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Electron Arraignment for Elements Above Atomic # 18
15

Electron Arraignment for Elements Above Atomic # 18.

Dec 21, 2015

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Jack Horn
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Page 1: Electron Arraignment for Elements Above Atomic # 18.

Electron Arraignment for Elements Above Atomic # 18

Page 2: Electron Arraignment for Elements Above Atomic # 18.

Electron Shells

• Periods on the periodic table are similar because they have the same number of electron shells.

• Within these shells there are layers called sublevels', a shell can have between 1 and 4 sublevels.

Page 3: Electron Arraignment for Elements Above Atomic # 18.

Sublevels of Electron Shells

Sublevel How Many Electrons can it

Hold?s 2p 6d 10f 14

Page 4: Electron Arraignment for Elements Above Atomic # 18.

Electrons Shells and their Sublevels

Shell or Period # Sublevels Allowed

1 s

2 s, p

3 s, p, d

4 s, p, d, f

5 s, p, d, f

6 s, p, d

7 s, p

Page 5: Electron Arraignment for Elements Above Atomic # 18.

Blocks on the Periodic Table**the period and block an element lives in indicates the sublevel their final electrons are filling, that element will have full shells for all prior blocks.

Page 6: Electron Arraignment for Elements Above Atomic # 18.
Page 7: Electron Arraignment for Elements Above Atomic # 18.

Aufbau Diagram –unfortunately, sublevels do not always fill in order. You can use the diagram to the right to understand how they

fill.

Page 8: Electron Arraignment for Elements Above Atomic # 18.

Standard Notation of Fluorine

Main Energy

Level

Numbers

1, 2, 2Sublevels

Number of electrons in the sub level 2,2,5

1s2 2s2 2p5

Page 9: Electron Arraignment for Elements Above Atomic # 18.

How is the electron configuration written?• Each row of an electron configuration table is sort of like a sentence.

Each 'sentence' is made up of smaller 'words'. Each 'word' follows this format:

• The first number is the energy level. We can tell right away that an atom of gold contains 6 energy levels.

• The lowercase letter is the sub-shell. The sub-shells are named s, p, d and f. The number of available sub-shells increases as the energy level increases. For example, the first energy level only contains an s sub-shell while the second energy level contains both an s sub-shell and a p sub-shell.

• The number in superscript is the number of electrons in a sub-shell. Each sub-shell can hold only a certain number of electrons. The s sub-shell can hold no more than 2 electrons, the p sub-shell can hold 6, the d sub-shell can hold 10 and the f sub-shell can hold as many as 14.

Page 10: Electron Arraignment for Elements Above Atomic # 18.

Example:

• The electron configuration for Nickel would look like:– 1s22s22p63s23p64s23d8

Page 11: Electron Arraignment for Elements Above Atomic # 18.

You Try:

• Using your Bohr model of gallium from the energizer, write the full electron configuration for gallium.– 1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p1

Page 12: Electron Arraignment for Elements Above Atomic # 18.

One more…

• Write the full electron configuration for palladium.– 1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p65s24d8

Page 13: Electron Arraignment for Elements Above Atomic # 18.

Abbreviated vs. Unabbreviated Notation• Unabbreviated: list all sub shells as we

did in the previous examples

• Abbreviated: list the last noble gas prior to the element then all subshells that fall after this:– Example – abbreviated version of palladium:

• [Kr] 5s24d8

Page 14: Electron Arraignment for Elements Above Atomic # 18.

Why is this important?

• Understanding the electron configuration of an atom will help us identify what type of ion or compound an atom will typically form.

Page 15: Electron Arraignment for Elements Above Atomic # 18.

Electron Configuration Song

• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vb6kAxwSWgU