
The Electron
Presentation
•
Chemistry
•
11th - 12th Grade
•
Hard
Joseph Anderson
FREE Resource
12 Slides • 0 Questions
1
Electron Configuration
Mr.Mendoza
2
Orbitals
a region of probability where an electron can be found.
s
d
p
f
Remember these are NOT electrons, they're just regions of space where an electron can be found.(Each can hold up to 2 electrons)
3
The 4 Quantum Numbers
n=Principle Quantum Number
l= Angular Momentum Quantum NumberMl =Magnetic Quantum Number
Ms =Spin Quantum Number
4
Principle Quantum Number
n=1
n=2
n=3
n=4
5
Angular Momentum Quantum Number
Determines the shape of an orbital
Each value of l
l indicates a specific s, p, d, f subshell (each unique in shape.
he value of l
l is dependent on the principal quantum number n
n.
l=0,1,2,3,4...,(n-1)
6
Magnetic Quantum
Determines the number of orbitals and their orientation within a subshell
s=1
d=3
p=5
f=7
7
Spin Quantum
designates the direction of the electron spin and may have a spin of +1/2, represented by↑, or –1/2, represented by ↓
8
Pauli Exclusion Principle
No two electrons in the same atom can have identical values for all four of their quantum numbers.
In other words:
(1) no more than two electrons can occupy the same orbital
(2) two electrons in the same orbital must have opposite spins
9
Aufbau Principle
states that electrons fill lower-energy atomic orbitals before filling higher-energy ones (Aufbau is German for "building-up")
10
Hunds Rule
every orbital in a subshell is singly occupied with one electron before any one orbital is doubly occupied, and all electrons in singly occupied orbitals have the same spin.
11
Orbital Configuration
the more visual way to represent the arrangement of all the electrons in a particular atom
Each sublevel is labeled by its principal energy level and sublevel
Electrons are indicated by arrows inside the circles. An arrow pointing upwards indicates one spin direction, while a downward pointing arrow indicates the other direction.
12
Electron Configuration
Electron configuration notation eliminates the boxes and arrows of orbital filling diagrams.
Electron Configuration
Mr.Mendoza
Show answer
Auto Play
Slide 1 / 12
SLIDE
Similar Resources on Wayground
10 questions
Electrochemical cell
Presentation
•
11th - 12th Grade
11 questions
Drawing Bohr Models
Presentation
•
11th - 12th Grade
11 questions
Ions
Presentation
•
10th - 12th Grade
11 questions
1.4 a/b/d: Ionic vs Covalent Bonds
Presentation
•
10th - 12th Grade
12 questions
Quantum Numbers and Electron Configurations
Presentation
•
11th - 12th Grade
10 questions
Electric Potential Energy
Presentation
•
11th - 12th Grade
10 questions
Kepler's Laws
Presentation
•
11th Grade
13 questions
AP Chemistry Unit 9 - Gibbs Free Energy
Presentation
•
11th Grade - University
Popular Resources on Wayground
10 questions
5.P.1.3 Distance/Time Graphs
Quiz
•
5th Grade
10 questions
Fire Drill
Quiz
•
2nd - 5th Grade
20 questions
Equivalent Fractions
Quiz
•
3rd Grade
22 questions
School Wide Vocab Group 1 Master
Quiz
•
6th - 8th Grade
20 questions
Main Idea and Details
Quiz
•
5th Grade
20 questions
Context Clues
Quiz
•
6th Grade
20 questions
Inferences
Quiz
•
4th Grade
12 questions
What makes Nebraska's government unique?
Quiz
•
4th - 5th Grade
Discover more resources for Chemistry
41 questions
Unit 5 Test - Biology
Quiz
•
12th Grade
15 questions
Ionic Compounds: Naming and Formula Writing
Quiz
•
9th - 12th Grade
10 questions
Exploring the Ideal Gas Law and Its Applications
Interactive video
•
9th - 12th Grade
15 questions
Balancing Chemical Equations
Quiz
•
10th - 12th Grade
6 questions
Single Replacement Reaction Lesson
Presentation
•
9th - 12th Grade
14 questions
Temp & Pressure Conversions & Daltons Law
Quiz
•
10th - 11th Grade
10 questions
Exploring Saturated, Unsaturated, and Supersaturated Solutions
Interactive video
•
9th - 12th Grade
42 questions
Practice Regents #1 (126)
Quiz
•
11th Grade