1 / 46

Chapter 7

Chapter 7. The Structure of Atoms and Periodic Trends. Arrangement of Electrons in Atoms. Electrons in atoms are arranged as: Shells (n) Subshells ( l ) Subshell orientation (m l ). Pauli’s Exclusion Principle. discovered in 1925 by Wolfgang Pauli

dane-keller
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 7

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 7 The Structure of Atoms and Periodic Trends

  2. Arrangement of Electrons in Atoms Electrons in atoms are arranged as: Shells (n) Subshells (l) Subshell orientation (ml)

  3. Pauli’s Exclusion Principle • discovered in 1925 by Wolfgang Pauli • -No two electrons in an atom can have the same set of 4 quantum numbers Practice:What are the 4 quantum numbers for each electron in He?

  4. Aufbau Principle Describes the electron filling order in atoms -electrons are placed in the lowest available energy orbital -the periodic table is a function of electron configurations for the elements

  5. Electron Configuration To remember the correct filling order for electrons in atoms:

  6. Electron Configuration

  7. Example: H atomic number = 1 1 no. of s 1 electrons value of l value of n Writing Electron Configurations Two ways to express electron configuration: 1. spdf notation

  8. Writing Electron Configurations 2. Orbital box notation spdf notation

  9. Electron Configurations Using the Aufbau Principle to determine the electronic configurations of the elements 1st row elements:

  10. Electron Configurations Hund’s rule: electrons fill suborbitals by placing electrons in each suborbital unpaired first with the same spin direction, then the electrons pair

  11. Electron Configurations

  12. Electron Configurations and Quantum Numbers We can write a complete set of quantum numbers for all of the electrons in every element: • Na • Ca • Fe

  13. Electron Configurations and Quantum Numbers l l The ml and ms are interchangeable

  14. Electron Configurations and Quantum Numbers Noble Gas Notation (or short hand notation): The first 18 electrons in Ca are represented with the preceding noble gas ([Ar]) - we only concern ourselves with the outermost e- Skip the first 18 electrons

  15. Electron Configurations and Quantum Numbers l l

  16. Electron Configurations and Quantum Numbers There is only one set of 4 quantum numbers for each of the 26 electrons in Fe: • To save space, we use the symbol [Ar] to represent the first 18 electrons in Fe

  17. Electron Configurations of Ions Electrons are removed from subshell of highest energy level (n-level) P0 [Ne] 3s2 3p3 -3e- ---> P3+ [Ne] 3s2 3p0

  18. Electron Configurations of Ions For transition metals, remove the highest s-orbital electrons first: Fe [Ar] 4s2 3d6 -2 electrons Fe2+ [Ar] 3d6 -3 electrons Fe3+ [Ar] 3d5 To form cations, always remove electrons of highest n value first!

  19. More About the Periodic Table Representative Elements Groups IA, IIA, IIIA-VIIIA • These elements will have their “outermost” electron in an outer s or p orbital • Variations in their properties are similar from top-to-bottom

  20. More About the Periodic Table d-Transition Elements All have d electrons -With n s-orbitals -With n-1 d–orbitals Have small property variations from row-to-row

  21. More About the Periodic Table f - transition metals -Sometimes called inner transition metals -Electrons are being added to f orbitals Extremely small variations in properties from one element to another

  22. More About the Periodic Table Noble Gases -Have filled electron shells -have similar chemical reactivities -similar electronic structures He 1s2 Ne [He] 2s2 2p6 Ar [Ne] 3s2 3p6 Kr [Ar] 4s2 4p6 Xe [Kr] 5s2 5p6 Rn [Xe] 6s2 6p6

  23. Periodic Properties • Atomic radii describes the relative sizes of atoms • Atomic radii increase within a column • Atomic radii decrease within a row

  24. Periodic Properties Example: Arrange these elements based on their atomic radii: Se, S, O, Te O < S < Se < Te

  25. Periodic Properties Example: Arrange these elements based on their atomic radii: P, Cl, S, Si Cl < S < P < Si

  26. Periodic Properties Electronegativity: measure of the tendency of an atom to attract electrons to itself -Fluorine is the most electronegative element -Cesium is the least electronegative element Electronegativity increase from left-to-right and decrease from top-to-bottom increase decrease

  27. Periodic Properties Example: Arrange these elements based on their electronegativity: Se, Ge, Br, As Ge < As < Se < Br

  28. Periodic Properties Example: Arrange these elements based on their electronegativity: Be, Mg, Ca, Ba Ba < Ca < Mg < Be

  29. Periodic Properties Ionization Energy: energy required to remove an electron from an atom in the gas state First ionization energy (IE1) • Energy required to remove the first electron from an atom in the gas state to form a 1+ ion Atom(g) + energy  Atom+(g) + e- Example: Mg(g) + 738kJ/mol  Mg+ + e-

  30. Periodic Properties Second ionization energy (IE2) • The amount of energy required to remove the second electron from a gaseous 1+ ion Atom+ + energy  Atom2+ + e- • Mg+ + 1451 kJ/mol Mg2+ + e- • - Atoms can have 3rd (IE3), 4th (IE4), etc. • - Each IE is significantly higher than the previous IE

  31. Periodic Properties Ionization Energy: • IE2 > IE1 always takes moreenergy to remove a second electron from an ion • IE1 increases to the right Important exceptions are Be & Mg, N & P, etc. due to filled and half-filled subshells • IE1 decrease down

  32. First Ionization Energies He Ne F Ar N Cl C P H Be O Mg S Ca B Si Li Al Na K

  33. Periodic Properties Example: Arrange these elements based on their first ionization energies: Sr, Be, Ca, Mg Sr < Ca < Mg < Be

  34. Periodic Properties Example: Arrange these elements based on their first ionization energies: Al, Cl, Na, P Na < Al < P < Cl

  35. Periodic Properties Electron Affinity: Energy absorbed when an electron is added to an atom to form a negative ion Sign conventions for electron affinity: • If electron affinity > 0 energy is absorbed • If electron affinity < 0 energy is released Electron affinity is the measure of an atom’s ability to form negative ions atom(g) + e- + EA  atom-(g)

  36. Periodic Properties Examples of electron affinity values: Mg(g) + e- + 231 kJ/mol Mg-(g) EA = +231 kJ/mol • Br(g) + e- Br-(g) + 323 kJ/mol • EA = -323 kJ/mol Increasing ability to add electrons decreasing ability to add electrons

  37. Electron Affinity He Be B N Ne Mg Al Ar Ca P Na K H Li O C Si S F Cl

  38. Periodic Properties Example: Arrange these elements based on their electron affinities: Al, Mg, Si, Na Si < Al < Na < Mg

  39. Periodic Properties Ionic Radius: diameter of an atom in its ionized form -Cations are always smaller

  40. Periodic Properties Anions are always larger

  41. Periodic Properties Cation radii decrease from left to right across a period • Increasing nuclear charge attracts the electrons and decreases the radius.

  42. Periodic Properties Anion radii decrease from left to right across a period • Increasing electron numbers in highly charged ions cause the electrons to repel and increase the ionic radius

  43. Ionic Radii Active Figure 8.15

  44. Periodic Properties Example: Arrange these elements based on their ionic radii: Ca2+, K+, Ga3+ K1+ > Ca2+ > Ga3+

  45. Periodic Properties Example: Arrange these elements based on their ionic radii: Cl-1, Se-2, Br-1, S-2 Cl1- < S2- < Br1- < Se2-

More Related