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Quantum Mechanical Model of the Atom Name This Element Building on Bohr • The simple Bohr model was unable to explain properties of complex atoms • Only worked for hydrogen • A more complex model was needed… Quantum Mechanics • Uses mathematical equations to describe the wave properties of subatomic particles • It’s impossible to know the exact position, speed and direction of an electron (Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle) • So Bohr’s “orbits” were replaced by orbitals – A wave function that predicts an electron’s energy and location within an atom – A probability cloud in which an electron is most likely to be found Orbits Orbitals - Bohr - Quantum Mechanics - 2-dimensional ring - 3-dimensional space - Electron is a fixed - Electrons are a variable distance from nucleus distance from nucleus - 2, 8, or 18 electrons per - 2 electrons per orbital orbit Wave Particle Duality • Experimentally, DeBroglie found that light had both wave and particle properties • Therefore DeBroglie assumed that any particle (including electrons) traveled in waves • Wavelengths must be quantized or they would cancel out Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle • Due to the wave and particle nature of matter, it is impossible to precisely predict the position and momentum of an electron • SchrÖdinger’s equation can be used to determine a region of probability for finding an electron (orbital) • Substitute in a series of quantum numbers to solve the wave function Quantum Numbers • Four numbers used to describe a specific electron in an atom • Each electron has its own specific set of quantum numbers • Recall: Describes orbitals (probability clouds) The Principal Quantum Number “n” • Indicates the average distance (size) of the orbital from the nucleus (same as Bohr’s energy levels) • Higher n = greater distance from nucleus = greater energy • n = integers > 1 (1,2,3…) • The greatest number of electrons possible in each energy level is 2n2 The Secondary Quantum Number “l” • Describes the shape of the orbital • Atoms with many electrons showed spectrum with many lines, some close together and others spaced apart • Subshells within the main energy levels • Each subshell has a different shape with the highest probability of finding an electron The Secondary Quantum Number “l” • Positive integers ranging from 0-3 • Maximum value of n-1 – l = 0 (s orbital) – l = 1 (p orbital) – l = 2 (d orbital) – l = 3 (f orbital) • Total number of sublevels = n The Magnetic Quantum Number “ml” • Describes orientation of the orbital • ml = integers from -l to +l • Maximum number of orientations = n2 The First Three Quantum Numbers The Spin Quantum Number “ms” • Describes the direction an electron is spinning in a magnetic field (up or down) • Only two electrons per orbital • ms = + 1/2 or - 1/2 Letter Analogy Miss Smith 4 The Parkway Kanata ON n= 3 l=1 ml = -1 ms = +1/2 Quantum Numbers Summary Chart Name Symbol Allowed Values Property Principal n positive integers 1,2,3… Orbital size and energy level Secondary l Integers from 0 to (n-1) Orbital shape (sublevels/subshells) Magnetic ml Integers –l to +l Orbital orientation +½ or –½ Electron spin Direction Spin ms Practice! • Quantum number handout • p. 182 #3-5 • p. 184 #3-7