Title: Chapter 1' ATOMIC STRUCTURE AND THE PERIODIC TABLE
1 PRINCIPALS OF CHEMISTRY I (CEM 141) Dr. BÙI
TH? B?U HUÊ College of Science Cantho University
2Chapter 1. MATTER AND MEASUREMENT Chapter 2.
ATOMS, MOLECULES AND IONS Chapter 3.
STOICHIOMETRIC Chapter 4. ATOMIC STRUCTURE AND
THE PERIODIC TABLE Chapter 5. CHEMICAL BONDS
AND MOLECULAR STRUCTURE Chapter 6. STATES
OF MATTER Chapter 7. ENERGY AND CHEMICAL
REACTIONS Chapter 8. SOLUTIONS Chapter 9.
CHEMICAL EQUILIBRIA
3References
- 1. Brady and Holum. 1996. Chemistry the Study
- of Matter and its Changes.
- 2th Ed., John Wiley Sons. Inc. New York.
- 2. Umland, Jean B., 1993. General Chemistry.
- West publishing company.
- 3. Zumdahl, Steven S. 1995. Chemical Principal.
- 2th Ed. DC. Health company. Toronto.
- 4. http//www.chemistry.msu.edu/Courses/
- 5. http//antoine.frostburg.edu
- 6. http//chemed.chem.purdue.edu
- 7. http//www.chem1.com/chemed/genchem.html
- http//www.cbu.edu/mcondren/lectures.htm
- http//ull.chemistry.uakron.edu/GenChem/index.htm
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4Chapter 4. ATOMIC STRUCTURE AND THE
PERIODIC TABLE
- Objectives
- Understand atomic structure of an atom
including its mass number, isotopes and orbitals. - Know how to account for the structure of the
periodic table of the elements based on the
modern theory of atomic structure. - Understand general trends of several important
atomic properties.
5Chapter 4. ATOMIC STRUCTURE AND THE
PERIODIC TABLE
Atomic Structure An atom is composed of three
types of subatomic particles the proton,
neutron, and electron.
6Atomic Structure
7Atomic Structure
8Electromagnetic Radiation
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10Electromagnetic Radiation
- nl c
- Where
- n frequency
- l wavelength
- c speed of light
11Electromagnetic Spectrum
12Dispersion of White Light
13Photoelectric Effect
- the emission of electrons by substances,
especially metals, when light falls on their
surfaces.
14Photoelectric Effect
15Quantum Mechanics
- Quantum theory
- the theory of the structure and behavior of
atoms and molecules.
16Photons
- The quantum of electromagnetic energy,
- generally regarded as a
- discrete particle having zero mass, no
- electric charge, and an indefinitely
- long lifetime.
- E h? hc/?
- h Planck's constant 6.626 10-34 J.s
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21Line Emission Spectrum
22Absorption Spectrum
- Light shinning on a sample causes electrons
to be excited from the ground state to an
excited state - wavelengths of that energy are removed from
transmitted spectra
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24The Atomic Spectrum of Hydrogen and the Bohr
Model
- Bohr Model for the Hydrogen Atom
- mvr nh/2p
- n quantum number
- n 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, etc
25Bohr Atom
26Ground State
- The state of least possible energy in a
physical system, as of elementary particles. Also
called ground level.
27Excited State
- Being at an energy level higher than the
ground state.
28Electron Transition in a Hydrogen Atom
Lyman series ? ultraviolet n gt 1 ? n
1 Balmer series ? visible light n gt 2 ?
n 2 Paschen series ? infrared n gt 3 ?
n 3
29- Knowing diamond is transparent, which curve best
represents the absorption spectrum of diamond
(see below)? - A, B, C
30- According to the energy diagram below for the
Bohr model of the hydrogen atom, if an electron
jumps from E1 to E2, energy is - absorbed
- emitted
- not involved
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42Orbitals
- region of probability of finding an electron
around the nucleus - 4 types s, p, d, f
43Atomic Orbitals, s-type
44Atomic Orbitals, p-type
45Atomic Orbitals, d-type
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48Pauli Exclusion Principle
49Electronic Configurations
- The shorthand representation of the occupancy of
the energy levels (shells and subshells) of an
atom by electrons.
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58Hund's Rules
59Electronic Configuration
- H atom (1 electron) 1s1
- He atom (2 electrons) 1s2
- Li atom (3 electrons) 1s2, 2s1
- Cl atom
- (17 electrons) 1s2, 2s2, 2p6, 3s2, 3p5
60Electronic Configuration
- As atom
- 33 electons
- 1s2, 2s2, 2p6, 3s2, 3p6, 4s2, 3d10, 4p3
- or
- Ar 4s2, 3d10, 4p3
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62- Mn Ar4s2 3d?
- How many d electrons does Mn have?
- 4, 5, 6
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64Electronic Configuration
- Negative ions
- add electron(s), 1 electron for each
- negative charge
- S-2 ion (16 2)electrons
- 1s2, 2s2, 2p6, 3s2, 3p6
65Electronic Configuration
- Positive ions
- remove electron(s), 1 electron for each
- positive charge
- Mg2 ion (12-2) electrons
- 1s2, 2s2, 2p6
66- How many valence electrons are in Cl, Ne3s2
3p5? - 2, 5, 7
67- For Cl to achieve a noble gas configuration, it
is more likely that - electrons would be added
- electrons would be removed
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69Regions by Electron Type
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75Trends in the Periodic Table
- atomic radius
- ionic radius
- ionization energy
- electron affinity
76Atomic Radius
- decrease left to right across a period
Zeff Z - S where Zeff
effective nuclear charge Z nuclear charge,
atomic number S shielding constant
77Atomic Radius
- Increase top to bottom down a group
- Increases from upper right corner to the lower
left corner
78Atomic Radius
79Atomic Radius vs. Atomic Number
80Ionic Radii
81Ionic Radius
- Same trends as for atomic radius
- positive ions smaller than atom
- negative ions larger than atom
82Comparison of Atomic and Ionic Radii
83Ionic Radius
- Isoelectronic Series
- series of negative ions, noble gas atom, and
positive ions with the same electronic
confiuration - size decreases as positive charge of the
nucleus increases
84Ionization Energy
- energy necessary to remove an electron to form a
positive ion - low value for metals, electrons easily removed
- high value for non-metals, electrons difficult to
remove - increases from lower left corner of periodic
table to the upper right corner
85Ionization Energies
- first ionization energy
- energy to remove first electron from an atom.
- second ionization energy
- energy to remove second electron from a 1 ion.
- etc.
86Ionization Energy vs. Atomic Number
87Electron Affinity
- energy released when an electron is added to an
atom - same trends as ionization energy, increases from
lower left corner to the upper right corner - metals have low EA
- nonmetals have high EA
88Magnetism
- Result of the spin of electrons
- diamagnetism - no unpaired electrons
- paramagnetism - one or more unpaired electrons
89Magnetism
Without applied field
With applied field
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