Atomic Structure
Atomic Structure
Atomic Structure
Break Break
Matter
Atom
10-10 meter
Kanad, 600 BC
1 meter (1 angstrom)
John Dalton (1814) • Atoms of one element can combine with atoms of other elements
to form compounds. A given compound always has the same
relative numbers of types of atoms.
.
• Atoms cannot be created, divided into smaller particles,
or destroyed in the chemical process. A chemical reaction
simply changes the way atoms are grouped together.
Atoms are made up of 3 types of particles:
Electrons
Electrons are tiny, very light particles and have negative electrical charges (-).
Protons are much larger and heavier than electrons and have the opposite charges,
A proton has a positive (+) charge.
Neutrons are large and heavy like protons, however neutrons have no
electrical charge.
A Hydrogen Atom
Determination of the Charge on an Electron
The charge on electron was first measured by J.J. Thomson and two co-workers (J.S.E.
Townsend and H.A. Wilson), starting in 1897. Each used a slightly different method.
Townsend's work depended on the fact that drops of water will grow around ions in
humid air. Under the influence of gravity, the drop would fall, accelerating until it hit a
constant speed.
He determined the e/m ratio of the droplets, then multiplied by the mass of one droplet to
get the value for e.
Thomson, Townsend, and Wilson each obtained roughly the same value for the charge
on positive and negative ions. It was about 1 x 10-19 coulombs. This work continued until
about 1901 or 1902.
Robert A. Millikan's Measurement
Robert A. Millikan started his work on electron charge in 1906 and continued for seven
years. His 1913 article announcing the determination of the electron's charge is a classic
and Millikan received the Nobel Prize for his efforts.
1. Oil evaporated much slower than water, so the drops stayed essentially
constant in mass.
2. Millikan could study one drop at a time, rather than a whole cloud.
3. In following the oil drop over many ascents and descents, he could measure the
drop as it lost or gained electrons, sometimes only one at a time. Every time
the drop gained or lost charge, it ALWAYS did so in a whole number multiple of
the same charge.
The value as of 1991 (for the charge on the electron) is 1.60217733 (49) x 10¯19
coulombs. This is less than 1% higher than the value obtained by Millikan in
1913. The 49 in parenthesis shows the plus/minus range of the last two digits
(the 33). It is unlikely that there will be much improvement of the accuracy in
years to come.
Interesting Fact about Robert Millikan's Experiment
Ions
H+ cation
H-atom
H- anion
Isotopes
Hydrogen
Atomic Mass = 1
Atomic Number = 1
Deuterium
Atomic Mass = 2
Atomic Number = 1
By 1911 the components of the atom had been discovered. The atom consisted of
subatomic particles called protons and electrons. However, it was not clear how these
protons and electrons were arranged within the atom. J.J. Thomson suggested the
"plum pudding" model. In this model the electrons and protons are uniformly mixed
throughout the atom:
Rutherford's Planetary Model of the Atom
There appeared something terribly wrong with Rutherford's model of the atom.
The theory of electricity and magnetism predicted that opposite charges attract
each other and the electrons should gradually lose energy and spiral inward.
Moreover, physicists reasoned that the atoms should give off a rainbow of colors
as they do so. But no experiment could verify this rainbow.
In 1912 a Danish physicist, Niels Bohr came up with a theory that said the
electrons do not spiral into the nucleus and came up with some rules for what
does happen. (This began a new approach to science because for the first
time rules had to fit the observation regardless of how they conflicted with the
theories of the time.)
Atomic Spectra
Rydberg proposed an
experimental data to fit this:
= 1/λ= R (1/m2-1/n2)
R=Rydberg constant
(109677 cm-1)
m,n= integers
Series Region m n
Lyman UV 1 2,3,4,..
1. The orbiting electrons existed in orbits that had discrete quantized energies.
That is, not every orbit is possible but only certain specific ones.
2. When electrons make the jump from one allowed orbit to another,
the energy difference is carried off (or supplied) by a single quantum of light
(called a photon) which has an energy equal to the energy difference between
the two orbitals.
Now, we can derive the energy required for transition from an n th level
to the mth level as:
1/λ = meqe4/8ch3ε0(1/m2-1/n2)
Wave-particle duality states that a particle such as an electron must also have
wave properties such as wavelength. In order to maintain a stable orbit, the
electron should have an integral number of wavelengths in its travels around the
nucleus. If the wavelengths do not match going around the circle, destructive
interference between the wavelengths causes the waves to disappear.
This observation led scientists to describe electron motion using equations for
wave motion.
Electron
+
de Broglie relationship (1924)
λ=h/p
What is the wavelength of an electron that has a velocity of 5.94×108 cm/sec
(electron accelerated through 100V) .
What is the wavelength of a man (70 Kg) walking at a velocity of 10km/hour.
Why don’t we have waves around us?
2005
C60
Uncertainty principle "The more precisely
(1927) the POSITION is determined,
the less precisely
the MOMENTUM is known"
• Let the electron be moving in the 1st Bohr orbit (radius=0.52 Å) in the hydrogen atom.
• Then Δx will be 330 Å !! This is ~300 times the diameter of the 1 st Bohr radius.
• You cannot even say that the electron was within the atom at all !
Bohr’s shells become most probable position regions (orbitals) in Quantum Mechanics
Hydrogen Atom Potential
We will solve Schrodinger equation for an electron bound to an proton by
electromagnetic potential to make one hydrogen atom.
Where,
Plug into,
To find,
P(x) diverges at x = 1
Legendre Polynomials
Associated Legendre Polynomials
Solution of Radial Part
Where Ln,l is the associated Laguerre function. The first few radial
wavefunctions R are shown as part of the hydrogen wavefunctions
The principal quantum number or total quantum number n arises from
the solution of the radial part of the Schrodinger equation for the
hydrogen atom. The bound state energies of the electron in the
hydrogen atom are given by
The normalized position wavefunctions, given in spherical
coordinates are:
Where,
6
Probability densities for the electron at different quantum numbers (l)
Electronic Configuration of atoms
The electron configuration is the arrangement of electrons in an atom. The
electrons occupy specific probability regions, who's shapes and electron capacity
are denoted by the letters s,p,d,f.
s-orbital
p-orbital
d-orbital
There are four quantum numbers:
1. Principal Quantum Number (n): This has range from 1 to n. This represents
the total energy of the system (Do you remember the Bohr’s energy expression).
2. Azimuthul Quantum Number (l): This has range from 0 to n-1. This is related
to the orbital angular momemtum.
3. Magnetic Quantum Number (m): This has a range from –l to +l. This determines
energy shift of an atomic orbital due to external magnetic field (Zeeman effect).
The electron not only rotates around the nucleus also rotates (spins) around itself.
Origin of Magnetic Quantum Number
For l = 2
No two electrons in one atom can have the same set of these four quantum numbers
maximum no. of
sublevel orbital
electrons
s 1 2
p 3 6
d 5 10
f 7 14
He 2 1s2
Li 3 1s22s1
Be 4 1s22s2
O 8 1s22s22p4
Cl 17 1s22s22p63s23p5
K 19 1s22s22p63s23p64s1
s-block atoms (have valence
electrons in s-orbitals) p-block atoms (have valence
electrons in p-orbitals)