1 / 30

Quantum Mechanics

Quantum Mechanics. Adapted from: http://www.chalkbored.com/lessons/chemistry-12/quantum-mechanics.ppt. Classical Mechanics v. Quantum Mechanics. Pic: http://www.clker.com/clipart-12416.html. What are Quantum Numbers?. An electron’s unique “fingerprint” that describes it position and behavior

squinto
Télécharger la présentation

Quantum Mechanics

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. Quantum Mechanics Adapted from: http://www.chalkbored.com/lessons/chemistry-12/quantum-mechanics.ppt

  2. Classical Mechanics v. Quantum Mechanics Pic: http://www.clker.com/clipart-12416.html

  3. What are Quantum Numbers? • An electron’s unique “fingerprint” that describes it position and behavior • Quantum Mechanics = explains the behavior of very SMALL, FAST moving objects

  4. Quantum Mechanics overview • We will see: electrons have discrete energies, not because they are in shells but because they can only have certain wavelengths • Line spectra are not due to electrons jumping from shell to shell (as in Bohr’s model)… • Instead they’re due to electrons transforming from one wavelength (waveform) to another • Each electron is a wave that can be described by a series of “quantum numbers” • There are four quantum numbers: n, l, ml, ms • The combination of the first 3 defines an “orbital”

  5. Quantum Mechanics I don't like it, and I'm sorry I ever had anything to do with it. -- Erwin Schrodinger talking about Quantum Physics

  6. Classifying electron waves • The waves of electrons are similarly class-ified according to certain variables (n, l, ml) • The rationale for the numbers is not always clear. These numbers come from some pretty advanced math. You don’t have to know why we use certain formulas for determining quantum numbers. • You do have to know what the formulas are, when to use them, and what the resulting quantum numbers represent.

  7. Quantum Numbers There are four numbers that come into the theory of electron clouds as waves called quantum numbers. The first quantum number, n, is the principle energy level. This is the 1 in 1s2. It can have the values 1, 2, 3, … The second quantum number, l, is the sublevel. The nth principle energy level has n sublevels. We refer to these sublevels by letters: s, p, d, f, g, h, i, j, k, … Sometimes numbers are used too: 0, 1, 2, 3, …(n-1)

  8. l : The secondary quantum number • Each value of l is associated with a letter: • 0 = s, 1 = p, 2 = d, 3 = f • after 3, the associated letters go alphabetically from f up, so 4 = g, 5 = h, etc. • Normally, we don’t talk about electrons beyond l = 3 (the f subshell) • Whereas n represents size and energy, l tells us of the shape (a.k.a. sublevel) of an electron (more detail later). • We often identify electrons by shell and subshell: e.g. 1s, 3d, 2s, and 5d subshell

  9. l : The secondary quantum number • If n can be thought of as shells, l can be thought of as “subshells” dividing each shell into subsections … (l = 0  n - 1) n = 1 l = 0 (s) n = 3 l = 0 (s) l = 1 (p) l = 2 (d) n = 2 l = 0 (s) l = 1 (p) Use QN WS as study tool

  10. Quantum Numbers The third quantum number, ml, is the orbital. Every sublevel has one or more orbitals. The s sublevel has 1 orbital, the p sublevel has 3 orbitals, the d sublevel has 5 orbitals, etc. These orbital can be indicated by the number ml = l, l-1, …0, -1, … -l The fourth quantum number, ms, is the spin of the electron. Electrons can be either spin up or spin down. ms can be either +½ or -½ Spintronics: This is a new type of electronics which is based on the spin of the electrons. It is possible to filter electrons which have different spins using very thin magnetic films.

  11. Principal QN(n = 1, 2, 3, . . .) • Related to size of the atomic orbital (distance from the nucleus). • Larger n value indicates higher energy • Larger n value means electrons are less strongly bound to nucleus • Angular Momentum (sublevel) QN(l = 0 to n 1) • Relates to shape of the atomic orbital. • Each l number is assigned a letter • n = 3, l= 0, 1, 2 (s, p, and d orbitals in the third shell) • Magnetic QN(ml = l to  l) • Relates to orientation of the orbital in space relative to other orbitals. • 2. For l = 2, ml = -2, -1, 0, 1, 2 (Five d-orbitals)

  12. Electron Spin QN (ms= +1/2, 1/2) • Relates to the spin statesof the electrons. • Electrons are –1 charged and are spinning • Spinning charge creates a magnetic field • You can tell the direction of the spin by which way the magnetic moment lines up in an external magnetic field • The two possible spin directions are called +½ and –½

  13. Pauli Exclusion Principle • In a given atom, no two electrons can have the same set of four quantum numbers (n, l, ml, ms). • 2. Therefore, an orbital can hold only two electrons, and they must have opposite spins. • 3. Electrons can have the same n, l, and ml values • a) n = 3, l = 2 (d-orbital), ml= -2 (a single d-orbital) • b) That single d-orbital can only hold 2 e-, one with • ms = +1/2, and one with ms = 1/2

  14. http://newsbureau.upmc.com/TX/Nanotubes04.htm • http://www.news.utoronto.ca/bin6/050110-832.asp • http://www.vega.org.uk/series/lectures/feynman/ • http://informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=59300089

  15. II. Orbital Shapes and Energies • Atomic orbital shapes are surfaces that surround 90% of the total probability of where its electrons are • Look at l = 0, the s-orbitals • Basic shape of an s-orbital is spherical • centered on the nucleus • Basic shape is same for same l values • Nodes = areas of zero probability • Number of nodes changes for larger n • We will usually just use outer surface • to describe the shape of an orbital

  16. p-orbitals • There are no 1p orbitals (n = 1, l = 0 only) • 2p orbitals (n = 2, l = 1) have 2 lobes with a node at the nucleus • There are three different p-orbitals (l = 1, ml = -1, 0, 1) • 2px lies along the x-axis • 2py lies along the y-axis • 2pz lies along the z-axis • All three 2p orbitals have the same energy = degenerate • 3p, 4p, 5p, etc… have the same shape and number, just larger

  17. d-orbitals • There are no 1d or 2d orbitals (d needs l = 2, so n = 3) • 5 degenerate d-orbitals (ml = -2, -1, 0, 1, 2) • 4 of the d-orbitals have 4 lobes which lie in planes on or between the xyz axes: 3dxy, 3dxz, 3dyz, 3dx2-y2 • 1 is composed of 2 lobes and a torus-shaped area: 3dz2 • The 4d orbitals etc…are the same shape, only larger

  18. f-orbitals • n = 4, l = 3, ml = -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3 • 7 f-orbitals in the fourth shell are degenerate • The f-orbital are only used for the lanthanides and actinides and are complex shapes. We won’t use them.

  19. Orbital Energies • Orbital energies are largely determined by • the n value: 3 > 2 > 1 for H atom (s = p) • But, for polyelectron atoms, the different • l values are not all degenerate (s ≠ p) • a. 2s is larger than 2p orbital • b. 2s “penetrates” the 2p, so is lower energy • c. Penetration effects help explain energy ordering

  20. The History of the Periodic Table • Patterns in element properties were recognized • Dobereiner (1780-1849) found “triads” of similar elements: Cl, Br, I • Newlands suggested in 1864 that elements should be arranged in “octaves” because similarities occurred every 8th element • The Modern Periodic Table • The German Meyer (1830-1895) and Russian Mendeleev (1834-1907) independently developed the current arrangement of elements • Mendeleev predicted the properties of “missing” elements

  21. Hund’s Rule • Orbitals of equal energy are each occupied by ONE electron before any orbital is occupied by a SECOND electron • All electrons in a single occupied orbital must have the same spin.

  22. Let's Summarize Quantum Numbers

  23. Principal Quantum Number • Symbol = n • Represents the main energy level of the electron • Range = 1- 7 • Ex. = 3s Principal Quantum number = 3

  24. Angular Momentum Quantum Number • Symbol = l (small letter L) • Represents the shape of the orbital (also called sublevel) • Range = 0 – n-1 (whole number) • Shapes: • 0 = s (sphere) 1 = p (petal) 2 = d (double petal) 3 = f (flower)

  25. Magnetic Quantum Number • Symbol = m • Represents the orientation of the orbital around the nucleus • Each line holds 2 electrons ___ = s 0 ___ ___ ___ = p -1 0 +1

  26. Magnetic Quantum Number (cont.) ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ = d -2 -1 0 +1 +2 ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ = f -3 -2 -1 0 +1 +2 +3

  27. So what is ms (or just “s”)? • The spin (clockwise or counterclockwise) on the electron • It describes which of the 2 possible electrons in any orbital is being described • Values: +/- ½

  28. Spin Quantum Number • 2 Spin States • Clockwise spin = +1/2 (upward arrow) • Counterclockwise spin = -1/2 (downward arrow) A Single orbital can hold two electrons, but they must have opposite spins

  29. Unit 2 – Electrons and Periodic BehaviorCartoon courtesy of NearingZero.net Cartoon courtesy of NearingZero.net

More Related