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Chapter 6 Characteristics of Atoms

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Title: Chapter 6 Characteristics of Atoms


1
Chapter 6Characteristics of Atoms
  • Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
  • Seton Hall University

2
Characteristics of Atoms
  • Atoms posses mass
  • most of this mass is in the nucleus
  • Atoms contain positive nuclei
  • Atoms contain electrons
  • Atoms occupy volume
  • electrons repel each other, so no other atom can
    penetrate the volume occupied by an atom
  • Atoms have various properties
  • arises from differing numbers of protons and
    electrons
  • Atoms attract one another
  • they condense into liquids and solids
  • Atoms can combine with one another

3
Wave aspects of Light
  • Most useful tool for studying the structure of
    atoms is electromagnetic radiation
  • Light is one form of that radiation
  • Light is characterized by the following
    properties
  • frequency, ?, nu
  • wavelength, ?, lambda
  • amplitude

4
Electric and magnetic field components of plane
polarized light
  • Light travels in z-direction
  • Electric and magnetic fields travel at 90 to
    each other at speed of light in particular medium
  • c ( 3 1010 cm s-1) in a vacuum

5
Connections between wavelength and frequency
  • c 3?108 m/s in a vacuum
  • make sure the units all agree!

6
Characterization of Radiation
7
Wavelength and Energy Units
  • Wavelength
  • 1 cm 108 Å 107 nm 104 ? 107 m?
    (millimicrons)
  • N.B. 1 nm 1 m? (old unit)
  • Energy
  • 1 cm-1 2.858 cal mol-1 of particles
  • 1.986 ? 1016 erg molecule-1 1.24 ? 10-4 eV
    molecule-1
  • ?E (kcal mol-1) ? ?(Å) 2.858 ? 105
  • E(kJ mol-1) 1.19 ? 105/?(nm)297 nm 400 kJ

8
The photoelectric effect
  • A beam of light impacts on a metal surface and
    causes the release of electrons (the
    photoelectron) if certain conditions are
    satisfied
  • Conditions
  • light must have a frequency above the threshold,
    ?o
  • number of photoelectrons increases with light
    intensity, but not the kinetic energy

9
Explanation of the photoelectric effect
  • Ephoton h?photon
  • h Plancks constant 6.626 ? 10-34 J s
  • Applying the Law of the Conservation of Energy
  • energy of the photon is absorbed by the metal
    surface and is transferred to the photoelectron
  • the minimum frequency is the binding energy of
    the electron
  • the remaining energy shows up as the kinetic
    energy of the electron

10
Photoelectric effect
  • Electron kinetic energy Photon energy - Binding
    energy
  • Ekinetic(electron) h? - h?o
  • Comments
  • if frequency is too low, the photo energy is
    insufficient to overcome the binding energy of
    the electron
  • energy in excess of the binding energy shows up
    as the kinetic energy of the electron
  • increasing the intensity of the light increases
    the number of photons impacting on the metal

11
Particle properties of light
  • Light has a dual nature of acting like a wave and
    acting like a particle
  • The photoelectric effect confirmed that light
    occurs as little packets of energy
  • Light is still diffracted like a wave, has
    wavelength and frequency

12
Light and atoms
  • When matter absorbs photons of light, the energy
    of the photon is transferred to the matter
  • In the case of atoms, the absorption process
    yields information about the atom
  • Absorption of a photon transforms the atom to a
    higher energy state
  • All higher energy states are referred to as
    excited states
  • The most stable state is the ground state

13
Absorption and Emission
  • White light (light containing all energies of
    light) is passed through a sample
  • Sample absorbs some of the light
  • Light that passes through the sample is dispersed
    by a prism or other wavelength selecting device
  • Photodetector records the intensity of the light
    passing through the sample, which is then
    interpreted as absorption of light

14
Beers Law
  • Io Intensity of incident light
  • I Intensity of transmitted light
  • ? molar extinction coefficient
  • l path length of cell
  • c concentration of sample

15
UV Spectral Nomenclature
16
UV and Visible Spectroscopy
  • Vacuum UV or soft X-rays
  • 100 - 200 nm
  • Quartz, O2 and CO2 absorb strongly in this region
  • N2 purge good down to 180 nm
  • Quartz region
  • 200 350 nm
  • Source is D2 lamp
  • Visible region
  • 350 800 nm
  • Source is tungsten lamp

17
Emission
  • Sample is excited by light
  • Excited sample emits the light
  • Emitted light is wavelength selected
  • The light is detected by a photodetector
  • Plot of emission intensity vs wavelength is
    generated

18
Quantization of absorption and emission
  • One of the three things that led to quantum
    theory was that the absorption and emission of
    light occurred at discrete frequencies, not
    continua
  • Interpreted as the energy of the photon must
    match the difference in energy of two energy
    levels in the atom or molecule

19
Molecular process
  • Absorption and emission of visible and
    ultraviolet light
  • Photon is annihilated upon absorption, and the
    electrons in the molecule are rearranged into the
    excited state
  • Emission results from the conversion of excited
    electron energy being converted to a photon of
    light
  • Ephoton ??Eatom?

20
Energy level diagrams
  • Wiggle lines indicate radiative processes
  • Straight lines indicate nonradiative processes
  • Each energy level represents an arrangement of
    electrons in the atom

21
Properties of electrons
  • Each electrons have the same mass and charge
  • Electrons behave like magnets through a property
    called spin (actually, magnets are magnets
    because electrons have this property)
  • Electrons have wave properties (diffract just
    like photons)

22
Heisenberg uncertainty principle
  • A particle has a particular location, but a wave
    has no exact position
  • The wave properties of electrons cause them to
    spread out, hence the position of the electron
    cannot be precisely defined
  • They are referred to as being delocalized in a
    region of space
  • Heisenberg proposed that the motion and position
    of the particle-wave cannot be precisely known at
    the same time

23
Bound electrons and quantization
  • The properties of electrons bound to a nucleus
    can only take on certain specific values (most
    importantly, energy)
  • Absorption and emission spectra provide
    experimental values for the quantized energies of
    atomic electrons
  • Theory of quantum mechanics links these data to
    the wave characteristics of electrons bound to
    nuclei

24
The Schrödinger Equation
  • A second order partial differential equation
  • The solutions to such equations are other
    equations
  • These equations describe three-dimensional waves
    called orbitals
  • These solutions have indexes that are integers
    (the solutions are quantized naturally)
  • These indexes are called quantum numbers

25
Quantum numbers
  • n - principle quantum number
  • values of the positive integers
  • n 1,2,3,
  • l - azimuthal quantum number
  • values correlate with the number of preferred
    axes of a particular orbital, indicating its
    shape
  • l 0,1,2,(n - 1)
  • value of l is often indicated by a letter (s, p,
    d, f, for l 0, 1, 2, 3)

26
Quantum number
  • ml - magnetic quantum number
  • directionality of orbital
  • ml 0, 1, 2, l
  • ms - spin orientation quantum number
  • ms ½
  • A complete description of an atomic electron
    requires a set of four unique quantum number that
    meet the restrictions of quantum mechanics

27
Shapes of atomic orbitals
  • Each atomic energy level can be associated with a
    specific three-dimensional atomic orbital
  • Orbitals are maps of the probability of the
    electron being in a particular location around
    the nucleus
  • While there are many representations, the most
    important to learn are the 90 probability
    volumes (which I will draw for you)

28
Depictions of orbitals
  • electron density plot - electron density plotted
    against the distance from the nucleus
  • orbital density plots
  • electron contour diagrams (90 probability
    drawings)
  • All are useful in helping us visualize the orbital

29
Waves and nodes
30
A variety of radial projections
31
Radial depictions
32
The p-orbitals
33
The d-orbitals
34
d-orbital radial projection
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