1 / 18

Understanding Fireworks: Explaining Colors and Electron Behavior

Learn how different compounds produce various colors in fireworks and how Bohr's atomic model helps explain the behavior of electrons. Discover the electron cloud model and electron configurations in atoms.

lenna
Download Presentation

Understanding Fireworks: Explaining Colors and Electron Behavior

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Have you ever wondered what produces the different colors in a fireworks display? Certain compounds will produce certain colors of light when they are heated. Compounds containing the element strontium produce red light. Compounds containing barium produce green light.

  2. Bohr’s Model of the Atom Bohr’s model explains what happens to electrons when atoms gain or lose energy?

  3. Bohr’s Model of the Atom • Bohr’s atomic model has a nucleus surrounded by a large volume of space - just like Rutherford's model • Electrons move in fixed orbits around the nucleus, like planets around a sun. • Each electron in the atom has a specific amount of energy. Electron Nucleus Bohr Model

  4. Electron Electrons gain or lose energy when they move between fixed energy levels Nucleus Bohr Model Bohr’s Model of the Atom Energy Levels Energy of an electron changes, when an atom gains or loses energy • Electrons in an atom can only have fixed energy levels. • Electrons cannot exist between energy levels.

  5. Bohr’s Model of the Atom An analogy for energy levels of electrons is a staircase. • Landing at the bottom of the staircase is the lowest level. • Each step up represents a higher energy level. • Step height represents an energy difference between levels. • You can only move in whole numbers of stairs.

  6. Bohr’s Model of the Atom • Electron may move up or down two or more energy levels if it gains or loses the right amount of energy. • The size of the jump between energy levels determines the amount of energy gained or lost. • No two elements have the same set of energy levels so light from each element is different

  7. Bohr’s Model of the Atom The movement of electrons between energy levels explains the light you see when fireworks explode. • Heat causes some electrons to move to higher energy levels. • When those electrons move back to lower energy levels, they release energy. Some of that energy is released as visible light. • Different elements emit differentcolors of light because no two elements have the same set of energy levels.

  8. Electron Cloud Model What model do scientists use to describe how electrons behave in atoms? An electron cloud is a visual model of the most likely locations for electrons in an atom. Scientists use the electron cloud model to describe the possible locations of electrons around the nucleus.

  9. The electron cloud is a visual model of the probable locations of electrons in an atom. The probability of finding an electron is higher in the denser regions of the cloud. Thenucleus contains protons and neutrons Electron Cloud Model Electron Cloud Model • Improvement on Bohr’s model where electrons have limited energy levels - “Staircase”, but electrons do not move like planets in a solar system. • Instead, electrons are located in an electron cloud • Probability of locating electron in the atom

  10. Electron Cloud Model - Analogy When the propeller of an airplane is at rest, you can see the location of the blades. When the propeller is moving, you see only a blur that is similar to a drawing of an electron cloud.

  11. Electron Cloud Model The electron cloud represents all the orbitals in an atom. An orbitalis a region of space around the nucleus where an electron is likely to be found. The electron cloud represents all the orbitals in an atom. An electron cloud is a good approximation of how electrons behave in their orbitals.

  12. Electron Cloud Model For an analogy to the concept of an orbital, imagine a map of your school. Mark your exact location with a dot once every 10 minutes over a period of one week. The dots on your map are a model of your “orbital.” They describe your most likely locations. • The places you visit the most would have the highest concentration of dots. • The places you visit the least would have the lowest concentration of dots.

  13. Electron Cloud Model The level in which an electron has the least energy—the lowest energy level—has only one orbital. Higher energy levels have more than one orbital.

  14. Electron Configurations What is the most stable configuration of electrons in an atom?

  15. Electron Configurations An electron configuration is the arrangement of electrons in the orbitals of an atom. When all the electrons in an atom have the lowest possible energies, the atom is said to be in its ground state.

  16. Electron Configurations The most stable electron configuration is the one in which the electrons are in orbitals with the lowest possible energies.

  17. Electron Configurations A lithium atom has three electrons. • In the ground state, two of the lithium electrons are in the orbital of the first energy level. • The third electron is in an orbital of the second energy level. • If a lithium atom absorbs enough energy, one of its electrons can move to an orbital with a higher energy. • This configuration is referred to as an excited state. An excited state is less stable than the ground state. • Eventually, the electron that was promoted to a higher energy level loses energy, and the atom returns to the ground state.

  18. Electron Configurations The ground state of a person is on the floor. A gymnast on a balance beam is like an atom in an excited state—not very stable. When she dismounts, the gymnast will return to a lower, more stable energy level.

More Related