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Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table
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Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s These four quantized values describe an electron.

Apr 01, 2015

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Page 1: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.

Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table

Page 2: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.

Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, ml, and ms

These four quantized values describe an electron in an atom (quantized values are restricted to certain discrete values)

These values add order to our description of the electron in the atom

Page 3: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.

Table 1: Summary of Quantum Numbers

Page 4: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.

Table 2: Values and Letters for the Secondary Quantum

Numbers

Page 5: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.

Orbits Orbitals

2-D path 3-D region in space

Fixed distance from nucleus

Variable distance from nucleus

Circular or elliptical path

No path; varied shape or region

2n2 electrons per orbit 2 electrons per orbital

Table 3: Comparing Orbits and Orbitals

Page 6: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.

Table 4: Energy Levels, Orbitals, and Shells

The first two quantum numbers (n and l) describe electrons with different energies under NORMAL circumstances

The last two quantum numbers (ml and ms) describe electrons with different energies under SPECIAL conditions (e.g. magnetic field)

Page 7: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.

Moving forward, we will be focusing on the electrons position in space (not energy), the language will change

◦Main (principal) energy level = shell

◦Energy sublevel = subshell

◦WHY?◦Its easier!◦1s orbital can be communicated as n=1, l=0◦2p orbital can be communicated as n=2,

l=1

Page 8: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.

Table 5: Classification of Energy Sublevels (subshells)

Page 9: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.

Figure 1: Energy-level diagrams show the relative energies of electrons in various orbitals under normal conditions (each orbital can hold a maximum of 2 e-)

Energy-Level Diagrams

Page 10: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.

The energy of an electron increases with an increasing value of principal quantum number, n

For a given number of n, the subshells increase in energy, in order, s<p<d<f

When creating energy-level diagrams, an electron in an orbital is represented by drawing an arrow, pointed up or down in a specific circle, but two arrows in a circle MUST be in opposite directions

Figure 2: Energy-level diagrams for (a) hydrogen (b) helium

Page 11: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.

Pauli Exclusion Principle – no two electrons in an atom can have the same four quantum numbers; no two electrons in the same atomic orbital can have the same spin, only two electrons with opposite spins can occupy any one orbital

What order do we fill the orbitals? Aufbau Principle – each electron is added

to the lowest energy orbital available in an atom or ion

An energy sublevel must be filled before moving onto the next higher sublevel

Page 12: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.

Figure 3: In this aufbau diagram, start at the bottom (1s) and add electrons in the order shown by the diagonal arrows. You work your way from the bottom left corner to the top right corner.

Page 13: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.

Figure 4: Classification of elements by the sublevels that are being filled

Page 14: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.

Hund’s Rule – one electron occupies each of the several orbitals at the same energy before a second electron can occupy the same orbital

SEATWORK Read pp. 189 – 199 - Drawing energy-level

diagrams for atoms, anions, cations Practice p. 191 UC # 3, 4

Page 15: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.

If you’re thinking this is too easy to be true, you’re right!

There are a few complications as the atoms get larger

As the energy level gets farther from the nucleus, the distance between energy levels decreases

As a matter of fact, it is believed that the energy levels actually overlap

Complications

Page 16: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.

Therefore, some energy levels start filling orbitals before the previous energy level is finished filling its subshell

The first time this is encountered is with potassium, in which the 4s starts to fill before the 3d

Complications

Page 17: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.

The second complication has to do with a variation of Hund’s Rule that takes into account the minimizing of the electron-electron repulsion

It states, the most stable arrangement of electrons is the arrangement with the maximum number of unpaired electrons.

So, when the transition metals’ orbitals are filling with electrons, at d4 and d9, an electron from the s JUMPS up into the d5 and d10

There’s More…

Page 18: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.
Page 19: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.

Overall energy state of the atom is lower after the promotion of the electrons

Half-filled and filled subshells are more stable (lower energy) than unfilled subshells

Why are some electrons promoted?

Page 20: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.

A method of communicating the location and number of electrons in electron energy levels (presents same information as energy-level diagrams BUT much more concise)

Electron Configuration

Figure 5: Example of electron configuration

Page 21: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.

Writing Electron Configurations

•The electron configuration below represents a boron atom in its ground state.•The superscripts indicate the number of electrons occupying each sublevel.

Page 22: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.

Electron Configuration Shorthand Writing out electron configurations can

become awkward as the atoms increase in the number of electrons

The shorthand involves using the abbreviation of the last noble gas (placed in square brackets) to indicate that all the orbitals to that point are full. Then the configuration is continued as usual.

Page 23: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.

Nitrogen1s22s22p3

[He] 2s22p3

Chromium1s22s22p63s23p64s23d4

[Ar] 4s23d4

Strontium1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p65s2

[Kr] 5s2

Page 24: Bohr’s single quantum number (n) was expanded to a total of four quantum numbers n, l, m l, and m s  These four quantized values describe an electron.

Learning Checkpoint

Read pp. 192 – 193◦Understand FULL electron configuration and

Shorthand (NOBLE GAS CORE) electron configurations◦Add the summary for “Procedure for Writing an

Electron Configuration” on p. 193

Complete “Electron Configuration” worksheet

Practice Questions p. 194 UC # 6, 8, 9, 10

Section 3.6 Questions p. 197 UC # 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 10, 11, 12, 13, 14

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