Chemistry by Raymond Chang General Chemistry by Ebbing: Reference
Chemistry by Raymond Chang General Chemistry by Ebbing: Reference
Chemistry by Raymond Chang General Chemistry by Ebbing: Reference
Reference
Chemistry by Raymond Chang
General Chemistry by Ebbing
Democritus
In the fifth century b.c. the Greek philosopher Democritus expressed the
belief that all matter consists of very small, indivisible particles, which he
named atomos (meaning uncuttable or indivisible)
Dalton 1. Elements are composed of extremely small particles, called atoms.
2. All atoms of a given element are identical, having the same size, mass,
1808 and chemical properties. The atoms of one element are different from
the atoms of all other elements.
3. Compounds are composed of atoms of more than one element. In any
compound, the ratio of the numbers of atoms of any two of the elements
present is either an integer or a simple fraction.
4. A chemical reaction involves only the separation, combination, or
rearrangement of atoms; it does not result in their creation or
destruction.
law of conservation of mass, which is that matter can be neither created nor destroyed
The Electron
1890s
Radiation , emission and transmission of wave
Radioactivity
Rutherford
(1910)
Gaiser
Marsden
Rutherford Atomic Model
Limitations The major limitation of Rutherford’s model of atom is: the radiating energy
of revolving electron continuously decreases the energy of the electron
which will eventually make the electron to fall into the nucleus. So, the
model couldn’t explain the stability of an atom. Also, the observed spectra
of different elements couldn’t be explained by this mode
After a prism you will get something other than the rainbow, a cluster of colored
lines in black background: Ex. Li will show a red, a yellow and two blue lines
Albert Einstein
In 1905 he explain photoelectric effect by postulating that light had both wave
and particle properties.
E=h
The wave and particle pictures of light should be regarded as complementary views of
the same physical entity. This is called the wave–particle duality of light
Emission Spectra/Atomic Spectra/Atomic line spectra
Balmer showed
Where n is greater than 2. . By substituting n = 3, for example, and calculating 1/λ and
then λ, one finds λ= 6.5610-7 m, or 656 nm, a wavelength corresponding to red light
Bohr’s Model
To explain
the stability of the hydrogen atom
the line spectrum of the atom.
Bohr’s Postulate:
1. Energy-level Postulate: An electron can have only specific energy values in an atom,
which are called its energy levels.
E= - (RH/n2) where n= 1, 2, 3 --- ∞
where RH is a constant (expressed in energy units) with the value 2.179 10-18 J called
Rydberg constant
2. Transitions Between Energy Levels: An electron in an atom can change energy only by
going from one energy level to another energy level. By so doing, the electron undergoes
Hydrogen Spectrum
Duel nature of electron
(de Broglie 1924)
Why energies of electros are quantized??
Why electrons are orbiting in a fixed distance??
de Broglie, = h/(mv)
The main objection to Bohr’s model was raised by Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle
If the electrons are wave then How can the position of a wave be specified???
To distinguish the quantum mechanical description of an atom from Bohr’s model, we speak
of an atomic orbital, rather than an orbit. An atomic orbital can be thought of as the wave
function of an electron in an atom.
The Principal Quantum Number (n) Quantum number
Quantum numbers are the mathematical solutions Schrödinger equation
The Principal Quantum Number (n) determines the energy of the electron
The Angular Momentum Quantum Number (l) tells the shape of the orbital
The magnetic Quantum number (m) describes the orientation of the orbital in space
The Spin Quantum number (m) describes spin of the electron in its own axis
Shapes of orbital
S-orbital
P-orbital
D-orbital
Electron Spin and Pauli exclusion principle
Shielding effect
Hund’s rule states that the most stable arrangement of electrons in sub-shell
is the one with the greatest number of parallel spin
Aufbau principle