Electrons in Atoms Ch. 13. Models of the Atom 13-1.

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Electrons in Atoms Ch. 13

Transcript of Electrons in Atoms Ch. 13. Models of the Atom 13-1.

Page 1: Electrons in Atoms Ch. 13. Models of the Atom 13-1.

Electrons in Atoms

Ch. 13

Page 2: Electrons in Atoms Ch. 13. Models of the Atom 13-1.

Models of the Atom

13-1

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The evolution of Atomic Models

• Dalton (1766-1844): atom indivisible• J.J. Thomson (1856-1940):

– “Plum-pudding” model – negative electrons stuck in positively charged material

• Rutherford (1871-1937):– Electrons surround dense nucleus, rest of

atom is empty space

• Bohr (1885-1962):– “Planetary model,” electrons fixed in energy

levels around nucleus

Page 4: Electrons in Atoms Ch. 13. Models of the Atom 13-1.
Page 5: Electrons in Atoms Ch. 13. Models of the Atom 13-1.

The Quantum Mechanical Model

• Quantum Mechanical Model:

– Estimates the probability of finding an electron in a certain place using the Schrodinger equation.

– “Fuzzy cloud” model; where the cloud is more dense the probability of finding the electron is high, where the cloud is less dense the probability is low.

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Energy Levels• Electrons move around the nucleus

in energy levels.

• Quantum of energy = amount of E required to move to a higher level.

• When they move towards the nucleus (down a level) they release energy

• When they move away from the nucleus (up a level) they require energy.

• The farther from the nucleus the energy level is, the more energy is required to move up a level (away from nucleus).

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Energy Levels

• Quantum number (n) refers to an energy level– n = 1, 2, 3, 4, …7, values increase going away

from nucleus.– Each energy level fits a certain amount of

electrons:• Level 1 = 2 electrons• Level 2 = 8 electrons• Level 3 = 18 electrons• Level 4 = 32 electrons

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Sublevels + Orbitals• Within each energy level there are sublevels; the

number of sublevels is equal to the quantum number.– Ex: Energy level 4 has 4 sublevels within it.

• A sublevel is made up of atomic orbitals: s, p, d, f– Orbital s fits 2 electrons total– Orbital p fits 6 electrons total– Orbital d fits 10 electrons total– Orbital f fits 14 electrons total– s fills up first, then p, then d, then f

Page 9: Electrons in Atoms Ch. 13. Models of the Atom 13-1.

Energy Level (n)

Sublevel/Orbital

Electrons in each

Sublevel/Orbital

Total # of electrons in

Level

1 1s 2 2

2 2s

2p

2

6 8

3 3s

3p

3d

2

6

10 18

4 4s

4p

4d

4f

2

6

10

14 32

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Atomic Orbitals

Orbital Shape # of Electrons

s Spherical 2

p Dumbbell 6

d Clover-leaf 10

f Complex 14

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DRAW!

s - orbital

p - orbital

d - orbital

f - orbital

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Electron Arrangement in Atoms

13-2

Page 13: Electrons in Atoms Ch. 13. Models of the Atom 13-1.

d-1

f-2

5d1

6d1

Label + Color on white, blank, large periodic table!

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Electron Arrangement in Atoms

• Period 1 - 1s2

• Period 2 - 2s22p6

• Period 3 - 3s23p6

• Period 4 - 4s23d104p6

• Period 5 - 5s24d105p6

• Period 6 - 6s24f145d106p6

• Period 7 - 7s25f146d107p6

• 1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p65s24d105p6

6s24f145d106p67s25f146d107p6

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Electron Configuration Notation• Notation used to represent electron

configurations:

– H: 1s1

– He: 1s2

– Li: 1s2 2s1

– Be: 1s2 2s2

– B: 1s2 2s22p1

Energy level Sub level/orbital

# of electrons in sublevel/orbital

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d-1

f-2

5d1

6d1

Duplicate

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Recommend writing configuration in each square

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You Try!

• C:– (6): 1s22s22p2

• F:– (9): 1s22s22p5

• Ne:– (10): 1s22s22p6

• Na:– (11)1s22s22p63s1

• P:– (15)1s22s22p63s23p3

• Ca:– (20)1s22s22p63s23p64s2

• Ir:– (77)1s22s22p63s23p64s2

3d104p65s24d105p66s2

4f145d7

• Cm:– (96)1s22s22p63s23p64s2

3d104p65s24d105p66s2

4f145d106p67s25f7

Write the electron configurations for the following:

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• Abbreviated form: shows preceding noble gas and the configuration of only the last energy level!– Mg: 1s2 2s22p63s2

• or [Ne] 3s2

– B: 1s2 2s2 2p1 • or [He] 2s2 2p1

– Si: 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p2 • or [Ne] 3s2 3p2

– Al: 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p1 • [Ne] 3s2 3p1

– Xe: 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s23p64s23d104p65s24d105p6

• [Kr] 5s24d105p6

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• What happens in the fourth period?

– After 4s2, comes 3d10, then 4p6

– Scandium (#21): 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s2 3d1

• or [Ar] 4s2 3d1

– Copper is [Ar] 4s2 3d9

– Bromine is [Ar] 4s2 3d10 4p5

• What happens in the sixth period?

– After 6s2, comes 4f14, then 5d10, then 6p6

– Tungsten (W) is [Xe] 6s24f145d4

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Orbital Notation Rules1) Aufbau principle: electrons enter orbitals

of lowest energy first.

2) Pauli exclusion principle: an atomic orbital may describe at most 2 electrons.

3) Hund’s rule: one electron enters each orbital until ALL orbitals contain 1 electron with parallel spins.

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Light and Atomic Spectra

13-3

(only pg. 372-375)

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Electromagnetic Spectrum

• Energy in the form of electromagnetic radiation (radiant energy) travels in waves

• Waves transfer the energy from one place to another

• Ex: radio waves, TV, microwave, visible light, x-rays, gamma rays, infrared, UV

• All forms of radiant energy are part of the electromagnetic spectrum

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DRAW!!!

Low energy High Energy

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Wavelength + Frequency• Two main properties of electromagnetic

waves:

1) Frequency

2) Wavelength

• Wavelength is the distance between two corresponding peaks or troughs.

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• Frequency is the number of wave cycles per second.

• Wavelength is inversely proportional to frequency

• wavelength frequency

DRAW!!!

Wave lengthFrequency

Wave lengthFrequency

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• Higher frequency waves (short wavelength) have high energy– Ex: gamma rays, x-rays, ultraviolet rays– Ex: Violet light in visible spectrum

• Low frequency waves (long wavelength) have low energy– Ex: radio waves, microwaves, infrared (heat)

waves– Ex: Red light in visible spectrum

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Light and Atomic Spectra

• Electrons absorb energy and move to higher energy states/levels

• Electrons give off that energy in the form of light when they fall back down to lower energy states, or ground state.

• ALL electromagnetic waves travel at the speed of light in a vacuum – 300 million meters per second or (3.0 x 108 m/s)

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•When atoms are energized by an electric current they emit light.

•When this light is passed through a prism they produce an emission spectrum.

•Each element has its own unique atomic emission spectrum fingerprint

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http://phys.educ.ksu.edu/vqm/html/emission.html