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Published byKenneth Stafford Modified over 9 years ago
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Models of the Atom
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A shortcoming of the discovery of the nucleus and advancements in an atomic model was that it failed to explain chemical behavior A model that focused on the electron was needed Bohr built on Rutherford’s model to include the energy within an atom ◦ He suggested that electrons existed within circular paths, called orbitals, outside the nucleus ◦ Every electron within an orbital possesses a certain amount of energy They were then called energy levels
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The e- with the lowest energy are found in the first energy level e- can move from one orbital to another but only if it gains or loses energy The further an e- is away from the nucleus, the more energy it possesses The amount of energy an e- must absorb/release to move from one orbital to another is called a quantum ◦ The amount of energy to move from one orbital to the next is not always the same
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The model of the atom was better understood but still failed to explain all the properties of atoms with atomic numbers greater than hydrogen Information was being gathered by other scientists on waves and energy that did not correspond with Bohr’s model
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Schrodinger used information about electron motion to devise and solve a mathematical equation that described the behavior of the electron The amount of energy an e- possesses is still considered fixed but the pathway is not QMM takes into consideration the amount of energy an e- has and how likely it is to be found in a certain location (probability) e- are most likely to be found close to the nucleus
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