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Advanced Higher Advanced Higher Chemistry Chemistry Unit 1 Unit 1 The Hydrogen Spectrum The Hydrogen Spectrum

Advanced Higher Chemistry Unit 1 The Hydrogen Spectrum

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Page 1: Advanced Higher Chemistry Unit 1 The Hydrogen Spectrum

Advanced Advanced Higher Higher

ChemistryChemistryUnit 1 Unit 1

The Hydrogen SpectrumThe Hydrogen Spectrum

Page 2: Advanced Higher Chemistry Unit 1 The Hydrogen Spectrum

Emission Spectrum of Emission Spectrum of hydrogenhydrogen

• When a high voltage is passed through a sample of hydrogen gas at low pressure, a coloured light is produced.

• When this coloured light is passed through a diffraction grating, coloured lines corresponding to certain frequencies of wavelengths are seen.

Page 3: Advanced Higher Chemistry Unit 1 The Hydrogen Spectrum

Absorption spectra of hydrogen in the visible region

Emission spectra of hydrogen in the visible region

Page 4: Advanced Higher Chemistry Unit 1 The Hydrogen Spectrum

• Hydrogen has only one electron suggesting that its emission spectrum should be easiest to interpret. However, its spectrum is still very complicated.

• Each line in the hydrogen emission spectrum corresponds to the energy given out when an excited electron falls back to the lowest energy level known as ground state (n=1).

Page 5: Advanced Higher Chemistry Unit 1 The Hydrogen Spectrum

• There are other series of lines corresponding to excited electrons falling back to the n=5, n=4, n=3 (lines are produced in the IR region) and n=1 energy levels (lines are produced in the UV region).

Page 6: Advanced Higher Chemistry Unit 1 The Hydrogen Spectrum

HydrogenHydrogen

Page 7: Advanced Higher Chemistry Unit 1 The Hydrogen Spectrum

• Electrons falling to n = 1 Lyman UV• Electrons falling to n = 2 Balmer Visible• Electrons falling to n = 3 Paschen IR• Electrons falling to n = 4 Brackett IR• Electrons falling to n = 5 Pfund IR

Lowest energy level (n = 1) - ground stateHigher energy levels (n >1) - excited state

Page 8: Advanced Higher Chemistry Unit 1 The Hydrogen Spectrum
Page 9: Advanced Higher Chemistry Unit 1 The Hydrogen Spectrum

The Convergence LimitThe Convergence Limit

• At higher energies the energy levels further from the nucleus become closer and closer together so the lines for a particular series also become closer and closer together until they merge into a continuum.

• This continuum is known as the convergence limit.

• The electron has escaped from the atom (i.e. has undergone ionisation) at the convergence limit and hence the convergence frequency can be used to find the ionisation energy of the atom.

Page 10: Advanced Higher Chemistry Unit 1 The Hydrogen Spectrum

Bohr TheoryBohr Theory

• The electron in a hydrogen atom exists only in certain definite energy levels.

• A photon of light is emitted or absorbed when the electron changes from one energy level to another.

• Energy of one photon is equal to the difference between the two energy levels (this can be related to frequency).

Page 11: Advanced Higher Chemistry Unit 1 The Hydrogen Spectrum

• The relationship between the energy change in the particle and the frequency of radiation emitted or absorbed is given by:

ΔE = hf or ΔE = hc λ

Page 12: Advanced Higher Chemistry Unit 1 The Hydrogen Spectrum

For one mole of particles

ΔE = Lhf or ΔE = Lhc λ

Page 13: Advanced Higher Chemistry Unit 1 The Hydrogen Spectrum

ExerciseExercise

• The convergence limit in the Lyman series is 91.2nm.Calculate the energy, in kJmol-1, corresponding to the wavelength of this convergence limit.

HINTIf you have the correct answer it should be the same value as the ionisation energy for hydrogen