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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 1 of 50 General Chemistry Principles and Modern Applications Petrucci Harwood Herring 10 th Edition Chapter 8: Electrons in Atoms
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 2 of 50 Contents 8-1Electromagnetic Radiation 8-2Atomic Spectra 8-3Quantum Theory 8-4The Bohr Atom 8-5Two Ideas Leading to a New Quantum Mechanics 8-6Wave Mechanics 8-7Quantum Numbers and Electron Orbitals
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 3 of 50 Contents 8-8Interpreting and Representing Orbitals of the Hydrogen Atom 8-9Electron Spin: A Fourth Quantum Number 8-10Multi-electron Atoms 8-11Electron Configurations 8-12Electron Configurations and the Periodic Table Focus on Helium-Neon Lasers
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 4 of 50 8-1 Electromagnetic Radiation Electric and magnetic fields propagate as waves through empty space or through a medium. A wave transmits energy.
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 5 of 50 EM Radiation Low High
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 6 of 50 Frequency, Wavelength and Velocity Frequency ( ) in Hertz—Hz or s -1. Wavelength (λ) in meters—m. cm m nm Å pm (10 -2 m)(10 -6 m)(10 -9 m)(10 -10 m)(10 -12 m) Velocity (c)—2.997925·10 8 m s -1. c = λ λ = c/ = c/λ
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 7 of 50 Electromagnetic Spectrum
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 8 of 50 R ed O range Y ellow G reen B lue I ndigo V iolet Prentice-Hall ©2002 General Chemistry: Chapter 9 Slide 8 ROYGBIV 700 nm450 nm
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 9 of 50 Constructive and Destructive Interference
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 10 of 50
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 11 of 50 Refraction of Light
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 12 of 50 8-2 Atomic Spectra
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 13 of 50 Atomic Spectra
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 14 of 50 8-3 Quantum Theory Blackbody Radiation: Max Planck, 1900: Energy, like matter, is discontinuous. Energy quantum: є = h E = n h ν
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 15 of 50 The Photoelectric Effect Light striking the surface of certain metals causes ejection of electrons. > o threshold frequency e - ~ I e k ~
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 16 of 50 The Photoelectric Effect Vs stop voltage
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 17 of 50 The Photoelectric Effect At the stopping voltage the kinetic energy of the ejected electron has been converted to potential. mv 2 = eV s 1 2 At frequencies greater than o : V s = k ( - o )
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 18 of 50 The Photoelectric Effect E o = h o E k = eV s o = eV o h eV o, and therefore o, are characteristic of the metal. Conservation of energy requires that: h = mv 2 + eV o 2 1 mv 2 = h - eV o eV s = 2 1 E photon = E k + E binding E k = E photon - E binding
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The Photoelectric Effect General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 19 of 50
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 20 of 50 8-4 The Bohr Atom (1913) E = -R H n2n2 R H = 2.179.10 -18 J
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General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 21 of 50 Energy-Level Diagram ΔE = E f – E i = -R H nf2nf2 ni2ni2 – = R H ( ni2ni2 1 nf2nf2 – 1 ) = h = hc/λ
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H atom spectral series General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 22 of 50
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 23 of 50 Ionization Energy of Hydrogen ΔE = R H ( ni2ni2 1 nf2nf2 – 1 ) = h As n f goes to infinity for hydrogen starting in the ground state: h = R H ( ni2ni2 1 ) = R H This also works for hydrogen-like species such as He + and Li 2+. h = -Z 2 R H
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 24 of 50 Emission and Absorption Spectroscopy
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General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 25 of 50 Visible atomic emission spectra
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 26 of 50 8-5 Two Ideas Leading to a New Quantum Mechanics Wave-Particle Duality. –Einstein suggested particle-like properties of light could explain the photoelectric effect. –But diffraction patterns suggest photons are wave-like. deBroglie, 1924 –Small particles of matter may at times display wavelike properties.
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 27 of 50 deBroglie and Matter Waves E = mc 2 h = mc 2 h /c = mc = p p = h/λ λ = h/p = h/mu
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 28 of 50 X-Ray Diffraction
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 29 of 50 The Uncertainty Principle Δx Δp ≥ h 4π4π Werner Heisenberg 1927
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 30 of 50 8-6 Wave Mechanics 2L n Standing waves. –Nodes do not undergo displacement. λ =, n = 1, 2, 3…
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 31 of 50 Wave Functions ψ, psi, the wave function. –Should correspond to a standing wave within the boundary of the system being described. Particle in a box. E n = (n π /L) 2 /2
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 32 of 50 Probability of Finding an Electron
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Quantum physics and chemistry 33 E. Schrödinger The fundamental idea of wave mechanics Theory of electrons and positrons P. A. M. Dirac
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Operators In quantum mechanics operator acts on a function and it transfers the function into another function. Typical example: derivation –x 2 is transformed to 2x –sin(x) is transformed to cos(x) –e x is transformed to e x –e xk is transformed to k e xk Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 34 of 50
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Hamilton operator Total energy = kinetic + potential Slide 35 of 60
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Hamilton operator 2. The operator of potential energy, atomic unit Nuclear charge: Electron charge: r Z is the position of the nucleus: r Z = 0,0,0 Slide 36 of 60
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 37 of 50 Wave Functions for Hydrogen Schrödinger, 1927 Eψ = H ψ –H (x,y,z) or H (r,θ,φ) ψ (r,θ,φ) = R(r) Y(θ,φ) R(r) is the radial wave function. Y(θ,φ) is the angular wave function.
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 38 of 50 8-7 Quantum Numbers and Electron Orbitals Principle electronic shell, n = 1, 2, 3… Angular momentum quantum number, l = 0, 1, 2…(n-1) l = 0, s l = 1, p l = 2, d l = 3, f Magnetic quantum number, m l = - l …-2, -1, 0, 1, 2…+ l
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 39 of 50 Orbital Energies
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 40 of 50 8-8 Interpreting and Representing the Orbitals of the Hydrogen Atom.
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Simplified wave functions (Z=1, a 0 =1) Slide 41 of 60 nlm R nl (r) Y( ) real Complex 1001s2e -r - 2002s- 2102p z - 21(±1)2p x,y Yes e ±i
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R n,0 (r) for s orbitals for Z=1 Slide 42 of 60 Radial part of the 3s orbital Radial part of the 4s orbital Radial part of the 1s orbitalRadial part of the 2s orbital
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R n,1 (r) for p orbitals for Z=1 Slide 43 of 60 Radial part of the 2p orbital Radial part of the 3p orbital
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Slide 44 of 60 8-8 Interpreting and Representing Orbitals of the Hydrogen Atom 0 in the yz plane 0 in the xz plane 0 in the xy plane
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Slide 45 of 60 d orbitals
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The shape of the atomic orbitals Slide 46 of 60
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Slide 47/61 The electron density of s orbitals s orbitals r (distance)
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Slide 48 of 60 The electron density of p orbitals
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Slide 49 of 60 Radial electron density (r) = 4 r 2 2 (r) The probability of finding electrons on the surface of a sphere with radius r. The surface area = 4 r 2
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 50 of 50 8-8 Electron Spin: A Fourth Quantum Number
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 51 of 50 8-10 Multi-electron Atoms Schrödinger equation was for only one e -. Electron-electron repulsion in multi- electron atoms. Hydrogen-like orbitals (by approximation).
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Általános Kémia, Periódikus tulajdonságok Slide 52 of 60 Shielding Z eff = Z – S E n = - RHRH n2n2 Z eff 2
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 53 of 50 Shielding Slater rules: For a 1s electron, S = 0.3. For electrons in an s or p orbital with n > 1, the screening constant is given by S = 1.00·N2 + 0.85·N1 + 0.35·N0 N0 represents the number of other electrons in the same shell, N1 represents the number of electrons in the next smaller shell (n-1), and N2 is the number of electrons in other smaller shells (n-2 and smaller). The effective nuclear charge is Z eff = Z - S
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 54 of 50 8-11 Electron Configurations Aufbau principle. –Build up and minimize energy. Pauli exclusion principle. –No two electrons can have all four quantum numbers alike (n, l, m l, s). Hund’s rule. –Degenerate orbitals are occupied singly first, and the spins of the electrons are parallel.
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 55 of 50 Orbital Energies
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 56 of 50 Orbital Filling
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Dia 57/61 Aufbau Process and Hunds Rule C E(1s) < E(2s) < E(2p) B
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 58 of 50 Filling p Orbitals
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Electron configuration Short notation. For example: B: 1s 2 2s 2 2p 1 C: 1s 2 2s 2 2p 2 N: 1s 2 2s 2 2p 3 O: 1s 2 2s 2 2p 4 F: 1s 2 2s 2 2p 5 Ne: 1s 2 2s 2 2p 6 is: [Ne] (10 electrons) Dia 59/61
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 60 of 50 Filling the d Orbitals
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 61 of 50 Electon Configurations of Some Groups of Elements
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 62 of 50 8-12 Electron Configurations and the Periodic Table
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 63 of 50 Focus on He-Ne Lasers
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Prentice-Hall © 2002General Chemistry: Chapter 9Slide 64 of 50 Chapter 9 Questions 1, 2, 3, 4, 12, 15, 17, 19, 22, 25, 34, 35, 41, 67, 69, 71, 83, 85, 93, 98
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