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Electron Configuration More complex than simple concentric circles.
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Electron Configuration More complex than simple concentric circles.

Jan 04, 2016

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Stuart Houston
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Page 1: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

Electron Configuration

More complex than simple concentric circles.

Page 2: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

Orbit vs. orbital??

-orbitthe path an electron takes (Bohr)

-orbitala region around the nucleus where an electron with a given energy is likely to be found

Page 3: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

Orbitals and energy

-each principle energy level is divided into one or more sublevels

n=1 has one sublevel

n=2 has two sublevels

n=3 has three sublevels

Page 4: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

Orbital Representations

Four basic orbital shapesThe s orbitals are spherical:

1s 2s 3s

Page 5: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

p Orbitals: “peanut”

Have two lobes lying along the x, y, or z axis.

Different orientations labelled px, py, and pz.

Page 6: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

Sodium Diagram

Page 7: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

d Orbitals: “double p”

Have complicated shapes, but the electron density at the nucleus is always zero.

Page 8: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

f Orbitals

orbital shape highly varied high energy electrons

Page 9: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.
Page 10: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

How do energy levels, sublevels, and orbitals fit

together?

Page 11: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

Orbitals and energy

-principle energy levels proposed by Bohr (n)

n=1n=2

n=3

Page 12: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

Orbitals and energy (cont’d)

- there may be only one of each type of sublevel at each energy level

- each sublevel consists of one or more orbitals

s

p

d

f

Increasing energy

1

3

5

7

Page 13: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

Orbitals and energy (cont’d)

-sublevels are written with the quantum number and the type of orbitals

1s 2p

energy level type of orbital

Page 14: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

1st principle energy level (n=1)

-since n=1, there is only one sublevel

1s

-the s sublevel only consists of one orbital

-there is only 1 orbital in this energy level

Page 15: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

2nd principle energy level (n=2)

-since n=2, there are two sublevels

2s 2p

-there is one s orbital in the 2s sublevel and three p orbitals in the 2p sublevel

-4 total orbitals in this energy level

Page 16: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

3rd principle energy level (n=3)

-since n=3, there are three sublevels

3s 3p 3d

-there is 1 s orbital, 3 p orbitals, and 5 d orbitals

-9 total orbitals in this energy level

Page 17: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

4th principle energy level (n=4)

How many sublevels? 4

Name the sublevels. 4s 4p 4d 4f

How many total orbitals? 16

Page 18: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

Orbitals and energy (cont’d)

How does a 1s orbital differ from a 2s orbital?

How does a 2p orbital differ from a 3p orbital?

SIZE & ENERGY

Page 19: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

Electron spin

-electrons behave as though they were spinning on their own axis, creating a magnetic field

-2 “types” of spin

clockwise counterclockwise

Page 20: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

Electron spin (cont’d)

-if 2 electrons have opposite spins, they cancel each other out

-if 2 electrons have parallel spins, there is a net effect on the magnetic field

-each orbital can hold a maximum of 2 electrons

Page 21: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

Electron spin (cont’d)

sublevel # of orbitals max. # e-

s 1 2

p 3 6

d 5 10

f 7 14

Page 22: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

Remember Bohr’s atom (2n2)?

n=1n=2

n=3

Level (n) sublevels orbitals max. # e-

1 1 (s) 1 2

2 2 (s, p) 4 8

3 3 (s, p, d) 9 18

4 4 (s, p, d, f) 16 32

Page 23: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

Writing electron configurations

An electron configuration shows the distribution of electrons among orbitals in an atom (location, energy).

Why is it important?

-the behavior of atoms is determined by the outer electrons (bonding)

Page 24: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

Electron configuration (cont’d)

When writing electron configurations, you must obey three rules:

1. The Aufbau Principle

2. The Pauli Exclusion Principle

3. Hund’s Rule

Page 25: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

The Aufbau Principle

-electrons are added one at a time to the lowest energy levels until all electrons of the atom have been accounted for

Page 26: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

Aufbau Principle (cont’d)

1s2s 2p3s 3p 3d4s 4p 4d 4f5s 5p 5d 5f6s 6p 6d 6f7s 7p 7d 7f

Page 27: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

The Pauli Exclusion Principle

-an orbital can hold a maximum of 2 electrons

-the e- must have opposite spins

-termed “paired” and “unpaired”

Page 28: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

Hund’s Rule

-electrons occupy equal energy orbitals so that a maximum number of unpaired electrons results

-in a sublevel, you place one e- in each orbital first, the go back and pair them up

Page 29: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

Example

lithium

3e-

1s

2e- 1e-

2sorbital diagram

e- configuration1s22s1

Page 30: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

Example

oxygen8e- 7e- 6e- 5e- 4e- 3e- 2e- 1e-

1s 2s 2p

1s22s22p4

Page 31: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

Practice Problem

Write the orbital diagram and electron configuration for sodium.

1s 2s 2p 3s

1s22s22p63s1

Page 32: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

Practice Problem

Write the orbital diagram and electron configuration for nickel.

1s 2s 2p 3s 3p 4s 3d

1s22s22p63s23p64s23d8

Page 33: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

H 1s1

He 1s2 full Noble gasLi 1s2,2s1

Be 1s2,2s2

B 1s2,2s2p1

C 1s2,2s2p2

N 1s2,2s2p3

O 1s2,2s2p4

F 1s2,2s2p5

Ne 1s2,2s2p6 full Noble gas

Valence Electrons in YellowYellow

Page 34: Electron Configuration  More complex than simple concentric circles.

Electron Configurations and the Periodic Table

Write electron configurations for:

13Al:

[Ne] 3s2 3p1

1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p1

50Sn: [Kr] 5s2 4d10 5p2

82Pb+2: [Xe] 6s2 4f14 5d10

92U: [Rn] 7s2 6d1 5f3

26Fe: [Ar] 4s2 3d6 [Ar]4s 3d