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Electronic structure

Electronic structure. Atomic structure. Atoms: neutral. Protons have a positive charge and electrons have a negative charge. Atoms are neutral so they have the same number of electrons as protons.  The protons are in the nucleus and do not change or vary except in some nuclear reactions.

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Electronic structure

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  1. Electronic structure

  2. Atomic structure

  3. Atoms: neutral • Protons have a positive charge and electrons have a negative charge. • Atoms are neutral so they have the same number of electrons as protons.  • The protons are in the nucleus and do not change or vary except in some nuclear reactions. • The electrons are in discrete pathways or shells around the nucleus.

  4. Shells - Orbitals

  5. ELECTRONIC STRUCTURE AND ATOMIC ORBITALS • In any introductory chemistry course you will have come across the electronic structures of hydrogen and carbon drawn as:

  6. Hydrogen's electron - the 1s orbital

  7. Names of orbitals • Each orbital has a name. • The orbital occupied by the hydrogen electron is called a 1s orbital. The "1" represents the fact that the orbital is in the energy level closest to the nucleus. • The "s" tells you about the shape of the orbital. s orbitals are spherically symmetric around the nucleus - in each case, like a hollow ball with the nucleus at its centre.

  8. 2s orbitals

  9. P orbitals A p orbital is rather like 2 identical balloons tied together at the nucleus. The diagram on the right is a cross-section through that 3-dimensional region of space. Once again, the orbital shows where there is a 95% chance of finding a particular electron.

  10. P orbitals • At any one energy level it is possible to have three absolutely equivalent p orbitals pointing mutually at right angles to each other. These are arbitrarily given the symbols px, py and pz. This is simply for convenience - what you might think of as the x, y or z direction changes constantly as the atom tumbles in space.

  11. The electronic structure of hydrogen • Hydrogen has only one electron and that will go into the orbital with the lowest energy - the 1s orbital. • Hydrogen has an electronic structure of 1s1. We have already described this orbital earlier. • The electron of a hydrogen atom travels around the proton nucleus in a shell of a spherical shape

  12. Helium • Helium, element number two, has two electrons in the same spherical shape around the nucleus. • The first shell only has one subshell, and that subshell has only one orbital, for electrons. • Each orbital has a place for two electrons. The spherical shape of the lone orbital in the first energy level has given it the name s orbital.

  13. The electronic structure of carbon • Carbon has six electrons. Two of them will be found in the 1s orbital close to the nucleus. The next two will go into the 2s orbital. • The remaining ones will be in two separate 2p orbitals. This is because the p orbitals all have the same energy and the electrons prefer to be on their own if that's the case. • The electronic structure of carbon is normally written 1s22s22p2

  14. Carbon

  15. Carbon • Name: Carbon • Atomic Number: 6 • Chemical Symbol: C • Electronic Configuration:1s22s22p2 • Atomic Mass: 12.0 • Atomic Ionization Energies: • 2p : 1086 kJ mol-1 • 2s : 1601 kJ mol-1 • 1s : 27788 kJ mol-1

  16. Orbitals, Shells • Physicists and chemists use a standard notation to describe the electron configurations of atoms and molecules. For atoms, we use atomic orbital labels (eg, 1s, 3d, 4f) with the number of electrons assigned to each orbital placed as a superscript. For example: • hydrogen has one electron in the s-orbital of the first shell, so its configuration is written 1s1. • Lithium has two electrons in the 1s-subshell and one in the (higher-energy) 2s-subshell, so its configuration is written 1s2 2s1 (pronounced "one-ess-two, two-ess-one"). • Phosphorus (atomic number 15), is as follows: 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p3.

  17. Electronic configuration

  18. Electronic configuration

  19. Electronic configuration

  20. Shells • The shells or energy levels are numbered or lettered, beginning with K. • So K is one, L is two, M is three, N is four, O is five, P is six, and Q is seven. • As the s shells can only have two electrons and the p shells can only have six electrons, the d shells can have only ten electrons and the f shells can have only fourteen electrons.

  21. Shells - Orbitals

  22. Shells • The electron shells are labelled K, L, M, N, O, P, and Q; or 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7; going from innermost shell outwards. • Electrons in outer shells have higher average energy and travel further from the nucleus than those in inner shells, making them more important in determining how the atom reacts chemically and behaves as a conductor, etc, because the pull of the atom's nucleus upon them is weaker and more easily broken.

  23. Subshells • Each shell is composed of one or more subshells, which are themselves composed of atomic orbitals. For example, the first (K) shell has one subshell, called "1s"; the second (L) shell has two subshells, called "2s" and "2p"; the third shell has "3s", "3p", and "3d"; and so on.[3] The various possible subshells are shown in the following table:

  24. Orbitals, Shells,subshells

  25. Orbitals, Shells, subshells

  26. Shells and subshells

  27. Shells and subshells

  28. Number of electrons in each shell • Each s subshell holds no more than two electrons • Each p subshell holds no more than six electrons • Each d subshell holds no more than ten electrons • Each f subshell holds no more than fourteen electrons • Therefore, the K shell, which contains only an s subshell, can hold up to 2 electrons; the L shell, which contains an s and a p, can hold up to 2+6=8 electrons; and so forth. The general formula is that the nth shell can in principle hold up to 2n2 electrons.

  29. Tin: Sn

  30. spdf notation • Electronic Configuration: 1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104s1

  31. Spdf notation

  32. Electrons in boxes

  33. The order of filling orbitals

  34. Orbitals =shells=Energy levels • The circles show energy levels - representing increasing distances from the nucleus. You could straighten the circles out and draw the electronic structure as a simple energy diagram

  35. Energy levels

  36. Energy levels

  37. Ground state • The electrons are housed in shells around the nucleus. There is a ranking or hierarchy of the shells, usually with the shells further from the nucleus having a higher energy. • As we consider the electron configuration of atoms, we will be describing the ground state position of the electrons. • Place electrons in lower energy shells. • Start from shell nearest to the nucleus, i.e 1s2

  38. Order of filling atomic orbitals

  39. Order of filling orbitals

  40. Ground state • Electrons fill low energy orbitals (closer to the nucleus) before they fill higher energy ones. Where there is a choice between orbitals of equal energy, they fill the orbitals singly as far as possible. • The diagram (not to scale) summarises the energies of the various orbitals in the first and second levels. • Notice that the 2s orbital has a slightly lower energy than the 2p orbitals. That means that the 2s orbital will fill with electrons before the 2p orbitals. All the 2p orbitals have exactly the same energy

  41. Quantum • Electrons are able to move from one energy level to another by emission or absorption of a quantum of energy, in the form of a photon. Because of the Pauli exclusion principle, no more than two electrons may exist in a given atomic orbital; therefore an electron may only leap to another orbital if there is a vacancy there. The word comes from the Latin "quantus," for "how much.

  42. Principal quantum number • An electron shell is the set of atomic orbitals which share the same principal quantum number, n (the number before the letter in the orbital label): hence the 3s-orbital, the 3p-orbitals and the 3d-orbitals all form part of the third shell. • An electron shell can accommodate 2n2 electrons, ie the first shell can accommodate 2 electrons, the second shell 8 electrons, the third shell 18 electrons, etc.

  43. The periodic table • The form of the periodic table is closely related to the electron configuration of the atoms of the elements. For example, all the elements of group 2 have an electron configuration of [E] ns2 (where [E] is an inert gas configuration), and have notable similarities in their chemical properties. • The outermost electron shell is often referred to as the "valence shell" and determines the chemical properties. It should be remembered that the similarities in the chemical properties were remarked more than a century before the idea of electron configuration.

  44. History • The existence of electron shells was first observed experimentally in X-ray absorption studies. Shells were first labeled with the letters K, L, M, N, O, P, and Q. • The origin of this terminology was alphabetic. • Later experiments indicated that the K absorption lines are produced by the innermost electrons. • These letters were later found to correspond to the n-values 1, 2, 3, etc. • K=1 ,L =2 , M =3, N = 4, etc.

  45. Quantum theory • The "quantum" theory was proposed more than 90 years ago, and has been confirmed by thousands of experiments. Science and education has failed to clearly describe the energy level concept to almost four generations of citizens. This experiment is an exercise aimed at throwing a little more light on the subject. • Atoms have two kinds of states; a ground state and an excited state. The ground state is the state in which the electrons in the atom are in their lowest energy levels possible (atoms naturally are in the ground state). This means the electrons have the lowest possible values for "n" the principal quantum number.

  46. Spectrum, spectra

  47. Wavelength and frequency

  48. The visible spectrum with respect to infrared and ultraviolet radiation.

  49. UV and visible light • Ultraviolet (200-400 nm) and visible (400-800 nm) radiation are found towards the short wavelength, high frequency end of the electromagnetic spectrum. Figure 1 shows the portion of the electromagnetic spectrum where UV-Vis radiation exists.

  50. White light • You need to know that white light is the combination of all colors of the spectrum. 

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