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Published byDora Montgomery Modified over 9 years ago
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Standing Waves Reminder Confined waves can interfere with their reflections Easy to see in one and two dimensions –Spring and slinky –Water surface –Membrane Examples on next slide
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Circular membrane standing waves 2-D Standing Waves Nodes are lines Higher frequency more nodes Source: Dan Russel’s pageDan Russel’s edge node onlydiameter nodecircular node
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Standing Waves Reminder Confined waves can interfere with their reflections Three-dimensional examples –Sound waves –Microwave ovens
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de Broglie’s Wild Idea Maybe electrons act as waves! After all, light can act like a particle. Momentum of a photon: p = h/ p = momentum h = Planck constant = 6.626 10 -34 J s = wavelength
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Question If an electron and an atomic nucleus have identical speeds, which has the shorter wavelength? 1.The electron. 2.The atomic nucleus. 3.Both will have the same wavelength. 4.It depends.
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de Broglie’s Wild Idea What is an electron’s wavelength? p = h/, so h/p Source: Griffith
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Waves and Uncertainty Energy known exactly, position not determined Energy less specific, position more specific Energy not determined, position known exactly
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Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle p = uncertainty in momentum x= uncertainty in position h= Planck constant = 6.626 10 -34 J s p x 2h
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Question The uncertainty principle tells us that A. Particles have wave-like properties. B. You cannot specify both position and momentum beyond a certain accuracy. C. Quantum physics is really wild. D. All of the above.
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Electron Energy Levels The electrons do not collapse onto the proton because: Smaller radius smaller x This requires larger p larger energy! This is also why -particles are ejected from the nucleus.
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Nuclei (Aside) So… how can protons and neutrons be confined to a nucleus? Momentum p = h/, so wavelength = h/p Light, heavy objects with same have same p –mV = Mv But… a heavy object has much lower speed and much lower kinetic energy! –½ mV 2 > ½ Mv 2 So confined massive things can have lower KE
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Quantum Wavefunctions Tell everything we know about a particle Mathematical functions of position, time Determined by particle’s energy, mass, force fields Square is probability density
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Electron Orbitals Higher energy more nodes Exact shapes given by four quantum numbers –n, l, m l : shape; m s : “spin” Pauli Exclusion Principle: No two electrons can have the same four quantum numbers
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Quantum Number n n: 1 + Number of nodes in orbital Sets energy level Values: 1, 2, 3, … Higher n → more nodes → higher energy
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Quantum Number l l: angular momentum Number of angular nodes Values: 0, 1, …, n−1 Sub-shell or orbital type l0123l0123 orbital type s p d f
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Quantum number m l Orientation of angular momentum Values: −l,…, 0, …, +l Tells which specific orbital (2l + 1 of them) in the sub-shell l0123l0123 orbital type s p d f degeneracy 1 3 5 7
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Quantum Number m s Spin direction of the electron Only two values: ± ½
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Hydrogen Orbitals Source: Chem Connections “What’s in a Star?” http://chemistry.beloit.edu/Stars/pages/orbitals.html
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Filling Orbitals An electron occupies the lowest-energy available orbital If only one electron, all orbitals with the same n have the same energy Electron-electron repulsion makes it more complicated for multi-electron atoms –Then s < p < d < f
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Fill Orbitals Do Activity 1: Quantum #s (pp 105–107) Start n ← 1 l ← 0 m l ← 0 m s ← −1/2 m l ← m l +1 m l ← −l m s ← +1/2 l ← l+1 m l ← −l m s ← −1/2 n ← n+1 l ← 0 m l ← 0 m s ← −1/2 More ? m l < l ? m s =−1/2 ? l < n−1 ? YN Y YY NN
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Filling Orbitals More complications with many electrons s < p < d < f for the same “energy level” n Energies of different n may cross
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Filling Orbitals: diagonal 1s 2s2p 3s3p3d 4s4p4d4f 5s5p5d5f5g 6s6p6d6f6g6h 7s7p7d7f7g7h7i (2)(6)(10)(14)(18)(22)(26)
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