Structure of Atom
Structure of Atom
Structure of Atom
Electromagnetic waves can have a wide variety of wavelengths. The entire range
of wavelengths is known as the electromagnetic spectrum.
Q: What are the rules to be followed while filling the electrons in atoms which
contains more than one electron? How do you fill the electrons in
degenerate orbitals? Explain.
(4 Marks)
A: We follow the following principles while filling the electrons in degenerate
orbitals of an atom. a) Pauli's Exclusion Principle b) Aufbau Principle and c)
Hund's Rule.
a) Pauli's Exclusion Principle: "No two electrons of the same atom can have all
the four quantum numbers the same".
If n, l, and ml are the same for two electrons then ms must be different. In the
Helium atom the spins must be paired.
Electrons with paired spins are denoted by ''. One electron has m s
1
1
= + and the other has m s = . They have anti-parallel spins. so
2
2
electronic configuration of Helium atom is
1s2
b) Aufbau Principle: In the ground state the electronic configuration can be
build up by placing electrons in the lowest available orbitals until the total
number of electrons added is equal to the atomic number. This called Aufbau
principle.
Thus orbitals are filled in the order of increasing energy.
Electrons are assigned to orbitals in order of increasing value of (n + l)
For sub-shells with the same value of (n + l), electrons are assigned first to the
sub-shell with lower 'n'.
c) Hund's Rule: Electron pairing in orbitals starts only when all empty orbitals
of the same energy (degenerate orbitals) are singly occupied.
The configuration of Carbon (C) atom (Z = 6) is 1s2 2s2 2p2
The first four electrons go into 1s and 2s orbitals. The next two electrons go
into separate 2p orbitals, with both electrons having the same spin.
Q:
A:
Q:
(1 Mark)
Orbital
(2 Marks)
Bohr's Orbit
It has a definite bounary
and fixed energy at
diferent distances from
the nucleus.
How do the vibrating electric and magnetic fields around the charge become
a wave that travel through space?
(1 mark)
A:
A vibrating electric charge creates a change in the electric field. The changing
electric field creates a changing magnetic field.
This process continues, with both the created fields being perpendicular to
each other and at right angles to the direction of propagation of the wave.