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Ch. 13 – Electrons in Atoms 13.1 = Models of the atom Down the wrong path… •400 BC – Democritus proposed that atoms make up substances •Aristotle disagreed with him and thought matter was uniform throughout •This was accepted for the next 2,000 years! Evolution of Atomic Models John Dalton (1808)- atom was a solid mass (did not know about subatomic particles) Billiard ball model J.J. Thomson (1904)- discovered the existence of electrons as part of an atom (however, he did not identify their location). Plum pudding model Ernest Rutherford (1911)- discovered the nucleus. Decided that the space surrounding the nucleus contained electrons. These models do not provide enough information to explain all of the properties of an element… Many properties of atoms, ions, and molecules are related to specific arrangements of their electrons Examples: colors given off when heated in flame, magnetic properties, covalent and ionic bonding, etc. Niels Bohr (1913) – he proposed that electrons travel in fixed orbits; the energy level is the region around the nucleus where the electron is likely to be Planetary model Evolution of Atomic Models cont… Erwin Schrodinger (1926)- used mathematical equation to describe probable location and energy of an electron (the quantum mechanical model) These models provide more information based on an electron’s… Energy level- region where electron is most likely moving The higher the energy level the further it is from the nucleus (the energy levels are not evenly spaced) Ground state = The ground state of an electron, the energy level it normally occupies, is the state of lowest energy for that electron. •Quantum- amount of energy required to move an electron from it’s present energy level -Energy is lost and gained -Not always the same (depends on energy level -higher energy level = less distance between energy levels thus less energy is required to move from one level to the next -lower energy levels have greater distance between them = more energy to transfer between levels) The Quantum Mechanical Model Does not define an exact path of an electron but a probable location. The region where electrons are likely to be found are called, atomic orbitals. Atomic Orbitals The Principal Quantum Number (n)represents the energy level (n=1,2,3,4,etc) • The principal energy levels are assigned values in order of increasing energy levels (ladder example) *Note: remember distance between energy levels decreases as you increase energy levels Within each principal energy level the electrons are found in sublevels (L). (number of sublevels = principal energy level) Table 13.1 Atomic Orbitals The sublevels are represented by the letters s, p, d, and f. Electrons in each of these sublevels travel in a pattern that have a distinctive shape to that sublevel. • s- spherical shaped cloud • p- dumbbell shaped cloud (contains node) Node- region close to nucleus where electron is not likely to be found. • d- cloverleaf shape (contains node) • f- complex and harder to visualize Letters denote atomic orbitals… Electron probability clouds Principal energy level # of sublevels Distance of electrons from nucleus increases with n 13.2 - Electron Arrangement in Atoms The maximum # of electrons that can occupy a principle energy levels is represented by the formula, 2n² -Note: n = principle quantum # A maximum of two electrons can be located in each sublevel. Electron Arrangement in Atoms -Electron Configurations- Electron Configurations- how the electrons are arranged around the nucleus Three rules tell you how to find the electron configurations of atoms: • 1. Aufbau Principle • 2. Pauli Exclusion Principle • 3. Hund’s Rule Aufbau Principle- Electrons enter orbitals of lowest energy first. s sublevel is the lowest, then p, d, f, etc… Electron Arrangement in Atoms -Pauli Exclusion PrinciplePauli Exclusion Principle- An atomic orbital may describe at most two electrons An s or p orbital may contain 1 or 2 electrons. If two electrons are in the same orbital they have opposite spins (clockwise or counterclockwise) • The position of the electrons represent the directions of the spin ( ) Hund’s Rule- When electrons occupy orbitals of equal energy, one electron enters each orbital until all the orbitals contain one electron with parallel spins. Periodic Table Arrangement Writing Electron Configurations There is a shorthand Write the energy level and the symbol for every sublevel occupied by an electron. Attach a superscript to indicate the number of electrons in that sublevel. • Examples: H = 1s¹ (1=energy level, s=symbol, ¹=superscript) He = 1s² Vertical Columns = Groups or Families; share similar props b/c they have the same # of valence electrons Electron Dot Diagrams = (aka Lewis dot structures) Uses the symbol of the element & dots to represent the valence electrons