Title: ELECTRONS IN ATOMS
1ELECTRONS IN ATOMS
- Chapter 5 pages 126-153
- Slides 2-15 are review from Chapter 4
2The Structure of the Atom
- About 2500 years ago, Greek philosophers thought
about matter and its composition - 4th Century B.C. Democritus first suggested the
idea of atoms (indivisible particles) - Aristotle did not believe in atoms
3Antoine Lavoisier (1782)
- Father of Modern Chemistry
- French chemist
- The first to use truly quantitative research
- Observations led to the Law of Conservation
of Mass - Identified components of water as hydrogen and
oxygen
4Joseph Proust (1799)
- French chemist
- Observed composition of water is always 11
hydrogen and 89 oxygen by mass - Studied many other compounds and always found a
constant composition by mass for a given compound - This is the Law of Definite Proportions
5John Dalton (1808)
- English schoolteacher
- Studied the results of Lavoisier and Proust and
many other scientists - He wanted and atomic theory to explain the
experimental evidence - His theory led to the solid ball model of the
atom
6Daltons Atomic Theory
- All matter is composed of indivisible particles
called atoms. - Atoms of the same element are identical atoms of
different elements are different. - Atoms of different elements chemically combine in
small whole number ratios to form compounds. - Chemical reactions occur when atoms are
separated, combined, or rearranged.
7Crookes Experiment (1870s)
- Gas Tubes w/2 electrodes (conductors)
- Anode positive
- Cathode negative
- Cathode ray tube (CRT) when voltage was applied
a beam of light composed of particles was
deflected by a magnet determined they were
charged particles
8J.J. Thomson (1897)
- Was investigating the relationship between matter
electricity - Cathode ray tube experiment with a fluorescent
screen allowed him to measure deflection when a
magnet was used - Measured ratio of charge to mass and determined
particles were identical regardless of the gas
used or the material of the cathode - These particles were later named electrons
- This led to the plum pudding model
9Thomsons Plum Pudding Model
- Nobel Prize 1907
- Pudding the charge and most of the mass of the
atom - Plums - charged electrons spread throughout to
make the atom neutral - Ions / - charged atoms result from the loss
or gain of electrons - Cations positive charge / lost electrons
- Anions negative charge / gain electrons
10Robert A. Millikan (1909)
- Oil drop experiment suspended fine mist of oil
droplets between charged plates - Approximated the mass of an electron to be 1/2000
the mass of an H atom - Currently known to be 1/1840 of a H atom
- 9.11 x 10-28 g
11Protons
- Since atoms are neutral, a positive charge must
also exist in the atom - Thomson showed that positively charged rays
existed in the CRT - Protons finally identified by 1920
- Proton mass is 1836/1837 of H atom
- Mass of Proton 1.67 x 10-24 g
12Radioactivity Discovered 1896 (Ch 25.1)
- Radioactivity discovered in Uranium by Becquerel
- Radiation energy that is emitted from a source
and travels through space - Radioactivity spontaneous radiation from the
nucleus of an atom - Marie/Pierre Curie radium polonium
13Radioactivity (Ch 25.1)
- By 1900 3 types of radiation identified
- Alpha (a) He ions w no elctrons 1/10th the speed
of light stopped by paper or clothing - Beta (ß) electrons at high speeds / stopped by a
few mm of Al - Gamma (?) form of electromagnetic radiation more
energetic than X-rays stopped by several cm of
Pb or more concrete/ no mass or charge
14Rutherford (1911)
- Gold foil experiment with alpha particles
- Led to the nuclear model of the atom
- Atoms contain a small dense nucleus
- Electrons move around like bees in a hive
- Diameter of nucleus 1/100,000 the size of the
atom most of the atom is empty space - 1920 Rutherford proposed neutral particles with
the same mass as protons
15Chadwick (1930s)
- Credited with the discovery of neutrons
- Nobel Prize 1935
- Neutron Mass 1.67 x 10-24 g
16Bohrs Model of the Atom (Chapter 5)
- 1913 Niels Bohr
- Linked electron with photon emission
- Electrons circle the nucleus in exact paths
- Paths farther from the nucleus are higher in
energy - When electrons drop to lower energy levels, the
photon emitted is equal to the energy difference
between the levels
17Problems with Bohrs Model
- It only worked for hydrogen, atoms with more
electrons did not fit the model - It did not fully explain the chemical behavior of
atoms
18Quantum Model
- Electrons as Waves If light has a dual nature,
could electrons also? - DeBroglie electrons considered waves confined
to the space around the nucleus electrons could
exist only at certain frequencies quantized
energy levels - Electrons like waves can be bent or diffracted
show interference
19Heisenberg Uncertainty
- Electrons are detected by their interaction with
photons - Uncertainty Principle It is impossible to
determine simultaneously both the position and
velocity of an electron or any other particles
20Schrodinger Wave Equation
- 1926 Used dual nature to develop equation that
treated electrons as waves - Like Bohr electrons exist in quantized energy
levels - Unlike Bohr Electrons do not travel in exact
pathways, but are located in orbitals of electron
density probability
21Atomic Orbitals Quantum Numbers
- Electron Cloud surface drawn where electrons
are likely to be found (orbital) - Quantum Numbers Mathematical description of
electrons in atoms - 90 probability
- No two electrons have the same set of four
quantum numbers
22Principal Quantum Number
- n
- Main energy level n integers
- As n increases, energy and distance from the
nucleus increases - Always equals the number of sublevels within the
principle energy level - The number of orbitals in any energy level is n2
- Maximum electrons that can occupy a given
energy level is 2n2.
23Angular Momentum Quantum Number
- l
- Indicates the shape of an orbital the number of
shapes possible n - Also referred to as sublevles
- Its value ranges from 0 to n-1
- Shapes spherical (s, l0), dumbbell (p, l1),
complex (d, l2), and more complex (f, l3)
24Magnetic Quantum Number
- Orientation around the nucleus corresponds to
3-D graph axes (x, y z) - Its value ranges from l to l
- 1 for s orbitals, 3 for p orbitals, 5 for d
orbitals, 7 for f orbitals
25Spin Quantum Number
- Which direction the electron is traveling
- 1/2 or -1/2 ( or )
- This satisfies Paulis exclusion principle
26Electron Configurations
- Defined Ways in which electrons are arranged
around the nuclei of atoms, from lowest to
highest energy. -
27Three Rules for Filling Orbitals
- 1. Aufbau Principle
- Electrons enter orbitals of lowest energy first
- Orbitals within a sublevel are equal energy
- s,p,d,f E order of sublevels
- 2. Pauli Exclusion Principle
- An atomic orbital may describe at most two
electrons - Paired electrons have opposite spin
- No 2 electrons can have the same 4 quantum
numbers - 3. Hunds Rule
- When electrons occupy orbitals of equal E, one
electron enters each orbital until all contain
es with parallel spin. Second electrons are
then added so they are paired.
28Types of Sublevels/Orbitals
- s 1 orbital 2 electrons
- p 3 orbital 6 electrons
- d 5 orbitals 10 electrons
- f 7 orbitals 14 electrons
- Remember each orbital holds up to 2 electrons.
- http//lrc-srvr.mps.ohio-state.edu/shell-cgi/world
/genquiz.pl
29Summary of Electron Positions
30PROPERTIES OF LIGHT
- http//www.nelsonthornes.com/secondary/science/sci
net/scinet/light/waves/wavediag.htm - Properties of Light
- Electromagnetic radiation
- Electromagnetic spectrum
- Wavelength
- Frequency
- Amplitude
- Speed of light 3.00 x 108 m/s
- C?v
- Separated into continuous spectrum
- ROY G BIV Frequency increases from red to violet
31Hydrogen Line-Emission
- Ground State
- Excited State
- When energy is passed through hydrogen gas, an
electron is excited to higher energy levels.
When the electron falls back to its ground state,
the energy is released as electromagnetic
radiation. Visible light can be separated into
separated bands of color known as a line emission
spectrum. These bands are associated with
specific frequencies (energy) - DEMONSTRATIONS
32Photoelectric Effect
- http//www.colorado.edu/physics/2000/quantumzone/p
hotoelectric.html - Wave theory predicted light of any frequency
would produce enough energy to emit an electron,
however light has to be a minimum frequency
support of particle theory - Planck suggested quanta
- Quantum
- Ehv
- Albert Einstein Electromagnetic Radiation has a
dual wave/particle nature - Photons
33Links
- http//wine1.sb.fsu.edu/chm1045/notes/Struct/EConf
ig/Struct08.htm - http//wine1.sb.fsu.edu/chm1045/notes/Struct/EPeri
od/Struct09.htm - http//lrc-srvr.mps.ohio-state.edu/shell-cgi/world
/genquiz.pl