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2.6: Orbitals, Electron Clouds, Probabilities, and Energies

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    52231
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    Our current working model of the atom is based on quantum mechanics that incorporate the ideas of quantized energy levels, the wave properties of electrons, and the uncertainties associated with electron location and momentum. If we know their energies, which we do, then the best we can do is to calculate a probability distribution that describes the likelihood of where a specific electron might be found, if we were to look for it. If we were to find it, we would know next to nothing about its energy, which implies we would not know where it would be in the next moment. We refer to these probability distributions by the anachronistic, misleading, and Bohrian term orbitals. Why misleading? Because to a normal person, the term orbital implies that the electron actually has a defined and observable orbit, something that is simply impossible to know (can you explain why?).

    Another common and often useful way to describe where the electron is in an atom is to talk about the electron probability density or electron density for short. In this terminology, electron density represents the probability of an electron being within a particular volume of space; the higher the probability the more likely it is to be in a particular region at a particular moment. Of course you can't really tell if the electron is in that region at any particular moment because if you did you would have no idea of where the electron would be in the next moment.

    Erwin Schrödinger (1887–1961) developed, and Max Born (1882–1970) extended, a mathematical description of the behavior of electrons in atoms. Schrödinger used the idea of electrons as waves and described each atom in an element by a mathematical wave function using the famous Schrödinger equation (HΨ = EΨ). We assume that you have absolutely no idea what either HΨ or EΨ are but dont worry—you don’t really need to. The solutions to the Schrödinger equation are a set of equations (wave functions) that describe the energies and probabilities of finding electrons in a region of space. They can be described in terms of a set of quantum numbers; recall that Bohr’s model also invoked the idea of quantum numbers. One way to think about this is that almost every aspect of an electron within an atom or a molecule is quantized, which means that only defined values are allowed for its energy, probability distribution, orientation, and spin. It is far beyond the scope of this book to present the mathematical and physical basis for these calculations, so we won’t pretend to try. However, we can use the results of these calculations to provide a model for the arrangements of electrons in an atom using orbitals, which are mathematical descriptions of the probability of finding electrons in space and determining their energies. Another way of thinking about the electron energy levels is that they are the energies needed to remove that electron from the atom or to move an electron to a “higher” orbital. Conversely, this is the same amount of energy released when an electron moves from a higher energy to a lower energy orbital. Thinking back to spectroscopy, these energies are also related to the wavelengths of light that an atom will absorb or release. Let us take a look at some orbitals, their quantum numbers, energies, shapes, and how we can used them to explain atomic behavior.


    2.6: Orbitals, Electron Clouds, Probabilities, and Energies is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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