orbital diagrams, electron configurations, & valence electrons

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Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

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Page 1: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Orbital Diagrams,

Electron Configurations,

&

Valence Electrons

Page 2: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons
Page 3: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Bohr’s Model: electrons would exist in different rings around the nucleus just like the planets are in different orbits around the sun. This is sometimes called the planetary model of the atom

Page 4: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Bohr’s Atom

7 orbits correspond to 7 periods on Periodic Table.

Page 5: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Which Orbit has the lowest energy?

n = 1, the orbit closest to the nucleus.

Page 6: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Bohr’s model was replaced by the quantum mechanical model of the atom.

Page 7: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

• This new model uses principle quantum levels that are similar to Bohr’s orbits, but are then divided into sublevels

Page 8: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

The principle quantum level is a number from 1-7, with 1 being the lowest energy and 7 being the highest in energy.

The sublevels are s, p, d, and f

Page 10: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

• Each sublevel has a least one orbital.

• Each orbital can hold 2 electrons

Page 11: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

The s sublevel only has 1 orbital, and each orbital holds 2 electrons

Shape: Sphere

Which matches the 2 elements in each period of the s block

Page 12: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

The p sublevel has 3 orbitals, and each orbital holds 2 electrons, for a total of 6 electrons – Matching the 6 elements in each period of the p block

Shape: dumbbell or peanut

Page 13: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

The d sublevel has 5 orbitals, and each orbital holds 2 electrons, for a total of 10 electrons – matching the 10 elements in each period of the d block

Shape: clover/double dumbbell

Page 14: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

The f sublevel has 7 orbitals, and each orbital holds 2 electrons, for a total of 14 electrons – matching the 14 elements

Funky / flower

Page 15: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

We put together the principle quantum number and sublevel letter to talk about a specific orbital

But not all sublevels are possible for

each energy level.

Page 16: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Principle Quantum Level Possible Sublevels

1 s2 s, p3 s, p, d4 – 7 s, p, d, f

1s2s 2p3s 3p 3d4s 4p 4d 4f

5s 5p 5d 5f6s 6p 6d (6f)

7s 7p (7d 7f)

Page 17: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

The arrangement of electrons in an atom is called an orbital diagram or electron configuration.

Page 18: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

1) There are three rules that we must follow when making an orbital diagram (OD) or an electron configuration (EC):

Page 19: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

A) The aufbau principle says electrons must fill lower energy levels before electrons can fill higher energy levels.

This means 1s is filled before 2s, etc

Page 20: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

B) The Pauli exclusion principle says that only two electrons can fill each orbital…and they must have opposite spins.

No Yes

Page 21: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

C) Hund’s rule says electrons must spread out in the orbitals of each sublevel (p, d, or f) before they double up.

Yes No

□ □ □ □ □ □

2p 2p

Page 22: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

2) If we use boxes to represent orbitals, then the following aufbau diagram shows all the possible places an electron could be:

Page 23: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Remember:

s has 1 orbital…..holds 2 electrons

p has 3 …..holds 6 electrons

d has 5 …..holds 10 electrons

f has 7 …..holds 14 electrons

Page 24: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Notice that the energy increases from bottom to top,

HighEnergy

LowEnergy

Page 25: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

and some of the orbitals do not fill in the same number order as the others.

Page 26: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Fill from the bottom to the top, spreading out the electrons before doubling them up

Page 27: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons
Page 28: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

□ □ □

□ □ □

□ 1s

2s

3s

2p

3pHydrogenH

Page 29: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

□ □ □

□ □ □

□ 1s

2s

3s

2p

3pHeliumHe

CompletelyFilled

Page 30: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

□ □ □

□ □ □

□ 1s

2s

3s

2p

3pLithiumLi

Page 31: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

□ □ □

□ □ □

□ 1s

2s

3s

2p

3pBerylliumBe

Page 32: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

□ □ □

□ □ □

□ 1s

2s

3s

2p

3pBoronB

Page 33: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

□ □ □

□ □ □

□ 1s

2s

3s

2p

3pCarbonC

Page 34: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

□ □ □

□ □ □

□ 1s

2s

3s

2p

3pNitrogenN

Page 35: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

□ □ □

□ □ □

□ 1s

2s

3s

2p

3pOxygenO

Page 36: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

□ □ □

□ □ □

□ 1s

2s

3s

2p

3pFluorineF

Page 37: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

□ □ □

□ □ □

□ 1s

2s

3s

2p

3pNeonNe

CompletelyFilled

Page 38: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

□ □ □

□ □ □

□ 1s

2s

3s

2p

3pSodiumNa

Page 39: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

□ □ □

□ □ □

□ 1s

2s

3s

2p

3pMagnesiumMg

Page 40: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

□ □ □

□ □ □

□ 1s

2s

3s

2p

3pAluminumAl

Page 41: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

□ □ □

□ □ □

□ 1s

2s

3s

2p

3pSiliconSi

Page 42: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

□ □ □

□ □ □

□ 1s

2s

3s

2p

3pPhosphorusP

Page 43: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

□ □ □

□ □ □

□ 1s

2s

3s

2p

3pSulfurS

Page 44: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

□ □ □

□ □ □

□ 1s

2s

3s

2p

3pChlorineCl

Page 45: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

□ □ □

□ □ □

□ 1s

2s

3s

2p

3pArgonAr

CompletelyFilled

Page 46: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

3) The correct order of filling is: 1s 2s 2p 3s 3p 4s 3d 4p 5s 4d 5p 6s 4f 5d 6p 7s 5f 6d 7p

Notice: s block fills in period 1 p block fills in period 2

d block fills in period 3: which is 1 behind the actual period f block fills in period 4: which is 2 behind the actual period

Page 47: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

n = period #

s & p block fill at n

d block fills at n – 1

f block fills at n - 2

Page 48: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

4) Orbital Diagram: Orbitals are sometimes shown as boxes in a

horizontal row

Remember: s = 1 orbital p = 3 orbitals d = 5 orbitals f = 7 orbitals

Page 49: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

5) Arrows are used to represent the electrons, so if two arrows go in the same box, one points up and the other points down.

Page 50: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

□ □ □

□ 1s

2s

2pNitrogenN

7 electrons

Becomes:

□ □ □ □ □1s 2s 2p

Page 51: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Cobalt (27 electrons – 27 arrows)

□ □ □□□ □ □□□ □ □□□□□1s 2s 2p 3s 3p 4s 3d

Page 52: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Cations and anions• * Ions: work the same way but remember that

electrons are negative. +2 means you lost two electrons, -2 means you gained two electrons.

Page 53: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Try Bromine

Page 54: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Bromine (35 electrons)

□ □ □□□ □ □□□ □ □□□□□ □□□1s 2s 2p 3s 3p 4s 3d 4p

Page 55: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Try Oxygen, O2- and Gallium on the back of your notes

Page 56: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Oxygen

□ □ □□□ □ □□□ □ □□□□□ □□□1s 2s 2p 3s 3p 4s 3d 4p

Page 57: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

O-2

□ □ □□□ □ □□□ □ □□□□□ □□□1s 2s 2p 3s 3p 4s 3d 4p

Page 58: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Gallium

□ □ □□□ □ □□□ □ □□□□□ □□□1s 2s 2p 3s 3p 4s 3d 4p

Page 59: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

6) Electron Configuration: Instead of drawing boxes and arrows, the number of electrons in each sublevel is turned into a superscript and is written with the quantum number and the sublevel letter.

Page 60: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

A) If all the orbitals are filled, the entire sequence would be:

1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s2 3d10 4p6

5s2 4d10 5p6 6s2 4f14 5d10 6p6 7s2

5f14 6d10 7p6

Page 61: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

NitrogenN

□ □ □ □ □1s 2s 2p

Becomes:1s2 2s2 2p3

Page 62: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Cobalt

□ □ □□□ □ □□□ □ □□□□□1s 2s 2p 3s 3p 4s 3d

Becomes:

1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s2 3d7

Page 63: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Try Bromine, Oxygen, O2-, Ca 2+

and Gallium on the back of your notes

Page 64: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Bromine (35 electrons)

□ □ □□□ □ □□□ □ □□□□□ □□□1s 2s 2p 3s 3p 4s 3d 4p

Becomes:1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s2 3d10 4p5

Page 65: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Electron configurations for:

Oxygen: 1s22s22p4

O2- : 1s22s22p6

Ca2+ : 1s22s22p63s23p6

Gallium: 1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p1

Page 66: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

7) Short cut: Noble gas configuration. Instead of writing out the entire electron configuration, we can use the previous noble gas to take the place of part of the electron configuration: must start with a noble gas

Page 67: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Example:

Magnesium: 1s22s22p63s2

Neon: 1s22s22p6

Noble Gas configuration:Magnesium: [Ne] 3s2

Page 68: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Example:

Polonium:1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p65s24d105p66s24f145d106p4

Xenon:1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p65s24d105p6

Polonium:[Xe] 6s24f145d106p4

Page 69: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Try Bromine, Oxygen, O2-, Ca 2+

and Gallium on the back of your notes

Page 70: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Noble gas configurations

Bromine [Ar] 4s2 3d10 4p5

Oxygen: [He] 2s22p4

O2-: [He] 2s22p6

Ca2+ : [Ne] 3s23p6

Gallium: [Ar] 4s23d104p1

Page 71: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

8) Valence Electrons: Electrons in the outer-most orbital – which is the highest energy level.

Very important: electrons involved in chemical bonds – determine chemical properties of element

Page 72: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

These electrons are called valence electrons.

Page 73: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Only the s and p block electrons are counted…so the number of valence electrons must be a number from 1 to 8

Page 74: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

9) Electron Dot Diagrams (Lewis Dot Diagrams):

The number of valence electrons makes a big difference in how the element will bond, so to make it easy to predict, we draw electron dot diagrams.

Page 75: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

A) In an electron dot diagram, we use the symbol of the element and dots to represent the number of valence electrons. The number of dots matches the group number on the Periodic Table.

Page 76: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

B) Only s and p electrons with the highest quantum number count for dot diagrams, even if there are d and f electrons

Page 77: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Lithium = 1s22s1

So Li

Page 78: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Beryllium = 1s2 2s2

So Be

Page 79: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Boron = 1s2 2s22p1

So B

Page 80: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Carbon = [He] 2s22p2

So C

Page 81: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Nitrogen = [He] 2s22p3

So N

Page 82: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Oxygen = 1s2 2s22p4

So O

Page 83: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Fluorine = 1s2 2s22p5

So F

Page 84: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Neon = 1s22s22p6 or [Ne]

So Ne

All noble gases have full outer shells: 8 valence electrons (except He which is full at 2, since it only has the s orbital)

Page 85: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Magnesium = 1s22s22p63s2

So

Page 86: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Magnesium = 1s22s22p63s2

So

Mg

Mg

Page 87: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Polonium:

1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p65s24d105p66s24f145d106p4

Page 88: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Polonium:

1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p65s24d105p66s24f145d106p4

So Po

Po

Page 89: Orbital Diagrams, Electron Configurations, & Valence Electrons

Look at your Periodic Table Notice: the A group number = the number of valence electrons

1A

3A2A 4A 5A 6A 7A

8A

Look at your Periodic Table - Notice: The A group number = the number of valence electrons (except for He)