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Quantum Numbers

The four quantum numbers n, l, ml, and ms are used to describe the probable location of an electron in an atom. The principal quantum number n describes the electron shell or energy level. The azimuthal quantum number l describes the subshell and orbital angular momentum. The magnetic quantum number ml describes the energy levels within a subshell and orbital orientation. The spin projection quantum number ms describes the spin of the electron.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
104 views

Quantum Numbers

The four quantum numbers n, l, ml, and ms are used to describe the probable location of an electron in an atom. The principal quantum number n describes the electron shell or energy level. The azimuthal quantum number l describes the subshell and orbital angular momentum. The magnetic quantum number ml describes the energy levels within a subshell and orbital orientation. The spin projection quantum number ms describes the spin of the electron.
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To completely 

describe an electron in an atom, four quantum numbers are needed: energy (n),


angular momentum (ℓ), magnetic moment (mℓ), and spin (ms). ... The value of n ranges from 1 to the
shell containing the outermost electron of that atom. The dynamics of any quantum system are
described by a quantum Hamiltonian (H).

Quantum numbersThese four quantum numbers are used to describe the probable location of an
electron in an atom.

The Principal Quantum Number

The first quantum number describes the electron shell, or energy level, of an atom. The value of n
ranges from 1 to the shell containing the outermost electron of that atom. For example, in caesium (Cs),
the outermost valence electron is in the shell with energy level 6, so an electron in caesium can have an
n value from 1 to 6. For particles in a time-independent potential, per the Schrödinger equation, it also
labels the nth eigenvalue of Hamiltonian (H) (i.e. the energy E with the contribution due to angular
momentum, the term involving J2, left out). This number therefore has a dependence only on the
distance between the electron and the nucleus (i.e. the radial coordinate r). The average distance
increases with n, thus quantum states with different principal quantum numbers are said to belong to
different shells.

The Azimuthal Quantum Number

The second quantum number, known as the angular or orbital quantum number, describes the subshell
and gives the magnitude of the orbital angular momentum through the relation. In chemistry and
spectroscopy, ℓ = 0 is called an s orbital, ℓ = 1 a p orbital, ℓ = 2 a d orbital, and ℓ = 3 an f orbital. The
value of ℓ ranges from 0 to n − 1 because the first p orbital (ℓ = 1) appears in the second electron shell (n
= 2), the first d orbital (ℓ = 2) appears in the third shell (n = 3), and so on. In chemistry, this quantum
number is very important since it specifies the shape of an atomic orbital and strongly influences
chemical bonds and bond angles.

The Magnetic Quantum Number

The magnetic quantum number describes the energy levels available within a subshell and yields the
projection of the orbital angular momentum along a specified axis. The values of mℓ range from − to ℓ,
with integer steps between them. The s subshell (ℓ = 0) contains one orbital, and therefore the mℓ of an
electron in an s subshell will always be 0. The p subshell (ℓ = 1) contains three orbitals (in some systems
depicted as three “dumbbell-shaped” clouds), so the mℓ of an electron in a p subshell will be −1, 0, or 1.
The d subshell (ℓ = 2) contains five orbitals, with mℓ values of −2, −1, 0, 1, and 2. The value of the mℓ
quantum number is associated with the orbital orientation.

The Spin Projection Quantum Number

The fourth quantum number describes the spin (intrinsic angular momentum) of the electron within
that orbital and gives the projection of the spin angular momentum (s) along the specified axis.
Analogously, the values of ms range from −s to s, where s is the spin quantum number, an intrinsic
property of particles. An electron has spin s = ½, consequently ms will be ±, corresponding with spin and
opposite spin. Each electron in any individual orbital must have different spins because of the Pauli
exclusion principle, therefore an orbital never contains more than two electrons.

For example, the quantum numbers of electrons from a magnesium atom are listed below. Remember
that each list of numbers corresponds to (n, l, ml, ms).

Two s electrons: (1, 0, 0, +½) (1, 0, 0, -½)

Two s electrons: (2, 0, 0, +½) (2, 0, 0, -½)

Six p electrons: (2, 1, -1, +½) (2, 1, -1, -½) (2, 1, 0, +½) (2, 1, 0, -½) (2, 1, 1, +½) (2, 1, 1, -½)

Two s electrons: (3, 0, 0, +½) (3, 0, 0, -½)


Table relating quantum numbers to orbital shapeThe relationship between three of the four quantum
numbers to the orbital shape of simple electronic configuration atoms up through radium (Ra, atomic
number 88). The fourth quantum number, the spin, is a property of individual electrons within a
particular orbital. Each orbital may hold up to two electrons with opposite spin directions.

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