Wave Nature of Light Rutherford’s model of the atom could not explain chemical behavior Bohr and...

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Wave Nature of Light • Rutherford’s model of the atom could not explain chemical behavior • Bohr and others described the arrangement of electrons around the nucleus • These arrangements could account for differences between the elements • Bohr’s model was based on spectroscopic evidence

Transcript of Wave Nature of Light Rutherford’s model of the atom could not explain chemical behavior Bohr and...

Page 1: Wave Nature of Light Rutherford’s model of the atom could not explain chemical behavior Bohr and others described the arrangement of electrons around the.

Wave Nature of Light

• Rutherford’s model of the atom could not explain chemical behavior

• Bohr and others described the arrangement of electrons around the nucleus

• These arrangements could account for differences between the elements

• Bohr’s model was based on spectroscopic evidence

Page 2: Wave Nature of Light Rutherford’s model of the atom could not explain chemical behavior Bohr and others described the arrangement of electrons around the.

Electromagnetic Radiation

• Light can be described as though it is a wave

Parts of a wave• Amplitude and wavelength

Crest

Trough

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Wave Stuff

• Amplitude: Vertical distance from crest to midline (brightness/intensity)

• Wavelength: Horizontal distance from crest to crest (meters) (color)

• Velocity: Rate at which wave travels (3.00x108 m/s in a vacuum) (constant)

• Frequency: # waves that pass a given point per unit time (waves/sec, cps, hertz, s-1)

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Electromagnetic Spectrum

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Low frequency

High frequency

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Wave Math

• Velocity = wavelength x frequency

• Velocity = c

Wavelength = Frequency = • c = • Since c is constant, and are inversely

related

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Example problems

• Find the frequency of purple light (wavelength 455 nm).

• Solution: c = , or = c/Wavelength must be in meters, since c is in m/s: 455 nm = 4.55x10-7 m

= (3.00x108 m/s)/(4.55x10-7 m) = 6.59x1014s-1

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Example #2

• Find the wavelength of red light with a frequency of 4.56x1014s-1.

• c = or = c/• = (3.00x108 m/s)/(4.56x1014s-1) =

6.58x10-7m (658 nm)

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Particle Nature of Light

• Light also acts as a particle: proposed by Newton

• Max Planck and glowing blackbodies: energy is quantized

• Smallest energy unit available is a quantum

• Energy of quanta depends on the frequency of the energy:

E = h

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Particle Nature of Light

• h is Planck’s constant: 6.626x10-34Js

• Energy is directly proportional to frequency

• Energy is inversely proportional to wavelength:

E = hand = c/so E = hc/

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Light Particle Sample Problem

• Find the energy of a microwave photon having a wavelength of 3.42x10-2m.

• Solution: E = hc/= (6.626x10-34Js)(3.00x108m/s)/3.42x10-2m

= 5.81x10-24J

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Photoelectric Effect

• Certain metals will eject electrons when exposed to light

• Number of electrons ejected depends only on the intensity of light

• No electrons ejected by light below certain frequency

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Photoelectric Effect

• Could not be explained by wave model of light

• Einstein explained effect using quantum theory of light

• He won the Nobel Prize for his work (not for relativity)

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Photoelectric Effect Simulator

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Atomic Emission Spectra

• When elements are zapped with energy, they give off light

• Light is first shone through a slit

• When light is shone through a prism, colors are separated

• Only some of the colors appear as fine lines against a dark background

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Emission spectra of common fluorescent bulbs

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Emission Spectrum Setup

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Absorption Spectra

• In absorption spectra, light is shone through cold gas or liquid

• Light then goes through a slit and prism or grating

• Resulting spectrum is continuous except for dark lines

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Absorption Spectrum

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Absorption Spectrum of Chlorophyll

Liquids tend to have less distinct absorption spectra

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Gas Absorption Spectra

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Absorption Spectrum Setup

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Spectra Types

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Bohr Model of the Atom

• Bohr wanted to explain the presence of sharp lines in the hydrogen spectrum

• He proposed that hydrogen’s electron could only have certain distinct energies

• These energies were integral multiples of some minimum energy

• The energy levels correspond to differently sized orbits

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Bohr’s Atom

• Spectral lines were due to electrons jumping from one level to another.

• Incoming energy promotes an electron to a higher energy level

• When the electron returns to the lower level it releases energy

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Quantum Numbers

• Bohr assigned the energy levels numbers

• The Principle Quantum Number (n) represents the main energy level

• n can only have non-zero integral values

• n = 1, 2, 3, ...

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Why quantum numbers?

• Louis de Broglie: Wave-particle duality

• As a wave: E = hc/• As a particle: E = mc

2

• Combined: hc/ = mc 2

= hc/mc 2 = h/mc

• For objects moving slower than light, replace c with v (velocity): = h/mv

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Particle wavelength problems

• Every particle has a wavelength• The larger the particle, the shorter the

wavelength• Example: Calculate the wavelength of an

electron moving at 0.80c (mass = 9.109×10-31 kilograms).

• Solution: = h/mv = 6.626x10-34Js/[(9.109×10-31kg)(0.80)(3.00x108m/s)]= 3.0x10-12m (smaller than an atom, bigger than a nucleus)

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Particle wavelength problems

• Find the wavelength of a baseball (145g) thrown toward home plate at 95.0 mph (42.5 m/s)

• Solution: = h/mv = 6.626x10-34Js/[(0.145kg)(42.5m/s)]= 1.08x10-34m (much smaller than a nucleus)

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Back to quantum numbers

• Only certain orbits are allowed because they are the only ones in which an integral number of wavelengths can “fit”.

• “In-between” orbitals would require a fractional number of wavelengths.

“I think it is safe to say that no one understands quantum mechanics.” Physicist Richard P. Feynman

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Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle

• It is impossible to know both the position and momentum of an electron simultaneously

• Electrons are both particles and waves• It’s in their nature to be indeterminate• Can be thought of as being “smeared out”

over a region of space• Indeterminacy is related to Planck’s

constant

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More Energy Levels

• The fine lines in emission spectra are actually made up of several even finer lines

• Each energy level has sublevels• Each sublevel has a shape• Each sublevel has one or more orbitals• Each orbital holds two electrons• How do we sort all this out?

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Using Quantum Numbers!

• Four quantum numbers are needed in Schrödinger’s equation to describe the probability function of an electron

• n = principle quantum number = 1, 2, 3, ...Main energy level – determines size of

orbital• l = azimuthal quantum number = 0, 1, ...

n-1Sublevel – determines orbital shape

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Well-used quantum numbers

• s: l = 0 (first two columns of PT)p: l = 1 (last six columns of PT)d: l = 2 (middle ten columns of PT)f: l = 3 (bottom two rows of PT)

• m = magnetic quantum number = - l to +lSpecifies orbital – determines

orientation• s = spin quantum number = ±½

Specifies spin

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Orbital shapes

• s orbital: spherical• Every energy level has

an s orbital: 1s, 2s, etc.• Higher level s orbitals

are lobed• Nodes are areas of

minimum electron density

• One node is added for each level

• s sublevel: one orbital, two electrons

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p orbital

• p orbitals are dumbbell shaped

• p sublevel (l = 1) consists of three orbitals: px py pz (six electrons)

• Three p orbitals are orthogonal to each other

• Only present after first main energy level (n>1)

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d orbital

• d orbital is cloverleaf-shaped

• Five orbitals, ten electrons make up d sublevel

• Only available when n>2

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f orbitals

• Complicated shape

• Seven orbitals, fourteen electrons

• Only available when n>3

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Allowed quantum number combinations

• Pauli exclusion principle: no two electrons can have the same set of four quantum numbers

• Aufbau principle: electrons fill the lowest energy state available first

• Lower numbers mean lower energy (n and l)

• Various m and s states are degenerate (of equal energy)

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Allowed Quantum Number Combinations

n l m s1 0 0 +½1 0 0 -½1s sublevel – 2e-

2 0 0 +½2 0 0 -½2s sublevel – 2e-

n l m s2 1 -1 +½2 1 0 +½2 1 1 +½2 1 -1 -½2 1 0 -½2 1 1 -½2p sublevel – 6e-

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Allowed Quantum Number Combinations

3s and 3p are similar to 2s and 2p

3d sublevel:n l m s3 2 -2 +½3 2 -2 -½3 2 -1 +½3 2 -1 -½

n l m s3 2 0 +½3 2 0 -½3 2 1 +½3 2 1 -½3 2 2 +½3 2 2 -½3d sublevel - 10e-

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Electron configurations

• Electron configurations show the location of every electron in the atom

• Electrons follow three rules: Pauli exclusion principle, Aufbau principle, Hund’s rule

• Each orbital is represented by a box and a symbol, and each electron by an arrow.

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Electron configurations

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More Electron Configurations

Hund’s rule: When putting electrons into degenerateorbitals, do not pair them until necessary.

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More Electron Configurations

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More Electron Configurations

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Add non-standard configurations

• And reason for 4s-3d order

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Orbital filling diagrams

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Orbital filling diagrams

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Noble Gas Shorthand Structures

• Noble gas symbols can be used to represent the core electron structure

• Manganese (25 e-): • Equivalent to [Ar] 4s2 3d5

1s22s2 2p63s23p64s2 3d5

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Electron Dot Structures

• Electron dot structures represent only the valence electrons

• Valence electrons are the electrons in the outermost energy level (highest value of n)

• The maximum number of electrons allowed in the valence shell is 8

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Electron dot structures

• Consists of the element’s symbol and dots representing the valence electrons

Hydrogen: Helium:Lithium:

Beryllium: Nitrogen: Neon:

Sodium: Iron: Lead:

H He Li

Be N Ne

Na Fe Pb