on n and l Different orbitals in
the same sub-shell have the same energy Orbitals
with the same energy are called
degenerate, There is interaction among different
sub-shells in higher energy levels, which lowers
their energy and explains the order of filling.
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