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Physics 102: Lecture 25 Periodic Table, Atomic Structure Physics 102: Lecture 25, Slide 1 Quantum Numbers Each electron in an atom is labeled by 4 #’s n = Principal Quantum Number (1, 2, 3, …) • Determines energy (Bohr) l = Orbital Quantum Number (0, 1, 2, … n-1) • • Determines angular momentum L l < n always true! h ( 1) 2 ml = Magnetic Quantum Number (-l , … 0, … l ) • • Component of l | ml | <= l always true! ms = Spin Quantum Number (-½ , +½) • “Up Spin” or “Down Spin” Physics 102: Lecture 25, Slide 2 h Lz m 2 ACT For which state of hydrogen is the orbital angular momentum required to be zero? 1. n=1 2. n=2 3. n=3 Physics 102: Lecture 25, Slide 3 Physics 102: Lecture 25, Slide 4 Nomenclature “Shells” “Subshells” l =0 is “s state” l =1 is “p state” l =2 is “d state” l =3 is “f state” l =4 is “g state” n=1 is “K shell” n=2 is “L shell” n=3 is “M shell” n=4 is “N shell” n=5 is “O shell” 1 electron in ground state of Hydrogen: n=1, l =0 is denoted as: 1s1 n=1 Physics 102: Lecture 25, Slide 5 l =0 1 electron Quantum Numbers How many unique electron states exist with n=2? l = 0 : 2s2 ml = 0 : ms = ½ , -½ 2 states l = 1 : 2p6 ml = +1: ms = ½ , -½ ml = 0: ms = ½ , -½ ml = -1: ms = ½ , -½ 2 states 2 states 2 states There are a total of 8 states with n=2 Physics 102: Lecture 25, Slide 6 ACT: Quantum Numbers How many unique electron states exist with n=5 and ml = +3? A) 0 B) 4 C) 8 D) 16 E) 50 Physics 102: Lecture 25, Slide 7 Physics 102: Lecture 25, Slide 8 Pauli Exclusion Principle In an atom with many electrons only one electron is allowed in each quantum state (n, l,ml,ms). This explains the periodic table! Physics 102: Lecture 25, Slide 9 Preflight 25.2 What is the maximum number of electrons that can exist in the 5g (n=5, l =4) subshell of an atom? Physics 102: Lecture 25, Slide 10 Electron Configurations Atom Configuration H 1s1 He 1s2 Li 1s22s1 Be 1s22s2 B 1s22s22p1 etc Ne 1s22s22p6 s shells hold up to 2 electrons Physics 102: Lecture 25, Slide 11 1s shell filled (n=1 shell filled noble gas) 2s shell filled 2p shell filled (n=2 shell filled noble gas) p shells hold up to 6 electrons Physics 102: Lecture 25, Slide 12 Physics 102: Lecture 25, Slide 13 Shell Ordering P(r) Why do s shells fill first before p? 1s P(r) 1s 2s 2p r 2s electrons can get closer to nucleus, which means less “shielding” from the 1s electrons Physics 102: Lecture 25, Slide 14 r Sequence of Shells Sequence of shells: 1s,2s,2p,3s,3p,4s,3d,4p….. 4s electrons get closer to nucleus than 3d 1s 2p 3p 4p 5p 4f 5f Physics 102: Lecture 25, Slide 15 Physics 102: Lecture 25, Slide 16 Sequence of Shells Sequence of shells: 1s,2s,2p,3s,3p,4s,3d,4p….. 4s electrons get closer to nucleus than 3d 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 K Ca Sc Ti V Cr Mn Fe Co Ni Cu Zn 4s 4p 3d In 3d shell we are putting electrons into l = 2; all atoms in middle are strongly magnetic. Angular momentum Physics 102: Lecture 25, Slide 17 Loop of current Large magnetic moment Sodium Na 1s22s22p6 3s1 Single outer electron Neon - like core Many spectral lines of Na are outer electron making transitions Yellow line of Na flame test is 3p 3s www.WebElements.com Physics 102: Lecture 25, Slide 18 Summary • Each electron state labeled by 4 numbers: n = principal quantum number (1, 2, 3, …) l = angular momentum (0, 1, 2, … n-1) ml = component of l (-l < ml < l) ms = spin (-½ , +½) • Pauli Exclusion Principle explains periodic table • Shells fill in order of lowest energy. Physics 102: Lecture 25, Slide 19 Physics 102: Lecture 25, Slide 20