1 / 8

Electron Configuration Guided Notes

Electron Configuration Guided Notes. How to write electron configurations, orbital notations, and Noble Gas configurations. Properties of Electrons.

Download Presentation

Electron Configuration Guided Notes

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. Electron ConfigurationGuided Notes How to write electron configurations, orbital notations, and Noble Gas configurations

  2. Properties of Electrons • Electrons don’t behave like normal particles. They also act like waves. Because they act like waves, their exact location around the nucleus cannot be calculated. • Bohr’s examination of the hydrogen atom also found that electrons were only allowed to have specific amounts of energy. Other energies are forbidden. The allowed energy of an electron around an atom is called a quantum. • Because we can’t see electrons in specific orbits, electrons are contained in orbitals around atoms. Orbitals are calculated regions of space where electrons can exist. Each orbital can hold two electrons. • The quanta of energy that electrons can have refer to the energy levels of the atom. The more energy an electron has, the further from the nucleus it is.

  3. Orbitals • Orbitals have four sublevels: s, p, d, and f.

  4. Rules for filling orbitals There are three rules for filling orbitals. • Aufbau Principle: Electrons always fill the lowest energy levels first. • Electrons start at the bottom and work their way up. • This also implies that electrons fill orbitalsthe same way every time. • Pauli Exclusion Principle: No two electrons with the same energy characteristics can occupy an orbital at the same time. • One electron must be spin up and the other electron must be spin down. • Hund’s Rule: When filling multipleorbitals of the same sublevel (p, d, and f), electrons half-fill the sublevel first before pairing electrons.

  5. Orbital Energy

  6. Order for Filling Orbitals • 7s 7p 7d 7f • 6s 6p 6d 6f • 5s 5p 5d 5f • 4s 4p 4d 4f • 3s 3p 3d • 2s 2p • 1s

  7. Connections to the Periodic Table • The first two columns of the periodic table are the s-block. • The last six columns of the periodic table are the p-block. • The middle ten columns of the periodic table are the d-block. Remember that d-block elements fill one energy level late! After 3p is filled, 4s is filled, then 3d is filled, and then 4p is filled. • The bottom two rows of the periodic table are the f-block. Remember that f-block elements fill two energy levels late! After 5p is filled, 6s is filled, then 4f is filled, then 5d is filled, then 6p is filled.

  8. Color-code and label your periodic table!

More Related