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Quantum Mechanical Model of the Atom

Quantum Mechanical Model of the Atom. Ochran 2013. Models of the Atom . Rutherford used existing ideas about the atom and proposed an atomic model in which the electrons move around the nucleus, like the planets move around the sun.

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Quantum Mechanical Model of the Atom

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  1. Quantum Mechanical Model of the Atom Ochran 2013

  2. Models of the Atom • Rutherford used existing ideas about the atom and proposed an atomic model in which the electrons move around the nucleus, like the planets move around the sun.

  3. Rutherford’s atomic model could not explain the chemical properties of elements. • Rutherford’s model fails to explain why objects change color when heated.

  4. 1863- John Dalton pictures atoms as tiny, indestructible particles, with no internal structure. Models of The Atom

  5. 1897- J.J. Thomson, a British scientist, discovers the electron. The later leads to his “Plum Pudding” model. He pictures electrons embedded in a sphere of positive electrical charge. Models of the Atom

  6. 1911- Ernest Rutherford finds that an atom has a small, dense, positively charged nucleus. Electrons move around the nucleus. Models Of the Atom

  7. 1913- Neils Bohr’s model, the electron moves in a circular orbit at fixed distances from the nucleus. Models of the Atom

  8. The Bohr Model • Bohr proposed that an electron is found only in specific circular paths, or orbits, around the nucleus. • Each orbit has a fixed energy. These fixed energies an electron can have are called energy levels.

  9. These ladder rungs are somewhat like energy levels. The higher an electron is on the energy ladder, the farther it is from the nucleus. quantum of energy is the amount of energy required to move an electron from one energy level to another energy level. Nucleus

  10. To move from one energy level to another an electron must gain or lose just the right amount of energy. The higher an electron is on the energy ladder, the farther from the nucleus.

  11. Nucleus

  12. The Bohr Model • The Bohr model establishes the concept of definite electron energy levels within atoms. But Bohr's model was rather simplistic and as scientists made more discoveries about more complex atoms, Bohr's model was modified and eventually was replaced by more sophisticated models.

  13. 1926- Erwin Schrodinger develops mathematical equations to describe the motion of electrons in atoms. His work leads to the electron cloud model. Models Of the Atom

  14. The Quantum Mechanical Model • The modern description of the electrons in atoms, the Quantum Mechanical Model, comes from the mathematical solutions to the Schrodinger equation. • Like the Bohr model, the quantum mechanical model of the atom restricts the energy of electrons to certain values. • Unlike the Bohr model, however, the QMM does not involve an exact path the electron takes around the nucleus.

  15. The Quantum Mechanical model determines the allowed energies an electron can have and how likely it is to find the electron in various locations around the nucleus. Key Concept!!!

  16. Here is a quantum mechanical picture of an Hydrogen atom. The nucleus is not shown, but is located at the center of the picture. Here are some things to notice: Like the heads you can see where the electron is most likely to be: near the nucleus (the center of the picture). You can't tell exactly where the electron is, just where it is most likely to be. The individual dots are not electrons. They are meant to be used in the context of how dense, or heavy an area of dots appears. The more crowded (or heavier packed) the dots are in a particular region, the better chance you have to finding your electron there.

  17. Bohr’s Atom - problems • Only explain hydrogen spectrum. • Could not explain molecules (bonding of atoms) - formation or properties. • Why fixed orbits and no energy radiation in orbits. • At variance with Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle. Heisenberg: Not possible to know both the position and velocity of an electron at the same time with the same amount of accuracy.

  18. The Successes and Limitations of the Bohr Atomic Model • Bohr's realization that the atom's energy is quantized-that electrons are restricted to specific energy levels (orbits)-was an astounding achievement. • this model successfully predicted the coloured lines in the visible-light portion of hydrogen's emission spectrum

  19. Bohr’s model of atom explains emission spectrum of hydrogen • other atoms however, posed problems

  20. Bohr’s model of atom explains emission spectrum of hydrogen • other atoms however, posed problems

  21. The Quantum Mechanical Model • By the mid-1920s, it had become apparent that the Bohr model could not explain and make predictions about multi-electron atoms • Three physicists: Schrodinger, de Broglie, and Heisenberg, developed to explain properties of matter called wave mechanics or commonly, quantum mechanics.

  22. Schrodinger’s standing wave • de Broglie originated the idea that the electron, previously consisted just as a particle , has wave properties • Schrodinger approached the problem of atomic structure by focusing on the wave properties of the electron. • In 1926, Schrodinger published an equation known as the Schrodinger wave equation.

  23. Solution to Schrodinger’s equation gives many wave functions that describe various types of orbitals. • Each of these types of orbitals has a set of four numbers called quantum numbers, which describe various properties of the orbital. • they are denoted as n,l ml and ms • when you substitute specific combinations of integers for each of these variables into the wave function, you have different solutions to the wave equation.

  24. Quantum Numbers • quantum numbers describe electrons in atoms • three quantum numbers are used to describe the distribution of electrons in the atom • the first quantum number, n., describes an orbitals energy level relative to size. • the second quantum, l, and the and third quantum number, ml, respectively describe an orbital’s shape and orientation in space. • the fourth quantum number, ms, describes the behaviour of a specific electron in an orbital.

  25. The Principal Quantum Number, n • describes the size and energy of an atomic orbital • has whole-number values (1,2,3, … ∞) • a higher value for n indicates a higher energy level. • a greater n value also means the size of the shell is larger with a higher probability of finding an electron farther from the nucleus. • the greatest number of electrons possible in any energy level is 2n2

  26. The Secondary Quantum Number, l • describes the shape of an atomic orbital. • refers to energy sub levels, or subshells, within each principal energy level. • the values of l are dependent on the value of the principal quantum number, n. • values of l are positive integers that range in value from 0 to n-1 If n=2, l can be either 0 or 1 If n=3, l can be 0,1, or 2 Note: the number of possible values for l in a given energy level is the same as the value of n

  27. In other words, if n=2 then there are only two possible sublevels, or subshells (2 types of orbital shapes) at this energy level. Each value of l is identified by a specific letter s, p, d, or f that is used to help distinguish it from the principal quantum number.

  28. The l=0 orbital has a letter s • The l=1orbital has a letter p • The l=2orbital has a letter d • The l=3orbital has a letter f To identify an energy sublevel, combine the value of n with the letter of the orbital shape • for example, the sublevel with n=3 and l=0 is called the 3s sublevel. The sublevel with n=2 and l=1 is the 2p sublevel

  29. Magnetic Quantum Number, ml • describes the orientation of the orbital in space around the nucleus. • the number of different values that ml can have equals the number of orbitals that are possible. • value of mldepends on the value of l. For any given value of l, there are (2l+1) values for ml ranging from – l to + l

  30. The Spin Quantum Number, ms • related to the spin of an electron • it specifies the direction in which the axis of an electron is oriented and has only two possible values,

  31. in 1925, Wolfgang Pauli proposed that only two electrons of opposite spin could occupy an orbital. • became known as the Pauli exclusion principle • thus an orbital can have a maximum of two electrons only, each of which must have the opposite spin of the other. In a given atom, no two electrons can have the same set of four quantum numbers (n, l, ml, ms)

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