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Modern Theory of the Atom: Quantum Mechanical Model

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Presentation on theme: "Modern Theory of the Atom: Quantum Mechanical Model"— Presentation transcript:

1 Modern Theory of the Atom: Quantum Mechanical Model

2

3 Recap of Bohr Model electrons:
particles moving in circular orbits with specific speed, position, & energy energy levels possess specific quantum of energy electrons can move between energy levels higher energy levels farther from nucleus e- moving up to higher E level: electron absorbs energy e- moving down to lower E level: electron emits light energy ground state: electrons located in lowest possible energy levels, closest can be to nucleus

4 DeBroglie Electron-Wave
Proposed this Idea: if light can show both particle and wave behavior, maybe matter can too wavelength describing electron depends on energy of electron at certain energies, electron waves make standing waves in atom wave does not represent path of electron

5 2 kinds of waves Traveling Wave wave not confined to given space
travels from one location to another interrupted by hitting boundary or another wave Standing Wave confined to given space (ends are pinned) interference between incident & reflected waves at certain frequencies: certain points seem to be standing still other points - displacement changes in regular way

6 Transverse (ocean) Longitudinal (compressed/sound)

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8 Bohr Model vs. Modern Theory
electron = particle e- path is orbit holds 2n2 electrons circular path each orbit has specific energy can find exact position/ speed electron = wave e– path is orbital holds 2 electrons not necessarily circular each orbit has specific energy probable location

9 Heisenberg uncertainty principle
fundamentally impossible to know velocity & position of particle at same time impossible to make observation without influencing system cannot specify both position & speed of electron can only determine probability of electron’s location in given region of space

10 Orbital – Modern Theory
orbital: term describes region where e- might be found each orbital: specific energy & specific shape described by 4 parameters of wave function (like an address) quantum numbers = n, l, m, s structure of orbitals explain: bonding, magnetism, atom size, crystal structure

11 n: principal quantum number
specifies atom’s principal energy levels whole number values: 1, 2, 3, 4, … 2n2 = maximum # electrons in any principal energy level

12 l = describes sublevels
sublevels are labelled by shape: s, p, d, f

13 s orbitals: spherical

14 p orbitals: dumbbell shaped

15 d orbitals: complex shapes

16 f orbitals: complex shapes too

17 Sublevels 1st principal energy level: s (1 sublevel) 2nd level:
s,p (2 sublevels) 3rd level: s,p,d (3 sublevels) 4th level: s,p,d,f (4 sublevels)

18 m = 3rd quantum number (orbitals)
each sublevel contains 1 or more orbitals each orbital holds a max of 2 electrons s has 1 orbital p has 3 orbitals d has 5 orbitals f has 7 orbitals 1st PEL =s (1 sublevel) = 1 orbital (__ electrons) 2nd PEL =s,p (2 sublevels) = 4 orbitals (__ e-) 3rd PEL = s,p,d (3 sublevels) = 9 orbitals (___ e-) 4th PEL s,p,d,f (4 sublevels) = 16 orbitals (___ e-) 2 8 18 32

19 4th quantum number = s  e- spin: 2 possible values
clockwise and counter clockwise Illustrated by arrows with opposite directions

20 address for each electron
4 quantum numbers no 2 e- can occupy the same space in atom can have same 4 quantum numbers therefore only 2 electrons per orbital (Pauli exclusion principle)

21 Memorize s s p d f 1 3 5 7 2e- 6e- 10e- 14e- p d f
sublevels # of orbitals max # of electrons *each orbital holds 2 e- s p d f

22 electron configurations
add e- to atoms so that e- are in lowest energy levels – most stable or ground state configuration start with 1s, then work upward in order of increasing energy use Aufbau rule.

23 Each box represents an orbital and holds 2 electrons
3rd principal energy level, 3 sublevels 2nd principal energy level, 2 sublevels – s & p  1st principal energy level, 1 sublevel – s Each box represents an orbital and holds 2 electrons

24 Aufbau Principle follow arrows 1s 2s 2p sequence of orbitals: 3s 3p 3d
1s, 2s, 2p, 3s, 3p, 4s, 3d, 4p, 5s, 4d, … exceptions do occur: - half-filled orbitals have extra stability - magic # is 8 1s 2s 2p 3s 3p 3d 4s 4p 4d 4f 5s 5p 5d 5f 6s 6p 6d 6f 7s 7p 7d 7f

25 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 3d10 4s2 4p6 4d10 4f14 5s2 5p6 5d10 5f14 6s2 6p6 6d10 7s2 7p6 7d10 He C Mg Zn 1s2 1s22s22p2 1s22s22p63s2 1s22s22p63s23p6 4s23d10

26 He C Mg Zn 1s22s22p2 1s22s22p63s2 1s22s22p63s23p64s23d10
from these modern configurations, we can figure out Bohr Configurations All you have to do is add up the electrons in each shell (energy level) He C Mg Zn 1s2 1 = 2 2 1s22s22p2 1 = 2 2 = 2+2 2 – 4 1s22s22p63s2 1 = 2 2 = = 2 2 – 8 – 2 1s22s22p63s23p64s23d10 1 = = = =2 2 – 8 – 18 – 2

27 Hund’s Rule most e- with same spin, so if more than one same orbital:
e- fill orbitals one at time before pairing up 1s s p4

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29 How many orbitals contain e-?
Which element? How many unpaired e-? How many principal energy level’s occupied? How many principal energy level’s are fully occupied? How many sublevels contain e-? How many sublevels full? How many orbitals contain e-? Boron 1 2 1 Figure UN Title: SAMPLE INTEGRATIVE EXERCISE | Putting Concepts Together (solution (b)) Caption: (b) The complete orbital diagram is shown. The valence electrons are the ones in the outermost occupied shell, the 2s2 and 2p1 electrons. The 1s2 electrons constitute the core electrons, which we represent as [He] when we write the condensed electron configuration, [He]2s22p1. Notes: Keywords: 3 2 3


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