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Published bySheena Tate Modified over 9 years ago
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Locating Electrons
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Newtonian Mechanics – describes objects at ordinary velocities (classical mechanics) Quantum Mechanics – describes particles at velocities near that of light (subatomic particles) Quanta – a packet of nrg
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It is impossible to know both the location and velocity of an electron at the same time. ◦ To see an e- we would have to bounce light off of it which would change its velocity and in turn its position. Ex: helium-filled balloon in a dark room
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In 1926, he treated e- as waves, giving us the e- cloud model. ◦ Radial Probability of Electrons The area of highest probability forms the e- cloud.
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Principle Quantum Number (n) Sublevel (l) Orbital (m) Spin (s)
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Energy levels are a particular distance from the nucleus n = 1 2 3 4 5 # e- = 2 8 18 32 50
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The maximum number of electrons in each nrg level is 2n 2 ◦ At n = 1, there can be 2(1) 2 = 2 e- ◦ At n = 2, there can be 2(2) 2 = 8 e- ◦ At n = 3, there can be 2(3) 2 = 18 e-
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Tells the shape Each nrg level has a # of sublevels = to n Energy Level (n) # SublevelsSublevels 111s 222s, 2p 333s, 3p, 3d 444s, 4p, 4d, 4f
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The 3 rd quantum number (m) tells which orbital and electron occupies. One pair (2e-) of electrons can occupy each orbital ◦ s sublevels have 1 orbital (2e-) ◦ p sublevels have 3 orbitals (6e-) ◦ d sublevels have 5 orbitals (10e-) ◦ f sublevels have 7 orbitals (14e-) ** each orbital can hold UP TO 2 e-**
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Indicates direction of spin of e- ◦ -1/2, +1/2 (clockwise, counterclockwise) Pauli Exclusion Principle states that no two electrons in an atom can have the same set of 4 quantum numbers. ◦ The two e- in an orbital must have opposite spins.
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Helium has 2 electrons ◦ n = 1 ◦ l = s ◦ m = 1 ◦ s = 1 up, 1 down Helium’s electron configuration would be: Principle Quantum # # of e- Sublevel
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Li N Ne Na
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Degenerate orbitals have the same nrg
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1s 2s 2p 3s 3p 3d 4s 4p 4d 4f 5s 5p 5d 5f 6s 6p 6d 6f 7s 7p 7d 7f - Sublevels fill in order of increasing nrg - 1s2s2p3s3p4s3d4p5s4d5p6s4f5d6p7s5f6d7p
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What is the electron configuration for: ◦ Cl – 17 ◦ Pb - 82
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e- first occupy the lowest possible nrg level available. Electron Dot Notation – show only valence e-, those in the outer most nrg level ◦ ONLY UP TO 8e- ◦ 8 e- = stable Valence electrons – e- in the highest nrg levels ◦ These e- are what form bonds
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Examples:
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Only show valence electrons Dots are either placed 1 on each side or in pairs. ◦ Never more than 2 per side This is why lithium has only one dot and why carbon can have 2 dot notations.
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What would the electron dot notation be for titanium? Ti = 22e- BUT only 2 valence e- Electron Configuration Notation Electron Dot Notation Valence e- -d’s are NEVER valence e-, they ALWAYS fill after a high nrg level -Same for f’s
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Show all orbitals with electrons Electrons represented as up and down arrows Arrows must be opposite within orbitals Nitrogen (7) Fluorine (9) 1s2s 2p
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Single electrons with the same spin must occupy each equal-energy orbital before additional electrons with opposite spins can occupy the same orbitals.
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Principle Quantum Number SublevelOrbitals Per Sublevel Orbitals Per Energy Level e- Per Sublevel e- Per Energy Level 1s1122 2spsp 1313 42626 8 3spdspd 135135 9 2 6 10 18 4spdfspdf 13571357 16 2 6 10 14 32
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Quantum Mechanical Model – describes and electron as having a particular amount of energy, depending on its location. Electron clouds give you the highest probability of locating and electron.
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Excited state – electrons in a higher than normal energy state. Nitrogen: 1s 2 2s 2 2p 3 (ground state) 1s 2 2s 2 2p 2 3s 1 (excited state)
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Lose or gain e- ◦ Anions – are negatively charged, having gained e- ◦ Cations – are positively charged, having lost e- ** atoms will gain or lose e- to become more stable**
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Na: 1s 2 2s 2 2p 6 3s 1 Na + : 1s 2 2s 2 2p 6 ◦ Alkali metals, like Na, want to lose their 1 valence e- to become stable. Cl: 1s 2 2s 2 2p 6 3s 2 3p 5 Cl - : 1s 2 2s 2 2p 6 3s 2 3p 6 ◦ Halogens, like Cl, want to gain a valence electron to become stable.
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Filled and half-filled sublevels are more stable than partially filled sublevels. This Cr takes an e- from 4s to put one e- in each of its 3d orbitals and Cu takes a 4s to fill each of its 3d orbitals Orbitals are stable when either full or half-full 1s 2s 2p 3s 3p 4s 3d
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