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Section 3: The Quantum Mechanical Model of the Atom Bohr's Model of the Atom (cont.) • Bohr’s model explained the hydrogen’s spectral lines, but failed to explain any other element’s lines. • The behavior of electrons is still not fully understood, but it is known they do not move around the nucleus in circular orbits. The Quantum Mechanical Model of the Atom • Louis de Broglie (1892–1987) hypothesized that particles, including electrons, could also have wavelike behaviors. The Quantum Mechanical Model of the Atom (cont.) • Heisenberg showed it is impossible to take any measurement of an object without disturbing it. • The Heisenberg uncertainty principle states that it is fundamentally impossible to know precisely both the velocity and position of a particle at the same time. • The only quantity that can be known is the probability for an electron to occupy a certain region around the nucleus. » The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle The Quantum Mechanical Model of the Atom (cont.) • Schrödinger treated electrons as waves in a model called the quantum mechanical model of the atom. • Schrödinger’s equation applied equally well to elements other than hydrogen. The Quantum Mechanical Model of the Atom • propeller has equal probability of being anywhere in the blurry region, but… •…you cannot tell its exact location at any instant. The Quantum Mechanical Model of the Atom (cont.) • The wave function predicts threedimensional regions of probability where electrons are likely to be found. Hydrogen Atomic Orbitals • n specifies the atom’s major energy levels, called the principal energy levels. Hydrogen Atomic Orbitals (cont.) • Energy sublevels are contained within the principal energy levels. Hydrogen Atomic Orbitals (cont.) • Each energy sublevel relates to orbitals of different shape. Atomic Orbitals are 3-dimensional regions with a high probability of electrons Atomic Orbitals There is one s orbital, which is spherical. There are three p orbitals, which are dumbbell-shaped. Atomic Orbitals •There are five d orbitals; • four are shaped like clover-leafs • and one is shaped like a dumbbell with a donut around the middle. •5. Atomic Orbitals 1 There are seven f orbitals. The numbers and kinds of atomic orbitals depend on the energy sublevel. The number of electrons allowed in each of the first four energy levels are shown here. Max # of e- = 2n2 Section 5.2 Assessment Which atomic suborbitals have a “dumbbell” shape? A. s B. f C. p D. d A. B. C. D. A B C D Section 5.2 Assessment Who proposed that particles could also exhibit wavelike behaviors? A. Bohr B. Einstein C. Rutherford D. de Broglie A. B. C. D. A B C D