A - Structure Flashcards
What is the value of one atomic mass unit, amu?
1.6605 x 10^-27 kg
What is the Aufbau principle?
Lowest energy orbitals are occupied first
What is the Pauli principle?
Only 2 electrons may occupy each orbital
What function describes an electron?
A wavefunction ie a sin wave. It is a mathematical description of the distribution of electrons in space and time.
What is the uncertainty principle?
The position and energy of an electron cannot be determined. The energy of an electron can be known, but where it is exactly is unknown - only know where it is likely to be located, in an orbital.
What are the 4 quantum numbers, and what do they determine?
Principal quantum number: n
How big the orbital is (the shell) -> 1, 2, 3, 4 etc
Angular momentum quantum number: l -> 0 - (n-1)
The shape of the orbital
l = 0 -> s l = 1 -> p l = 2 -> d
magnetic quantum number: ml = -l ….. +l
Gives the orientation of the orbital
Spin quantum number: ms = + or - 1/2
What are wavefunctions used to calculate?
The radial distribution function of the orbital. This is the chance of finding an electron at a certain distance.
What is the Pauli exclusion principle?
No 2 electrons in an atom can have the same 4 quantum numbers.
What is Hund’s rule of maximum multiplicity?
A greater total spin state makes the resulting atom more stable. So, if two or more orbitals of equal energy are available, electrons will occupy them singly before filling them in pairs.
Electrons in separate orbitals will have less electrostatic repulsion, so will be in a lower energy arrangement. Additionally, they will have lower energy if their spins are parallel due to reduced repulsion from spin correlation - parallel spins mean they stay further away from each other
What is the chemical reactivity of each block in the periodic table?
s block = forms stable cations
p block = forms multiple bonds
d block = range of oxidation states
What is the radial distribution function of the 1s orbital?
Starts at 0
Rapidly increases until the maximum
Probability decreases and tends towards 0
Why is the 2s orbital filled before the 2p orbital?
2p orbital has similar probability distribution to 1s. 2s probability distribution has a small peak close to the nucleus, then falls to zero again -> node.
Probability then rises again to form a larger peak than the first.
This means there is a greater probability of an electron being found near the nucleus in the 2s orbital than the 2p orbital, hence it is filled first.
What is the Lewis model of bonding?
Covalent bonding occurs when valence electrons are shared between two atoms.
Maximum stability is achieved when each has a filled valence shell.
What is the octet rule?
Each atom acquires shares in electrons until its valence shell has 8 electrons.
When do atoms form a bond?
The potential energy varies with distance. A bond is formed at the distance with the lowest energy - the energy well.
What is a resonance structure?
When a molecule has more than one satisfactory Lewis structure. The true structure is a resonance hybrid - it has equal contributions from all the resonance forms
What are hypervalent compounds?
Compounds that require more than an octet of electrons in order to draw a satisfactory Lewis structure, eg PCl5, SF6. This is possible through the use of low-lying d orbitals
What is VSEPR theory?
Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion.
Electrons in bonds and lone pairs can be considered as charge clouds which repel each other. The lowest energy arrangement is the one where they are as far apart as possible.
In VSEPR theory, how do much do lone pairs and bonding pairs repel each other?
Most repulsion = lone pair to lone pair
Medium repulsion = bond pair to lone pair
Least repulsion = bond pair to bond pair
Will a lone pair choose an equatorial position or an axial position, and why?
Equatorial. There is less repulsion from 2 axial bonding pairs in equatorial position than there is from 3 equatorial bonding pairs in the axial position.
What are the problems with the Lewis model?
It does not explain hypervalency well, nor does it explain how/why O2 is paramagnetic.
What is valence-bond theory?
Half-filled atomic orbitals on two atoms overlap to create a bond filled with paired electrons, ie a bonding orbital
How does the valence-bond theory explain relative bond strengths?
More orbital overlap means a stronger bond is formed. Therefore in larger atoms, electrons are not as tightly held because the orbital is bigger and there is less overlap.
What is the orbital hybridisation theory?
Orbitals can combine constructively to form hybrid orbitals which all have the same energy. This explains molecular geometry.