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AT2. Old Quantum Mechanics

  • Page ID
    4030
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    Basic Developments

    Today, we know that atoms contain protons, neutrons and electrons. The protons have significant mass and a positive charge and are found in the nucleus of the atom. The neutrons have mass but no charge and are also found in the nucleus. The electrons have negative charge and very little mass and are found outside the atom's nucleus. The weight of an atom in atomic mass units is approximately the sum of its protons and neutrons, since the electrons do not have much mass.

    For example, a typical carbon atom has six protons and six neutrons, and it has an atomic weight of 12 amu. A carbon also has six electrons, but they are so small that they don't contribute to carbon's weight.

    • An element is defined by the number of protons in its nucleus.
    • The number of protons in an atom is equal to the number of electrons, to balance the charge.

    Some carbon atoms have an extra neutron or two, so carbon may have an atomic weight of 13 or even 14 amu. However, a carbon atom cannot have an extra proton; an extra proton would make it a nitrogen atom. It is the six protons that make the atom behave like carbon. Many other elements may have slightly different atomic weights, depending on how many neutrons are found in the nucleus. Different atoms of the same element with different weights are called isotopes. For example, 12C, 13C and 14C are all isotopes of carbon.

    • Neutrons are also in the nucleus.
    • A neutron has a mass similar to a proton, but has no charge.
    • Compared to protons and neutrons, the mass of an electron is very small.

    Problem AT2.1.

    An element's atomic number is just the number of protons in an atom of that element. Given the following atomic numbers and atomic weights, identify the number of protons, neutrons and electrons in an atom of the element.

    1. oxygen: atomic number = 8, atomic weight = 16
    2. phosphorus: atomic number = 15, atomic weight = 31
    3. zinc: atomic number = 30, atomic weight = 65
    4. gold: atomic number = 79, atomic weight = 197

    Problem AT2.2.

    If a proton's mass is 1.67 x 10-27 kg and the mass of an electron is 9.11 x 10-31 kg, how many times heavier is a proton than an electron?

    Problem AT2.3.

    If carbon in nature is about 99% 12C and 1% 13C, then what is the average weight of a carbon atom?

    Problem AT2.4.

    Note that 14C is even rarer than 13C, because 14C is converted into 14N via radioactive decay. In that event, a high-energy electron is emitted from the 14C nucleus. Explain how that emission must convert the carbon into a nitrogen, and indicate how many protons and neutrons are found in the resulting nucleus.

    Problem AT2.5.

    Magnesium in nature is found in three major isotopes. It is nearly 79% 24Mg, about 11% 25Mg and 12% 26Mg. What is the average weight of a magnesium atom?

    Problem AT2.6.

    Chlorine in nature is found in two major isotopes: 35Cl and 37Cl. If the average atomic weight of chlorine is about 35.5, what percentage of each isotope is found in nature?

    A number of developments at the beginning of the twentieth century led to our current understanding of the structure of atoms and molecules a hundred years later. Ernest Rutherford first proposed that an atom contains a very small, positively charged nucleus surrounded by empty space.

    Rutherford was explaining the result of an experiment in which alpha particles (positively charged helium ions) were fired at a gold foil. Most of these particles passed through the foil easily, suggesting there was a lot of empty space in the material. However, some of the particles bounced directly back, having collided with the small, highly charged nuclei. The positive alpha particles were powerfully repelled by the positive nuclei, because like charges repel each other. He did not really know much about the location of the electrons, the negatively charged particles in the atom, but believed they orbited the nucleus like planets around the sun.

    rutherford atom

    Figure AT2.1. Rutherford's model of an atom: a nucleus with electrons far away, and lots of empty space.

    Why were the electrons not found in the nucleus? If electrons are attracted to protons, it seems like that is where they should be. Niels Bohr suggested that electrons are found only in specific, allowed orbits at different distances from the nucleus.

    That conceptual leap to specific, allowed orbits marks the introduction of quantum mechanics into the understanding of the atom. Quantum mechanics is based on the idea that on a very small scale, many properties only have specific values (like 1, 2, 3...) instead of any value at all (like all the possible fractions between these integers). In other words, in the world around us, we usually view things like walking up a ramp. We can heat a pot of water just a little bit warmer, and just a little bit warmer than that, and so on. On the atomic scale, however, the world is more like walking up a set of stairs. Maybe you could heat the water to 30 oC or 40 oC, but heating to 35 oC would be impossible, because heat only comes in 10 degree packages. That is, in fact, how the quantum world really works, but on the human scale, the steps involved are so tiny that we cannot notice them.

    bohr atom

    Figure AT2.2. In the Bohr model of an atom, electrons could be found only at certain allowed distances from the nucleus.

    Bohr also showed that electrons in these different orbits have specific amounts of energy. By doing this mathematically, he was offering an explanation to an important problem. People knew that atoms can absorb energy (they can be heated in a flame, for example) and give the energy back again in the form of light. Rather than give off light of all colors when excited, atoms only give off very specific colors. For example, heating lithium salts in a flame produces a red color, but heating sodium salts produces an orange color, whereas potassium salts produce a purple color, and so on.

    These colors can be separated and studied using a prism. When people did that, they found that a given atom does not produce just one pure color of light, but several different ones. When separated by a prism, the light given off by an excited compound could be seen against a dark surface as several different, colored lines. These were called emission lines.

    It had been known since the early 1800's that light had wave properties, and that light of different colors had different wavelengths. For example, red light consists of electromagnetic waves, with a wavelength of about 700 nm, but blue light's wavelength is about 450 nm. That means a color can actually be measured numerically. Because of that fact, people can look for mathematical relationships between the emission lines observed for different atoms. Those mathematical relationships may reveal something about the atoms themselves.

    Furthermore, it was known that different wavelengths of light corresponded to different amounts of energy. In one of the first developments in quantum mechanics, Max Planck in 1900 proposed that light travels in bundles called photons. Although they are particles, these photons do have wave properties. The amount of energy in a photon of light corresponds to its wavelength.

    By proposing that electrons could be found only in specific orbits, specific distances away from the nucleus, Bohr was trying to explain observations from atomic spectroscopy reported by another scientist named Rydberg. Rydberg had found a mathematical relationship between the wavelengths of these emission lines. Bohr thought that, when energy was added, electrons could be excited from one energy level (or orbit) to a higher one. When the electron relaxed back to its original orbit, it gave off the energy it had gained in the form of light. The specific emission lines occur because electrons are found at very specific energy levels in an atom, so a drop from one level to another always produces the same amount of light energy. That specific amount of light energy has a specific colour.

    ATblured.gif

    Figure AT2.3. The correspondence between color, wavelength and energy.

    Bohr then used the mathematical relationships describing electrostatic attraction and centripetal force to show that his model of the atom was consistent with Rydberg's relationship. In fact, he could use his model to predict the emission lines of an atom.

    Problem AT2.7.

    Bohr's explanation of atomic structure built on Rydberg's observation of a numerical series in spectral emission lines. Solving a series involves finding a pattern in numbers. Find the patterns among the following sequences of numbers, and predict the next number in the sequence.

    1. 1, 2, 3, 4...
    2. 2, 4, 6, 8...
    3. 3, 5, 7, 9...
    4. 1, 4, 9, 16...
    5. 2, 4, 8, 16...
    6. 1, 1/2, 1/4, 1/9...

    Problem AT2.8.

    Bohr's idea depended partly on the use of Coulomb's Law of electrostatic attraction. Coulomb's law is expressed mathematically as follows:

    F = (k q1q2 )/ r2

    in which F is the attractive force between two charged particles, q1 and q2 are the charges on the two particles, r is the distance between the two particles and k is a constant. A large value of F means that the charges are strongly attracted to each other.

    1. Suppose q1 is the charge on the nucleus of an atom and q2 is the charge on an electron. What happens to the force of attraction between an electron and the nucleus when the charge in the nucleus increases? Explain.
    2. Suppose r is the distance from the electron to the nucleus. What happens to the force of attraction between an electron and nucleus when the electron gets further from the nucleus?
    3. Using the ideas of Coulomb's law, compare the attraction of an electron to the nucleus in a helium atom versus a hydrogen atom.

    Problem AT2.9.

    Max Planck described the energy of a photon using the following relationship:

    E = hν or E = hc/λ

    In which E = energy; ν =frequency; λ = wavelength; c = speed of light; h = Planck's constant

    1. What happens to the energy of light as its wavelength gets longer?
    2. What happens to the energy of light as its frequency gets higher?

    Other people were familiar with these ideas and already knew about the relationship between light and energy. Bohr's model of the atoms put all of these ideas together to successfully explain a specific atomic property:

    colour = wavelength = energy of light = energy between electron levels.

    In other words, an excited electron can drop back to its original orbit by giving off a photon with an energy exactly the same as the difference in energy between the two orbits ("excited state" and "ground state" orbits).

    ATparticlewave.gif

    Figure AT2.4. An electron can be thought of as both a particle and a wave.

    However, Bohr did not explain why electrons would be found at specific energy levels in the first place. Louis de Broglie, a historian-turned-physicist, solved this problem with the idea of wave-particle duality. de Broglie put together the following ideas:

    • All moving particles have wave properties.
    • Electrons move around the nucleus and they have wavelengths.
    • To maintain a complete standing wave along its orbit, an electron can only adopt orbits of specific circumferences. Otherwise, one end of the wave would not meet up with the other end, and it would interfere with itself.
    • Orbits with specific circumferences have specific radii.
    • Electrons are found at specific distances from the nucleus, but not at other distances.

    One way to illustrate why an electron might have only certain allowed orbits is via the "particle in a box," a basic concept from quantum mechanics. If a particle has wave properties, then it has a wavelength. Its wavelength depends on certain conditions. By analogy, if you take a guitar string and attach it to the ends of a box, the string can only vibrate at certain frequencies. That is how guitarists can change the note played on a guitar string. By pressing one end of the string against a fret on the guitar neck, the length of the string is changed, and so is its allowed wavelength, so it makes a different sound.

    The string cannot move at the two points where it is held. That means the wave has to form in such a way that it returns to the same position at both ends. Because of that, certain wavelengths will not work, because the wave will not be able to return to that correct position at the far end.

    Furthermore, the allowed wavelengths of a guitar string also depend on the thickness of the string. As a result, there are two conditions that control the tone that is played: which of the six guitar strings is plucked, and where the string is held against the frets.

    ATpartboxoops.gif

    Figure AT2.5. A particle in a box is allowed only certain wavelengths, based on the dimensions of the box.

    The same thing is true with very small particles that have wave properties. These particles can have only certain wavelengths that fit their surroundings. An electron has some property, analogous to the thickness of a guitar string, that limits its possible wavelengths. Given those limits, there are only certain orbits allowed the electron. If its orbit doesn't have the right circumference, the electron will not be able to form a complete wave along that orbit.

    These ideas ushered in a revolution in science. Quantum mechanics is a very powerful tool. It can be used to accurately predict how molecules will behave. Unfortunately, the mathematics involved in quantum mechanics are one or two math courses beyond what most introductory chemistry students are familiar with. Even so, a qualitative feel for some of the consequences of quantum mechanics is important enough that we should explore it.


    This page titled AT2. Old Quantum Mechanics is shared under a CC BY-NC 3.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Chris Schaller.

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