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Wave-Particle Duality: The Beginnings of Quantum Mechanics

Wave-Particle Duality: The Beginnings of Quantum Mechanics

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Page 1: Wave-Particle Duality: The Beginnings of Quantum Mechanics

Wave-Particle Duality:The Beginnings of Quantum Mechanics

Page 2: Wave-Particle Duality: The Beginnings of Quantum Mechanics

• Explain the basics of wave-particle duality.

• Define the relationship between quantum, photon and electron.

• Describe how a produced line spectra relates to the Bohr diagram for a specific element.

Additional KEY Terms

Absorption Spectra

Page 3: Wave-Particle Duality: The Beginnings of Quantum Mechanics

PHOTOELECTRIC EFFECT

Shining light on a metal surface will immediately eject electrons.

Electrons given enough energy (ionization) can escape the attraction of the nucleus.

*Light is acting like a “particle” in this experiment – collision.

Page 4: Wave-Particle Duality: The Beginnings of Quantum Mechanics

Einstein (1905) - electromagnetic radiation is a stream of tiny bundles of energy called photons.

Photons have no mass but carry a quantum of energy.

One photon can remove one electron.

Light is an electromagnetic wave, yet it contains particle-like photons of energy.

Page 5: Wave-Particle Duality: The Beginnings of Quantum Mechanics

Only high frequency light (> 1.14 x 10 15 Hz) will eject electrons - acting as particle.

Can only explain it if you think of it using photons in a collision.

Page 6: Wave-Particle Duality: The Beginnings of Quantum Mechanics

Only more intense light (higher amplitude) will eject more electrons - acting as wave.

Can only explain it if you think of it as changing the amplitude of the wave.

Page 7: Wave-Particle Duality: The Beginnings of Quantum Mechanics

Compton (1922) – first experiment to show particle and wave properties of EMR simultaneously.

Incoming x-rays lost energy and scattered in a way that can be explained with physics of collisions.

Page 8: Wave-Particle Duality: The Beginnings of Quantum Mechanics
Page 9: Wave-Particle Duality: The Beginnings of Quantum Mechanics

Quantum Mechanical Model of the Atom

Page 10: Wave-Particle Duality: The Beginnings of Quantum Mechanics

Bohr (1922) – explained unique line spectrums by restricting electrons to fixed orbits with different quantized energy levels.

Page 11: Wave-Particle Duality: The Beginnings of Quantum Mechanics

1. Electron absorbs radiation and jumps fromground state (its resting state) to a higher unstable energy level (excited state).

2. Electron soon loses energy and drops back down to a lower energy level – emitting the absorbed EMR.

Page 12: Wave-Particle Duality: The Beginnings of Quantum Mechanics

• Levels are discrete like quanta – no in between.

• Each jump/drop is associated with a specific frequency photon - same transition, same photon.

Page 13: Wave-Particle Duality: The Beginnings of Quantum Mechanics
Page 14: Wave-Particle Duality: The Beginnings of Quantum Mechanics

The size of nucleus will affect electron position around the atom.

Cl:

17 e-

Na:11 p+

11 e- 17 p+

Page 15: Wave-Particle Duality: The Beginnings of Quantum Mechanics

*Each element has a unique line spectrum as each element has a unique atomic configuration.

Page 16: Wave-Particle Duality: The Beginnings of Quantum Mechanics

Absorption spectrum – portion of visible light absorbed by an element – heating up.

Emission spectrum – portion of visible light emitted by that element – cooling down.

Page 17: Wave-Particle Duality: The Beginnings of Quantum Mechanics

CAN YOU / HAVE YOU? • Explain the basics of wave-particle duality.

• Define the relationship between quantum, photon and electron.

• Describe how a produced line spectra relates to the Bohr diagram for a specific element.

Additional KEY Terms

Absorption Spectra