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Ella Kusumastuti Kimia Anorganik I Jurusan Kimia FMIPA UNNES Atomic Structure and Periodic Table of Elements • Perkembangan Teori Atom • Bilangan Kuantum • Konfigurasi Elektron (unsur, anion, kation) • Klasifikasi/ penggolongan Unsur dalam SPU • Keperiodikan Sifat Unsur dalam SPU What is an atom? 460 BC • Atom: the smallest unit of matter that retains the identity of the substance • First proposed by Democratus Dalton’s Atomic Theory 1. All matter is made of tiny indivisible 2. 3. 4. 1808 particles called atoms. Atoms of the same element are identical, those of different atoms are different. Atoms of different elements combine in whole number ratios to form compounds. Chemical reactions involve the rearrangement of atoms. No new atoms are created or destroyed. Parts of Atoms 1898 Joseph John Thompson • J. J. Thomson - English physicist. 1897 • Made a piece of equipment called a cathode ray tube. • It is a vacuum tube - all the air has been pumped out. • A limited amount of other gases are put in : Electron Thomson’s Experiment Voltage source - + Metal Disks Thomson’s Experiment Voltage source + Passing an electric current makes a beam appear to move from the negative to the positive end Thomson’s Experiment Voltage source + By adding an magnetic field Thomson’s Experiment Voltage source + By adding an magnetic field he found that the moving pieces were negative Thomson’s Experiment • Used many different metals and gases • Beam was always the same • By the amount it bent he could find the ratio of charge to mass • Was the same with every material • Same type of piece in every kind of atom Thomsom’s Model • Found the electron. • Couldn’t find positive (for a while). • Said the atom was like plum pudding. • A bunch of positive stuff, with the electrons able to be removed. PLUM PUDDING MODEL Millikan’s Experiment Atomizer + - Oil Microscope Metal Plates Millikan’s Experiment Atomizer Oil droplets + - Oil Microscope Millikan’s Experiment X-rays X-rays give some drops a charge by knocking off electrons Millikan’s Experiment +- Millikan’s Experiment - - + + They put an electric charge on the plates Millikan’s Experiment - - + + Some drops would hover Millikan’s Experiment - - - - - - - + Some drops would hover + + + + + + + Millikan’s Experiment - - + + From the mass of the drop and the charge on the plates, he calculated the charge on an electron Rutherford’s Experiment 1910 Ernest Rutherford • Ernest Rutherford English physicist. (1910) • Believed the plum pudding model of the atom was correct. • Wanted to see how big they are. • Used radioactivity. • Alpha particles - positively charged pieces given off by uranium. • Shot them at gold foil which can be made a few atoms thick. Lead block Flourescent Screen Uranium Gold Foil He Expected • The alpha particles to pass through without changing direction very much. • Because… • The positive charges were spread out evenly. Alone they were not enough to stop the alpha particles. What he expected Because Because, he thought the mass was evenly distributed in the atom Because, he thought the mass was evenly distributed in the atom What he got How he explained it • Atom is mostly empty. • Small dense, positive piece at center. • Alpha particles are deflected by it if they get close enough. + + HISTORY OF THE ATOM Rutherford’s new evidence allowed him to propose a more detailed model with a central nucleus. He suggested that the positive charge was all in a central nucleus. With this holding the electrons in place by electrical attraction However, this was not the end of the story. Bohr’s Atom Theory 1913 Niels Bohr studied under Rutherford at the Victoria University in Manchester. Bohr refined Rutherford's idea by adding that the electrons were in orbits. Rather like planets orbiting the sun. With each orbit only able to contain a set number of electrons. Bohr’s Atom electrons in orbits nucleus Bohr’s Atom Bohr’s Model of the Hydrogen Atom (1913) He proposed that only certain orbits for the electron are allowed Bohr’s Empirical Explanation • Electrons can only take discrete energies (energy is related to radius of the orbit) • Electrons can jump between different orbits due to the absorption or emission of photons Dark lines in the absorption spectra are due to photons being absorbed • Bright lines in the emission spectra are due to photons being emitted Absorption / Emission of Photons and Conservation of Energy Ef - Ei = hf Ei - Ef = hf Hydrogen Atom is Unstable? • It is known that accelerating charges emit radiation • Thus, electron should emit radiation, lose energy and eventually fall into the nucleus! • Why doesn’t this happen? Shows that something was wrong with this model of the hydrogen atom Absorption Spectrum of a Gas Dark lines will appear in the light spectrum Absorption spectrum of Sun Emission spectra of various elements Balmer’s Formula for Hydrogen • Notice there are four bright lines in the hydrogen emission spectrum • Balmer guessed the following formula for the wavelength of these four lines: where n = 3, 4, 5 and 6 Energy Levels of Hydrogen Electron jumping to a higher energy level E = 12.08 eV Spectrum of Hydrogen Bohr’s formula: Hydrogen atom spectra High E Short l High n Low E Long l Low n Visible lines in H atom spectrum are called the BALMER series. 6 5 4 Energy 3 2 1 En = -1312 n2 Ultra Violet Lyman Visible Balmer Infrared Paschen n Bohr’s Quantum Theory of the Atom (1913) – Negative electrons move in stable, circular orbits around positive nuclei – Electrons absorb or emit light by moving out or moving in to other orbits – Bohr replaced Balmer’s equations with better ones 1 1 E RH 2 2 nh nl 2 2 Z 2 e 4 RH (4o ) 2 h 2 1 1 1 me mnucleus = reduced mass e = electron charge Z = nuclear charge 4o = permittivity of vacuum – Energy levels are far apart at small n, close together at large n n = 1, 2, 3, etc if the nucleus and electron are completely separate – Only worked for H-atom; not a complete description of atomic structure Mechanics Wave Atomic Theory ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION • Subatomic particles (electron, photon, etc) have both PARTICLE and WAVE properties • Light is electromagnetic radiation - crossed electric and magnetic waves: Properties : Wavelength, l (nm) Frequency, n (s-1, Hz) Amplitude, A constant speed. c 3.00 x 108 m.s-1 Electromagnetic Radiation wavelength Visible light Amplitude wavelength Ultaviolet radiation Node Electromagnetic Radiation • All waves have: frequency and • symbol: n (Greek letter “nu”) wavelength l (Greek “lambda”) • “distance” (nm) units: “cycles per sec” = Hertz • All radiation: l • n = c where c = velocity of light = 3.00 x 108 m/sec Note: Long wavelength small frequency Short wavelength high frequency increasing frequency increasing wavelength Electromagnetic Radiation Example: Red light has l = 700 nm. Calculate the frequency, n. n= c l 3.00 x 10 = 8 -7 7.00 x 10 m/s 14 4.29 x 10 Hz m • Wave nature of light is shown by classical wave properties such as • interference • diffraction Quantization of Energy Max Planck (1858-1947) Solved the “ultraviolet catastrophe” 4-HOT_BAR.MOV • Planck’s hypothesis: An object can only gain or lose energy by absorbing or emitting radiant energy in QUANTA. Quantization of Energy Energy of radiation is proportional to frequency. E = h•n where h = Planck’s constant = 6.6262 x 10-34 J•s Light with large l (small n) has a small E. Light with a short l (large n) has a large E. Photoelectric Effect Albert Einstein (1879-1955) Photoelectric effect demonstrates the particle nature of light. No e- observed until light of a certain minimum E is used. Number of e- ejected does NOT depend on frequency, rather it depends on light intensity. Photoelectric Effect (2) • Classical theory said that E of ejected electron should increase with increase in light intensity — not observed! • Experimental observations can be explained if light consists of particles called PHOTONS of discrete energy. Application of the Schrödinger Equation to the Hydrogen Atom The potential energy of the electron-proton system is electrostatic: Use the three-dimensional timeindependent Schrödinger Equation. Spherical Coordinates •The potential (central force) V(r) depends on the distance r between the proton and electron. Transform to spherical polar coordinates because of the radial symmetry. The Schrödinger Equation in Spherical Coordinates Transformed into spherical coordinates, the Schrödinger equation becomes: Atomic Line Spectra • Bohr’s greatest contribution to science was in building a simple model of the atom. • It was based on understanding the SHARP LINE SPECTRA of excited atoms. Niels Bohr (1885-1962) (Nobel Prize, 1922) Line Spectra of Excited Atoms • Excited atoms emit light of only certain wavelengths • The wavelengths of emitted light depend on the element. H Hg Ne Atomic Spectra and Bohr Model One view of atomic structure in early 20th century was that an electron (e-) traveled about the nucleus in an orbit. + Electron orbit 1. Classically any orbit should be possible and so is any energy. 2. But a charged particle moving in an electric field should emit energy. End result should be destruction! Atomic Spectra and Bohr Model (2) • Bohr said classical view is wrong. • Need a new theory — now called QUANTUM or WAVE MECHANICS. • e- can only exist in certain discrete orbits — called stationary states. • e- is restricted to QUANTIZED energy states. Energy of state = - C/n2 where C is a CONSTANT n = QUANTUM NUMBER, n = 1, 2, 3, 4, .... Atomic Spectra and Bohr Model (3) Energy of quantized state = - C/n2 • Only orbits where n = integral number are permitted. • Radius of allowed orbitals = n2 x (0.0529 nm) • Results can be used to explain atomic spectra. Atomic Spectra and Bohr Model (4) If e-’s are in quantized energy states, then DE of states can have only certain values. This explains sharp line spectra. E = -C (1/22) H atom n=2 07m07an1.mov E = -C (1/12) n=1 4-H_SPECTRA.MOV Calculate DE for e- in H “falling” from n = 2 to n = 1 (higher to lower energy) . DE = Efinal - Einitial = -C[(1/12) - (1/2)2] = -(3/4)C Energy Atomic Spectra and Bohr Model (5) n=2 n=1 • (-ve sign for DE indicates emission (+ve for absorption) • since energy (wavelength, frequency) of light can only be +ve it is best to consider such calculations as DE = Eupper - Elower C has been found from experiment. It is now called R, the Rydberg constant. R = 1312 kJ/mol or 3.29 x 1015 Hz so, E of emitted light = (3/4)R = 2.47 x 1015 Hz and l = c/n = 121.6 nm (in ULTRAVIOLET region) This is exactly in agreement with experiment! Hydrogen is therefore a fussy absorber / emitter of light It only absorbs or emits photons with precisely the right energies dictated by energy conservation Quantum Numbers and Orbitals “The equations predicted that there are four quantum numbers.” Principal Quantum Number n (main energy level or “shell”) Angular Quantum Number l (orbital shape) n l together is called a subshell Magnetic Quantum Number m (orientation of orbital) Spin Quantum Number either +½ or -½ Principal Quantum Number “n” Designates the Main Energy Level or “Shell” an Electron can Occupy • Orbital sizes increase as “n” increases. • n2 designates the maximum number of orbitals allowed. • 2n2 designates total electrons in an energy level •n= 1 has only 1 orbital; and 2 electrons •n=2 has 4 orbitals; and 8 electrons •n=3 has 9 orbitals; and 18 electrons Angular Quantum Number “l” Designates the shape of a sublevel l= 0 through (n-1) The sublevels are… s (sharp) where l=0 p (principal) where l=1 d (diffuse) where l=2 f (fundamental) where l=3 Another name for “sublevel” is “orbital”. s (sharp) Sublevel 1s 2s 3s • s-orbitals are spherical. • There is one s-orbital per shell (n). •A total of 2 electrons per s orbital. •No directionality. p (principal) Sublevel Three of these • P orbitals are peanut shaped. • There are three p-orbitals per shell (n) and have directionality along the x, y, and z-axis. • There are two electrons in each p-orbital. • A total of 6 electrons in all p-orbitals. d (diffuse) Sublevel Two of these One of these Two of these • d-orbitals are “double peanut” shaped. • There are five d-orbitals per energy level and have complex directionality . • There are 2 electrons per d-orbital. • There are a total of 10 electrons in all d-orbitals. f (fundamental) Sublevel One of these Two of these Two of these Two of these • f orbitals are flower shaped. • There are seven orbitals and have directionality • There are 2 electrons per f-orbital. • There are a total of 14 electrons in all 7 orbitals. Angular Quantum Number “m” •Designates the “orbitals” in the subshell •Orbitals are oriented on a 3-dimensional axis. m= -l to +l For : l=0 (s); m=0 (-0 to +0) l=1 (p); m=3 (-1…0…+1) l=2 (d); m=5 (-2..-1..0..+1..+2) l=3 (f); m=7 (-3..-2..-1..0..+1..+2..+3) There are always 2 electrons per orbital! What is a subshell? A subshell is the principal quantum number “n” together with the angular quantum number “l”. The n=1 shell has only one subshell which is the 1s subshell. The n=2 shell has two subshells which are the 2s and 2p subshells. There are a total of 4 orbitals in these subshells. One in the 2s and three in the 2p. Then=3 shell has three subshells which are the 3s, 3p and 3d. There Are a total of 9 orbitals in these subshells, one in the 3s, three in the 3p and 5 in the 3d. Try n=4 for yourself….. Spin Quantum Number “+½ or -½” Designates the spin of each electron in an orbital • Each orbital can hold only 2 electrons. • s has 2e-; p has 6e-; d has 10e-; f has 14eElectrons like to be in “pairs” ! 1 2 1 2 Fitting Quantum Numbers Together n=1 Principal level (shell) Sublevel (subshell) s l=0 s n=3 s p p d l=1 m=-1,0,1 m=0 s Orbital n=2 px py l=2 m=-2,-1,0,1,2 pz px py pz dxy dxz dyz dz2 dx2- y2 -½ +½ -½ +½ -½ +½ -½ +½ -½ +½ s= -½,+½ Spin • n -½ +½ -½ +½ -½ +½ -½ +½ -½ +½ -½ +½ -½ +½ = # of sublevels per principal energy level • n2 = # of orbitals per principal energy level • 2n2 = # of electrons per principal energy level Quantum Number Relationships in the Atomic Structure n 1 l 0 0 1 0 Subshell designation s s p s p d Orbitals in subshell 1 1 3 5 Subshell capacity 2 Principal shell capacity 2 3 1 2 2 3 6 8 4 1 2 2 6 18 10 ...n 0 1 2 3 s p d f 1 3 2 5 6 7 10 14 32 ...2n2 The Pauli Exclusion Principal “No two electrons can have the same four quantum numbers.” Overlapping Orbitals All orbitals overlap but electrons can’t be more than 2 per orbital. Quantum Numbers Symbol Values Description n (major) 1, 2, 3, .. Orbital size and energy = -R(1/n2) l (angular) 0, 1, 2, .. n-1 Orbital shape or type (subshell) ml (magnetic) -l..0..+l Orbital orientation in space Total # of orbitals in lth subshell = 2 l + 1 Thank you ....