Unit 1-Atomic Structure Flashcards
Atomic models, mass spectrometry, electronic structure and ionisation
Masses and charges of subatomic particles
Proton - mass of 1 - +1 charge
Electron - negligible mass - -1 charge
Neutron - mass of 1 - neutral charge
Properties of neutrally charged/ionised atoms
In neutral atoms No. Electrons is equal to No. protons, ionised atoms have an overall charge due to an imbalance
Difference between isotopes of the same element?
Isotopes have different number of neutrons, changing their mass but not their charge or electronic structure
3 different models of the atom
Plum Pudding - solid ball of positive material with electrons dotted in like plums in a pudding
Rutherfords- includes fact that atom is mostly empty space with a tiny positive nucleus being orbited by electrons
Bohr’s- suggested electrons contained in specific energy levels instead of a cloud, and that radiation is released when they move between levels
Process of mass spectrometry
- sample is ionised
- an electric field applies equal amounts of kinetic energy to all ions
- the lighter ions accelerate faster through the spectrometer than the heavy ones, and hit the detector faster
- they take the electron back when they hit the detector, causing a current
- mass/charge ratio calculated and used to produce a graph of relative abundance against m/z
How are atoms ionised in mass spectrometers?
Either by being dissolved in a solvent and pressurised under a high voltage or being hit with a high velocity electron gun
How to read spectrometry graphs
Height of peak = relative abundance
Mr can be calculated for each isotope using %abundance×mass, or (exact abundance×mass) of every value ÷ total abundance of every value
All four sub shells, no. Of orbitals and max electrons
S-1 orbital-2 electrons
P-3 orbitals-6 electrons
D-5 orbitals-10 electrons
F-7 orbitals-14 electrons
Electron Shells, sub shells in each one, max electrons per shell
1- 1s - 2 2- 2s,2p - 8 3- 3s,3p,3d -18 4- 4s,4p,4d,4f -32 5 - ditto
How to correctly write electronic structure
Split total number of electrons into the individual shells and sub shells, and write them in order going out from the nucleus. Include the number of electrons in each shell. E.g 1s2, 2s2, 2p3
4s fills before 3d, 5s fills before 4d, 5p before 4f
Ionisation energy definition
The total energy needed to remove one electron from one mole of a gaseous substance
What affects ionisation energy?
- Strength of nucleus’ positive charge
- Distance of electron from nucleus
- Number of electron Shells shielding nuclear charge between nucleus and electron
- Electrons are easier to take from higher energy levels, and easier to remove from paired orbitals (one removed from each full orbital first before second)