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Chapter 13 Electrons in Atoms

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Chapter 13 Electrons in Atoms Charles Page High School Dr. Stephen L. Cotton Section 13.1 Models of the Atom OBJECTIVES: Summarize the development of atomic theory. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 13 Electrons in Atoms


1
Chapter 13Electrons in Atoms
  • Charles Page High School
  • Dr. Stephen L. Cotton

2
Section 13.1Models of the Atom
  • OBJECTIVES
  • Summarize the development of atomic theory.

3
Section 13.1Models of the Atom
  • OBJECTIVES
  • Explain the significance of quantized energies of
    electrons as they relate to the quantum
    mechanical model of the atom.

4
Greek Idea
  • Democritus and Leucippus
  • Matter is made up of solid indivisible particles
  • John Dalton - one type of atom for each element

5
J. J. Thomsons Model
  • Discovered electrons
  • Atoms were made of positive stuff
  • Negative electron floating around
  • Plum-Pudding model

6
Ernest Rutherfords Model
  • Discovered dense positive piece at the center of
    the atom- nucleus
  • Electrons would surround it
  • Mostly empty space
  • Nuclear model

7
Niels Bohrs Model
  • He had a question Why dont the electrons fall
    into the nucleus?
  • Move like planets around the sun.
  • In circular orbits at different levels.
  • Amounts of energy separate one level from
    another.
  • Planetary model

8
Bohrs planetary model
  • Energy level of an electron
  • analogous to the rungs of a ladder
  • electron cannot exist between energy levels, just
    like you cant stand between rungs on ladder
  • Quantum of energy required to move to the next
    highest level

9
The Quantum Mechanical Model
  • Energy is quantized. It comes in chunks.
  • A quanta is the amount of energy needed to move
    from one energy level to another.
  • Since the energy of an atom is never in between
    there must be a quantum leap in energy.
  • Erwin Schrodinger derived an equation that
    described the energy and position of the
    electrons in an atom

10
The Quantum Mechanical Model
  • Things that are very small behave differently
    from things big enough to see.
  • The quantum mechanical model is a mathematical
    solution
  • It is not like anything you can see.

11
The Quantum Mechanical Model
  • Has energy levels for electrons.
  • Orbits are not circular.
  • It can only tell us the probability of finding
    an electron a certain distance from the
    nucleus.

12
The Quantum Mechanical Model
  • The atom is found inside a blurry electron
    cloud
  • A area where there is a chance of finding an
    electron.
  • Draw a line at 90
  • Think of fan blades

13
Atomic Orbitals
  • Principal Quantum Number (n) the energy level
    of the electron.
  • Within each energy level, the complex math of
    Schrodingers equation describes several shapes.
  • These are called atomic orbitals - regions where
    there is a high probability of finding an
    electron.
  • Sublevels- like theater seats arranged in sections

14
Summary
of shapes
Max electrons
Starts at energy level
s
1
2
1
p
3
6
2
5
10
3
d
7
14
4
f
15
By Energy Level
  • First Energy Level
  • only s orbital
  • only 2 electrons
  • 1s2
  • Second Energy Level
  • s and p orbitals are available
  • 2 in s, 6 in p
  • 2s22p6
  • 8 total electrons

16
By Energy Level
  • Third energy level
  • s, p, and d orbitals
  • 2 in s, 6 in p, and 10 in d
  • 3s23p63d10
  • 18 total electrons
  • Fourth energy level
  • s,p,d, and f orbitals
  • 2 in s, 6 in p, 10 in d, ahd 14 in f
  • 4s24p64d104f14
  • 32 total electrons

17
By Energy Level
  • Any more than the fourth and not all the orbitals
    will fill up.
  • You simply run out of electrons
  • The orbitals do not fill up in a neat order.
  • The energy levels overlap
  • Lowest energy fill first.

18
Section 13.2Electron Arrangement in Atoms
  • OBJECTIVES
  • Apply the aufbau principle, the Pauli exclusion
    principle, and Hunds rule in writing the
    electron configurations of elements.

19
Section 13.2Electron Arrangement in Atoms
  • OBJECTIVES
  • Explain why the electron configurations for some
    elements differ from those assigned using the
    aufbau principle.

20
Aufbau diagram - page 367
21
Electron Configurations
  • The way electrons are arranged in atoms.
  • Aufbau principle- electrons enter the lowest
    energy first.
  • This causes difficulties because of the overlap
    of orbitals of different energies.
  • Pauli Exclusion Principle- at most 2 electrons
    per orbital - different spins

22
Electron Configuration
  • Hunds Rule- When electrons occupy orbitals of
    equal energy they dont pair up until they have
    to.
  • Lets determine the electron configuration for
    Phosphorus
  • Need to account for 15 electrons

23
  • The first two electrons go into the 1s orbital
  • Notice the opposite spins
  • only 13 more to go...

24
  • The next electrons go into the 2s orbital
  • only 11 more...

25
  • The next electrons go into the 2p orbital
  • only 5 more...

26
  • The next electrons go into the 3s orbital
  • only 3 more...

27
  • The last three electrons go into the 3p orbitals.
  • They each go into separate shapes
  • 3 unpaired electrons
  • 1s22s22p63s23p3

28
The easy way to remember
  • 1s2
  • 2 electrons

29
Fill from the bottom up following the arrows
  • 1s2 2s2
  • 4 electrons

30
Fill from the bottom up following the arrows
  • 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2
  • 12 electrons

31
Fill from the bottom up following the arrows
  • 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s2
  • 20 electrons

32
Fill from the bottom up following the arrows
  • 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s2 3d10 4p6 5s2
  • 38 electrons

33
Fill from the bottom up following the arrows
  • 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s2 3d10 4p6 5s2 4d10 5p6 6s2
  • 56 electrons

34
Fill from the bottom up following the arrows
  • 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s2 3d10 4p6 5s2 4d10 5p6 6s2
    4f14 5d10 6p6 7s2
  • 88 electrons

35
Fill from the bottom up following the arrows
  • 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s2 3d10 4p6 5s2 4d10 5p6 6s2
    4f14 5d10 6p6 7s2 5f14 6d10 7p6
  • 108 electrons

36
Exceptional Electron Configurations
37
Orbitals fill in order
  • Lowest energy to higher energy.
  • Adding electrons can change the energy of the
    orbital.
  • Half filled orbitals have a lower energy.
  • Makes them more stable.
  • Changes the filling order

38
Write these electron configurations
  • Titanium - 22 electrons
  • 1s22s22p63s23p64s23d2
  • Vanadium - 23 electrons
  • 1s22s22p63s23p64s23d3
  • Chromium - 24 electrons
  • 1s22s22p63s23p64s23d4 expected
  • But this is wrong!!

39
Chromium is actually
  • 1s22s22p63s23p64s13d5
  • Why?
  • This gives us two half filled orbitals.
  • Slightly lower in energy.
  • The same principal applies to copper.

40
Coppers electron configuration
  • Copper has 29 electrons so we expect
    1s22s22p63s23p64s23d9
  • But the actual configuration is
  • 1s22s22p63s23p64s13d10
  • This gives one filled orbital and one half filled
    orbital.
  • Remember these exceptions d4, d9

41
Section 13.3Physics and the Quantum Mechanical
Model
  • OBJECTIVES
  • Calculate the wavelength, frequency, or energy of
    light, given two of these values.

42
Section 13.3Physics and the Quantum Mechanical
Model
  • OBJECTIVES
  • Explain the origin of the atomic emission
    spectrum of an element.

43
Light
  • The study of light led to the development of the
    quantum mechanical model.
  • Light is a kind of electromagnetic radiation.
  • Electromagnetic radiation includes many kinds of
    waves
  • All move at 3.00 x 108 m/s c

44
Parts of a wave
Origin
45
Parts of Wave - p.372
  • Origin - the base line of the energy.
  • Crest - high point on a wave
  • Trough - Low point on a wave
  • Amplitude - distance from origin to crest
  • Wavelength - distance from crest to crest
  • Wavelength is abbreviated by the Greek letter
    lambda l

46
Frequency
  • The number of waves that pass a given point per
    second.
  • Units cycles/sec or hertz (hz or sec-1)
  • Abbreviated by Greek letter nu n
  • c ln

47
Frequency and wavelength
  • Are inversely related
  • As one goes up the other goes down.
  • Different frequencies of light are different
    colors of light.
  • There is a wide variety of frequencies
  • The whole range is called a spectrum, Fig. 13.10,
    page 373

48
Radiowaves
Microwaves
Infrared .
Ultra-violet
X-Rays
GammaRays
Long Wavelength
Short Wavelength
Visible Light
49
Prism
  • White light is made up of all the colors of the
    visible spectrum.
  • Passing it through a prism separates it.

50
If the light is not white
  • By heating a gas with electricity we can get it
    to give off colors.
  • Passing this light through a prism does something
    different.

51
Atomic Spectrum
  • Each element gives off its own characteristic
    colors.
  • Can be used to identify the atom.
  • How we know what stars are made of.

52
  • These are called discontinuous spectra, or line
    spectra
  • unique to each element.
  • These are emission spectra
  • The light is emitted given off
  • Sample 13-2 p.375

53
Light is a Particle
  • Energy is quantized.
  • Light is energy
  • Light must be quantized
  • These smallest pieces of light are called
    photons.
  • Photoelectric effect?
  • Energy frequency directly related.

54
Energy and frequency
  • E h x ?
  • E is the energy of the photon
  • ? is the frequency
  • h is Plancks constant
  • h 6.6262 x 10 -34 Joules x sec.
  • joule is the metric unit of Energy

55
The Math in Chapter 11
  • 2 equations so far
  • c ??
  • E h?
  • Know these!

56
Examples
  • What is the wavelength of blue light with a
    frequency of 8.3 x 1015 hz?
  • What is the frequency of red light with a
    wavelength of 4.2 x 10-5 m?
  • What is the energy of a photon of each of the
    above?

57
Explanation of atomic spectra
  • When we write electron configurations, we are
    writing the lowest energy.
  • The energy level, and where the electron starts
    from, is called its ground state- the lowest
    energy level.

58
Changing the energy
  • Lets look at a hydrogen atom

59
Changing the energy
  • Heat or electricity or light can move the
    electron up energy levels (excited)

60
Changing the energy
  • As the electron falls back to ground state, it
    gives the energy back as light

61
Changing the energy
  • May fall down in steps
  • Each with a different energy

62



63
Ultraviolet
Visible
Infrared
  • Further they fall, more energy, higher frequency.
  • This is simplified
  • the orbitals also have different energies inside
    energy levels
  • All the electrons can move around.

64
What is light?
  • Light is a particle - it comes in chunks.
  • Light is a wave- we can measure its wavelength
    and it behaves as a wave
  • If we combine Emc2 , c??, E 1/2 mv2 and E
    h?
  • We can get ? h/mv
  • called de Broglies equation
  • Calculates the wavelength of a particle.

65
Sample problem
  • What is the approximate mass of a particle having
    a wavelength of 10-7 meters, and a speed of 1
    m/s?
  • Use ? h/mv
  • 6.6 x 10-27
  • (Note 1 J N x m 1 N 1 kg x m/s2

66
Matter is a Wave
  • Does not apply to large objects
  • Things bigger than an atom
  • A baseball has a wavelength of about 10-32 m
    when moving 30 m/s
  • An electron at the same speed has a wavelength of
    10-3 cm
  • Big enough to measure.

67
The physics of the very small
  • Quantum mechanics explains how the very small
    behaves.
  • Classic physics is what you get when you add up
    the effects of millions of packages.
  • Quantum mechanics is based on probability

68
Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle
  • -It is impossible to know exactly the location
    and velocity of a particle.
  • The better we know one, the less we know the
    other.
  • Measuring changes the properties.
  • Instead, analyze interactions with other particles

69
More obvious with the very small
  • To measure where a electron is, we use light.
  • But the light moves the electron
  • And hitting the electron changes the frequency of
    the light.

70
Before
After
Photon changes wavelength
Photon
Electron Changes velocity
Moving Electron
Fig. 13.19, p. 382
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