Title: Electrons%20in%20Atoms
1Chapter 5
2Light and Quantized Energy (5.1)
- The study of light led to the development of the
quantum mechanical model. - Light is a kind of electromagnetic radiation EM).
- All move at 3.00 x 108 m/s (c) Speed of light.
3Parts of a wave
Origin
4Parts of Wave
- Crest - high point on a wave
- Trough - Low point on a wave
- Amplitude - distance from origin to crest
- Wavelength (l) - distance from crest to crest. To
calculate use lc/v. - c speed of light (3.00 x 108 m/s).
- V frequency (HZ)
5Frequency
- Frequency (v) is the number of waves that pass a
given point per second. Units are cycles/sec or
hertz (Hz). To calculate use - v c/l
6Frequency and wavelength
- Are inversely related (v c/l )
- As one goes up the other goes down.
- Different frequencies of light show as different
colors of light. - The whole range is called the electromagnetic
(EM) spectrum
7Spectrum
Radio waves
Microwaves
Infrared .
Ultra-violet
X-Rays
Gamma Rays
Long Wavelength
Short Wavelength
Visible Light
8Light is a Particle
- Light is energy, Energy is quantized, therefore,
Light must be quantized. - These quantized pieces of light are called
photons. - Energy and frequency of the photons are directly
related. E h x n - (i.e.. High frequency high energy)
9Energy and frequency
- A photon is a particle of EM radiation with no
mass that carries a quantum of energy. To
calculate its energy use - EPhoton h x n
- E is the energy of the photon
- n is the frequency
- h is Plancks constant (6.626 x 10 -34 Joules
sec).
10Photoelectric Effect
- In the photoelectric effect , electrons, called
photoelectrons, are emitted from a metals surface
when light of a certain frequency shines on it.
(solar calculator) - Can be used to identify the type of metal.
11Examples
- What is the frequency of red light with a
wavelength of 4.2 x 10-5 cm? - What is the wavelength of KFI, which broadcasts
at with a frequency of 640 kHz? - What is the energy of a photon of each of the
above?
12Atomic Emission Spectrum
- How color tells us about atoms?
- The atomic emission spectrum of an element is the
set of frequencies of the EM waves emitted by
atoms of the element. - Each is unique to the individual element giving a
pattern of visible colors when viewed through a
prism.
13Prism
- White light is made up of all the colors of the
visible spectrum. - Passing it through a prism separates it into
colors.
14If the light is not white
- By heating a gas or with electricity we can get
it to give off colors. - Passing this light through a prism shows a unique
color pattern
15Atomic Emission Spectrum
- Each element gives off its own characteristic
colors. - Can be used to identify the atom.
- This is how we know what stars are made of.
16 - These are called line spectra
- unique to each element.
- These are emission spectra
- Mirror images are absorption spectra
- Light with black missing
17An explanation of the Atomic Emission Spectra
18Where the electron starts
- When we write electron configurations we are
starting at the writing the lowest energy level. - The energy level an electron starts from is
called its ground state.
19Changing the energy
- Lets look at a hydrogen atom
20Changing the energy
- Heat or electricity or light can move the
electron up energy levels
21Changing the energy
- As the electron falls back to ground state it
gives the energy back as light
22Changing the energy
- May fall down in steps
- Each with a different energy
23The Bohr Ring Atom
n 4
n 3
n 2
n 1
24 25Ultraviolet
Visible
Infrared
- The Further the electrons fall, the more the
energy and the higher the frequency.
26Light is also a wave
- Light is a particle - it comes in chunks.
- Light is also a wave- we can measure its wave
length and it behaves as a wave - The wavelength of a particle is calculated using
l h/mv . (de Broglie equation)
27Diffraction
- When light passes through, or reflects off, a
series of thinly spaced lines, it creates a
rainbow effect because the waves interfere with
each other.
28A wave moves toward a slit.
29A wave moves toward a slit.
30A wave moves toward a slit.
31A wave moves toward a slit.
32A wave moves toward a slit.
33(No Transcript)
34(No Transcript)
35Comes out as a curve
36Comes out as a curve
37Comes out as a curve
38with two holes
39with two holes
40with two holes
41with two holes
42with two holes
43Two Curves
with two holes
44Two Curves
with two holes
45Two Curves
with two holes
Interfere with each other
46Two Curves
with two holes
Interfere with each other
crests add up
47Several waves
48Several waves
49Several waves
50Several waves
51Several waves
52Several waves
53Several waves
54Several waves
55Several waves
56Several waves
57Several waves
Several Curves
58Several waves
Several Curves
59Several waves
Several Curves
60Several waves
Several Curves
61Several waves
Several waves
Several Curves
Interference Pattern
62Diffraction
- Light shows interference patterns
- What will an electron do when going through two
slits? - If it goes through one slit or the other, it will
make two spots. - If it goes through both slits, then it makes an
interference pattern.
63Electron as Particle
Electron gun
64Electron as wave
Electron gun
65Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle
- It is impossible to know exactly the speed and
position of a particle.
66Quantum Theory and the Atom (5.2)
- Rutherfords model Discovered the nucleus
- small dense and positive
- Electrons moved around in Electron cloud
67Bohrs Model
- Why dont the electrons fall into the nucleus?
- Electrons move like planets around the sun.
- In circular orbits at different levels.
- Energy separates one level from another.
68Bohrs Model
Nucleus
Electron
Orbit
Energy Levels
69Bohrs Model
Nucleus
Electron
Orbit
Energy Levels
70Bohrs Model
- Further away from the nucleus means more energy.
- There is no in between energy levels
Fifth
Fourth
Third
Increasing energy
Second
First
Nucleus
71The Quantum Mechanical Model
- Energy is quantized. It comes in chunks.
- Quanta - the amount of energy needed to move from
one energy level to another. - Quantum is the leap in energy.
- Schrödinger derived an equation that described
the energy and position of the electrons in an
atom - Treated electrons as waves. De Broglie equation
predicts wave characteristics of moving
particles. (l h/mv)
72The Quantum Mechanical Model
- Does have energy levels for electrons.
- Orbits are not circular.
- It can only tell us the probability of finding
an electron a certain distance from the
nucleus.
73The Quantum Mechanical Model
- The electron is found inside a blurry electron
cloud - An area where there is a chance of finding an
electron. - Draw a line at 90 probability.
74Atomic Orbitals
- Principal Quantum Number (n) the energy level
of the electron (1,2,3,4,5). - Within each energy level, there are sublevels
that have specific shapes (s, p, d, f) - Sublevels have atomic orbitals. These are regions
where there is a high probability of finding an
electron. (s1,p3,d5,f7) - Each orbital can hold up to 2 electrons.
Electrons held s2, p6, d10, f14
75S orbitals
- An atomic orbital is a three-dimensional region
around the nucleus that describes the electrons
probable location. - There is one s
- orbital for every energy
- level (1s,2s,3s,4s,5s).
- It is Spherical shaped and can hold 2 electrons
each.
76P orbitals
- Starts at the second energy level (2p,3p,4p,5p)
- Dumbbell shaped (3 types)
- Each can hold 2 electrons (6-total)
77P Orbitals (aligned on the x,y,z axis)
78D orbitals
- Start at the third energy level (3d,4d,5d)
- 5 different shapes
- Each can hold 2 electrons (10-total)
79F orbitals
- Start at the fourth energy level (4f,5f)
- Have seven different shapes
- 2 electrons per shape (14-total)
80F orbitals
81Summary
Energy Level (n)
Number of orbitals (Odd 1,3,5,7)
Sublevels (S, p, d, f)
Maximum Number of Electrons (orbital x 2)
1
2
s
1
2
S P
1 3
2 6
2 6 10
3
S P d
1 3 5
S P D f
2 6 10 14
4
1 3 5 7
82By Energy Level
- First Energy Level
- only s orbital
- only 2 electrons total
- Written as 1s2
- Second Energy Level
- s and p orbitals are available
- 2 in s, 6 in p
- Written as 2s22p6
- 8 total electrons total
83Filling order
- Lowest energy level fills first.
- Each box gets 1 electron before anyone gets 2.
- Orbitals can overlap
- Counting system
- Each box is an orbital shape
- Has Room for two electrons
847s
6s
5s
4s
Increasing energy
3s
2s
1s
857p
6d
5f
7s
6p
5d
6s
4f
5p
4d
5s
4p
3d
4s
3p
Increasing energy
3s
2p
2s
1s
86Electron Configurations (5.3)
- Shows the way electrons are arranged in atoms.
- Aufbau principle- electrons enter the lowest
energy first. - This causes difficulties because of the overlap
of orbitals of different energies. - Pauli Exclusion Principle- at most 2 electrons
per orbital - opposite spins
87Electron Configuration
- Hunds Rule- When electrons occupy orbitals of
equal energy they dont pair up until they have
to . - Lets determine the electron configuration for
Phosphorus - Need to account for 15 electrons
88- The first to electrons go into the 1s orbital
- Notice the opposite spins
- only 13 more
89- The next electrons go into the 2s orbital
- only 11 more
90- The next electrons go into the 2p orbital
- only 5 more
91- The next electrons go into the 3s orbital
- only 3 more
92- The last three electrons go into the 3p orbitals.
- They each go into separate shapes
- 3 unpaired electrons
- 1s22s22p63s23p3
93The easy way to remember
94Fill from the bottom up following the arrows
95Fill from the bottom up following the arrows
96Fill from the bottom up following the arrows
97Fill from the bottom up following the arrows
- 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s2 3d10 4p6 5s2
98Fill from the bottom up following the arrows
- 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s2 3d10 4p6 5s2 4d10 5p6 6s2
99Fill from the bottom up following the arrows
- 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s2 3d10 4p6 5s2 4d10 5p6 6s2
4f14 5d10 6p6 7s2
100Fill from the bottom up following the arrows
- 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s2 3d10 4p6 5s2 4d10 5p6 6s2
4f14 5d10 6p6 7s2 5f14 6d10 7p6
101Rewrite when done
- 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s2 3d10 4p6 5s2 4d10 5p6 6s2
4f14 5d10 6p6 7s2 5f14 6d10 7p6
- Group the energy levels together
- 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 3d10 4s2 4p6 4d10 4f14 5s2
5p6 5d105f146s2 6p6 6d10 7s2 7p6
102Exceptions to Electron Configuration(optional)
103Orbitals fill in order
- Lowest energy to higher energy.
- Adding electrons can change the energy of the
orbital. - Filled and half-filled orbitals have a lower
energy. - Makes them more stable.
- Changes the filling order of d orbitals
104Write these electron configurations
- Titanium - 22 electrons
- 1s22s22p63s23p63d24s2
- Vanadium - 23 electrons 1s22s22p63s23p63d34s2
- Chromium - 24 electrons
- 1s22s22p63s23p63d44s2 is expected
- But this is wrong!!
105Chromium is actually
- 1s22s22p63s23p63d54s1
- Why?
- This gives us two half filled orbitals.
106Chromium is actually
- 1s22s22p63s23p63d54s1
- Why?
- This gives us two half filled orbitals.
107Chromium is actually
- 1s22s22p63s23p63d54s1
- Why?
- This gives us two half filled orbitals.
- Slightly lower in energy.
- The same principle applies to copper.
108Coppers electron configuration
- Copper has 29 electrons so we expect
- 1s22s22p63s23p63d94s2
- But the actual configuration is
- 1s22s22p63s23p63d104s1
- This gives one filled orbital and one half filled
orbital. - Remember these exceptions
- d4s2 ? d5 s1
- d9s2 ? d10s1
109In each energy level
- The number of electrons that can fit in each
energy level is calculated with - Max e- 2n2 where n is the energy level
- 1st
- 2nd
- 3rd