Unit 2 - Atomic Structure
Unit 2 - Atomic Structure
Unit 2 - Atomic Structure
■■ shell 1 – up to 2 electrons
■■ shell 2 – up to 8 electrons
■■ shell 3 – up to 18 electrons
■■ shell 4 – up to 32 electrons.
Electronic configurations
Representing electronic configurations
Electronic configuration of potassium
Potassium has the electronic structure 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s1. The
outer electron goes into the 4s subshell rather than the 3d subshell
because the 4s is below the 3d in terms of its energy.
Filling the 3d subshell
After calcium, a new subshell becomes occupied. The next electron
goes into a 3d subshell rather than a 4p subshell.
So scandium has the electronic configuration [Ar] 3d1 4s2. This is
because electrons occupy the orbitals with the lowest energy – the
3d subshell is just above the 4s subshell but below the 4p subshell.
This begins a pattern of filling the 3d subshell ending with zinc. Zinc
has the electronic configuration [Ar] 3d10 4s2.
Chromium and copper
The electronic configurations of chromium and copperdo not follow
the expected pattern. Chromium has the electronic configuration [Ar]
3d5 4s1 (rather than the expected [Ar] 3d4 4s2). Copper has the
electronic configuration [Ar] 3d10 4s1 (rather than the expected [Ar]
3d9 4s2). You will have to learn that these two elements are exceptions
to the pattern.
Filling the orbitals
The ΔHi1 for lithium is much smaller than the ΔHi1 for helium.
Helium has two electrons.
These are in the first quantum shell. But lithium has three
electrons. The third electron must go into the next quantum shell
further away from the nucleus.
■■ Li = 519 kJ mol–1
■■ Na = 494 kJ mol–1
■■ K = 418 kJ mol–1
■■ Rb = 403 kJ mol–1
As you go down the group, the outer electron removed is
from the same type of orbital but from a successively higher
principal quantum level – 2s from lithium, 3s for sodium and
4s for potassium. Although the nuclear charge is increasing
down the group there is less attraction between the outer
electron and the nucleus because: