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Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

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Page 1: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Chapter 4 Review

Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Page 2: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Explain the term wavelength (λ) using a diagram

Page 3: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Explain the relationship between Wavelength (λ) and the energy of light

Speed of light (c) 3.00 x 108 m/s

186,000 miles per second

671,000,000 miles per hour

Energy is inversely proportional to wavelength

Page 4: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Explain the relationship between Wavelength (λ) and the energy of light

Red light 650 nm – 750nm Violet light 380nm – 430nm

1m= 1 x 10-9nm (0.000 000 001 meters)

Page 5: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Explain the relationship between Wavelength (λ) and the energy of light

Page 6: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Write the equation for calculating energy (E) of light from its wavelength

E = hc/λE is energy of the electromagnetic radiationH is Planck’s constant 6.626 x 10-34 J sc is the speed of light 3.00 x 108m/s

Remember λ must be in meters

Page 7: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Draw a diagram to illustrate what is meant by line spectrum, and explain what the presence of line Spectra means in terms of energy that is emitted

by atoms

The fact that only 4 distinct lines are seen in the visible spectrum means that these atoms only emit the 4 amounts of energy associated with these wavelengths

Page 8: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Explain the major differences between

Classical Physics• Works well for large

objects• Objects can have any

energy

Quantum Physics• Explains the behavior of

very small particles• Objects have only

certain particular energies

Page 9: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Explain the meaning of the term quantized

Electrons can only have particular discrete amounts of energy.

Page 10: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Explain how the Bohr model accounts for line spectra

• Electrons can jump from one energy level to another but never posses any energy in between (Quantum Leap)

Page 11: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Explain the meaning of the term Principal Quantum Number

• Bohr assigned each of his allowed electron “orbits” which he called shells a principal quantum number (n).

The first shell was n=1 (lowest energy)The second shell n=2 (more energy)The third shell n=3 (more energy)

Page 12: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Explain the meaning of the term Principal Quantum Number

Ideally all electrons would like to be in the n=1 shell

But… electrons repel each other and crowding them all so close would increase energy too much.

To solve this problem and explain line spectra Bohr maintained that each shell can hold a maximum number of electrons

Page 13: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

The Bohr Model in a nutshell

• Orbits get larger as the principal quantum number increases.

• The energy of an electron in an atom increases with (n) the principal quantum number

• Each shell can hold a maximum of 2n2 electrons

Page 14: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Describe how valance shell configurations are related to the chemical properties of

the elements.

The Bohr model helped explain the periodic nature of the elements

Page 15: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Describe how valance shell configurations are related to the chemical properties of

the elements.

The outermost shell is called the valance shell.

Page 16: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Describe how valance shell configurations are related to the chemical properties of

the elements.

These elements have similar chemical properties because they have similar valance shell configurations.

Page 17: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

The number of valance shell electrons in an atom is equal to the roman numeral group number for

the representative (group A) elements.

Page 18: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Ground state

• Arrangement of electrons that has the lowest energy

Page 19: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Excited State

• When enough energy is added to the atom (heating or passing electric current through) the electron can jump into a high energy level.

• So an electron absorbs energy to jump to the excited state and releases energy to return to the ground state. (emitting light) (flame test lab)

Page 20: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Bohr’s model was only able to predict line spectra for only one

valance electron

• Quantized energy• Maximum electrons in shells

Page 21: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Calculate energy and determine the color of light emitted when an electron is excited

and returns to the ground state.• Flame test lab• E = hc/λ

Page 22: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Start here day 2

Page 23: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Start day 3

Page 24: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd
Page 25: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

1ev = 1.602 x 10-19J

1m = 1 x 109 nm

h = 6.626 x 10-34 J * s

c = 3.00 x 108m/s

Page 26: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Subshells s, p, d, f

Page 27: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

s, p, d orbitalsWhere you would find an electron 95%

of the time. (probability)

Page 28: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Write the complete electron configuration for the following:

Carbon

Sodium

Chlorine

Page 29: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Write the shorthand notation electron configuration for the following:

Carbon

Sodium

Chlorine

Page 30: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Potassium problem

• 2e-, 8e-, 9e- What? It should have 1e- in the valance shell

• 1s2, 2s2, 2p6, 3s2, 3p6, 4s1

Page 31: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Write the complete electron configuration for the following:

Bromine

Rubidium

Tin (Sn)

Page 32: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Write the shorthand notation electron configuration for the following:

Bromine

Rubidium

Tin (Sn)

Page 33: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

• Aufbau Principle: Electrons occupy the orbitals of the lowest energy levels first

• Pauli exclusion principle: An atomic orbital can hold only two electrons. Electrons must have opposite spins.

• Hund’s rule: electrons occupy orbitals of the same energy in a way that make the electrons with the same spin direction as large as possible.

Page 34: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd
Page 35: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Compound formation and the octet rule

• elements react to form compounds in such away as to put 8 electrons in their outermost valance shell. Just like noble gasses.

• Some exceptions H = 2 Be and B sometimes 4 and 6.

• Transition metals don’t often obey the octet rule.

Page 36: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

What is the chemical formula?

Mg2+ F-

Page 37: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Day 4

Page 38: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Metals vs. Non Metals

• Metals tends to lose valance electrons in a chemical reaction (cation)

• Non metals tend to gain electrons in a chemical reaction (Anion)

Page 39: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd
Page 40: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd
Page 41: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Explain why the trends in atomic size are opposite of the trends in

ionization energy

• Each step down adds an energy level thus increasing size

• Each step across adds an electron and a proton more attraction between nucleus and electrons

Page 42: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle

Page 43: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Particles Behaving Like Waves

Page 44: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

s, p, d orbitalsWhere you would find an electron 95%

of the time. (probability)

Page 45: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Modern Model of the Atom

• Rutherford’s small but massive positively charge nucleus.

• Bohr’s “quantized” energy of electrons• Orbits replaced with probability orbital that

has a wave like motion that gives it its shape• A particular size based on principle quantum

number

Page 46: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd
Page 47: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

• Photon: Discrete bundle of electromagnetic energy

• Frequency: Number of wave cycles per second

• Spectrum(electromagnetic spectrum) separation of light into different wavelengths

• n=1 principal quantum number (Shell)• S, p, d, f sub shells

Page 48: Chapter 4 Review Test is Thursday, December 22nd

Homework Due Thursday, December 22, 2011

• 4.40, 4.43, 4.60, 4.62, 4.72*, 4.73*4.80, 4.83, 4.117, 4.121, 4.123, 4.125, 4.137, 4.139, 4.141, 4.143, 4.151, 4.153, 4.160, 4.165, 4.174

• Blue worth 10 points• Gold worth 10 points