Title: Chapter 7: Completing the Model of the Atom
1Chapter 7 Completing the Model of the Atom
2Class Activity (there is no BW)
- Send 1 student from your team to pick up enough
white boards and markers for each person. 1 paper
towel per team - Draw a Bohr model for the element I assign to
you.
3Class Activity (there is no BW)
- 2. Now, find all other students with the same
number of occupied energy levels. - Starting with Hydrogens group, stand together.
Next, lithiums group, finally sodiums group. - What do you notice?
4Class Activity (there is no BW)
- 3. Now, find all other students with the same
number of valence. - Starting with Hydrogens group, stand together.
Then, Berylliums group, etc. - Then, borons group, etc. What do students
notice?
5What the Periodic Table Tells Us
- 1. Columns are called Groups or Families
- Main Group Elements are the tall ones!
- Groups 1 2, 13-18
- They follow the rules pretty well. Behavior is
predictable. - They tell us how many ______ the atoms of these
elements have. - Groups 12 Group tells you how many
- Groups 13-18- subtract 10 from the Group
- Transition Elements are in between Main Group
Elements - Groups 3-12
- Behavior is less predictable!
- Inner Transition Elements are at the bottom of
the P. Table
6What the Periodic Table Tells Us
- 2. Rows are called Periods
- They tell us the location of the _______ in atoms
of these elements.
7Use the P. Table to Make an e- Diagram for an
Element
- Ex Lithium
- Identify its Group 1
- Identify its Period 2
- Q So how many valence e-s does a lithium atom
have? And where are they located? - A 1 valence e- in the 2nd energy level
8Light Electromagnetic Spectrum
- Energy can travel in waves.
- There are high energy and low energy waves.
- The ones we can see are called the visible
spectrum. ROY G BIV - Red is the low energy end violet is the high
energy end.
9Movement of e-s
- e-s can jump to higher energy levels if they
absorb energy. - They cant keep the energy so they lose it and
fall back to lower levels. - When they do this, they release the energy they
absorbed in the form of light.
10Movement of e-s, cont.
- When e-s absorb energy, they do so in certain
amounts. (They jump specific distances.) - When they release energy, they do so in certain
amounts. (They fall specific distances.) And
they release light that has that amount of
energy. - Question if e-s fall a long distance, they
release a lot of energy. What is the color that
is likely to be released? (red end or purple end
of spectrum?)
11Emission Spectrum
- Def Each element has a characteristic set of
colors that are given off when its e-s fall
back. - You can identify an element by its emission
spectrum! - Emission spectrum of hydrogen
12Emission Spectrum (cont.)
- See Fig 7.4 on p 235
- H has 4 spectral lines (4 colored lines)
- Mercury (Hg) has 11 lines!
- Ne has 20 lines!
- Problem there are more lines than you would
expect if there are only a few energy levels. - Hypothesis There must be many sublevels in an
energy level
13Electron Sublevels
- Each electron has an address, where it can be
considered to be located in the atom. - Main energy level hotel
- Sublevel floor
- Orbital room
- Regions of space outside the nucleus
- All orbitals in a sublevel have the same energy
- 2 electrons max can fit in an orbital
14Sublevels in Atoms
Main energy level Types of sublevels of orbitals of electrons
1 s 1
2 s p 1 3 (4 total)
3 s p d 1 3 5 (9 total)
4-7 s p d f 1 3 5 7 (16 total)
15Orbitals
- s orbitals are spherical
- There is only 1 orbital
- p orbitals are dumbbell shaped
- There are 3 orbitals, all with energy
- Each is oriented on either x, y, or z axis
- They overlap
- d orbitals have varying shapes
- There are 5 orbitals, all with energy
- f orbitals have varying shapes
- There are 7 orbitals, all with energy
16Electron Configurations
- Electrons are always arranged in the most stable
(lowest energy) way - This is calledelectron configuration
17Section 2 The Periodic Table Atomic Structure
- Shape of p. table is based on the order in which
sublevels are filled - REGIONS OF THE P. TABLE (see p 244 of book)
- s REGION (block) - Groups 1 2
- p REGION (block) - Groups 13-18
- d REGION (block)- Groups 3-12 (Transition
Elements) - f REGION (block)- (Inner Transition Elements)
18List sublevels from lowest to highest energy
level (Using P.Table)
- 1. Always start with Period 1-go from L to R.
- 2. Go to Period 2-from L to R
- 3. Go to Period 3- from L to R
- 4. Continue 4-7 periods, L to R until you have
completed the P. Table. - Exception elements in d block are 1 main E.L
lower than the period where they are located - Exception elements in f block are 2 main E.L.s
lower than the period in which they are located
19Correct Order of Sublevels (lowest to highest
energy)
- 1s, 2s, 2p, 3s, 3p, 4s, 3d, 4p, 5s, 4d, 5p, 6s,
4f, 5d, 6p, 7s, 5f, 6d, 7p
20Why Exceptions w/d f block elements?
- When you get to the higher main E.L.s, the
sublevels begin to overlap.
21E- configurations
- Use the P. Table to write the sublevels in
increasing order, as previously instructed. - Add a superscript next to each sublevel that
shows how many e-s are in the sublevel - Ex Oxygen 1s22s22p4
22Valence e-s
- Valence e-s are the electrons in the highest
occupied main energy level. - Identify the valence e-s by finding the biggest
big number in your e- configuration. - Ex Oxygen 1s22s22p4
- Question WHAT IS THE BIGGEST BIG NUMBER YOU
SEE? WHAT ARE THE VALENCE ELECTRONS?
23Noble Gas Notation
- Short-cut way of showing e- configuration
- A Noble Gas is a Group 18 element.
- Identify the noble gas in the period above your
element of interest. Write this symbol in
brackets. - Write the e- configuration for any additional e-s
that your element of interest has, but the noble
gas doesnt have. - Ex Nitrogen 1s22s22p5 becomes He 2s22p5
24Practice Noble Gas Notation
- Tungsten (W)
- E- configuration
- Noble Gas configuration
25Arrow Orbital Diagram-Used to show e-
configuration.
- SYMBOLS
- A box represents an orbital
- Label each box with the sublevel 1s 2s 2p
2p 2p - An arrow represents an electron
- 2 arrows (e-s) in the same orbital face opposite
directions. - Example oxygen, see above
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? ?
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26Arrow Orbital Diagram-Used to show e-
configuration.
- INSTRUCTIONS
- Fill electrons from lowest to highest sublevel.
- Never place 2 e-s in the same orbital of a
sublevel until you have placed one in each of the
orbitals
27Arrow Orbital Diagram Practice
28Regions or Blocks of the P. Table