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Unit 1: Atomic and Molecular Structure

  • Page ID
    93395
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    Electron configuration of atoms is important for understanding the chemical and physical properties of elements. Quantum theory is used to precisely determine the nature of all electrons in any atom. Each electron—first, second, third, etc.—has a unique set of quantum numbers used with wave equations. Quantum numbers can be translated into electron orbitals, which represent “containers” for the probability of finding an electron about the nucleus. Creating an electron configuration that lists the energy level, or shell, with the type of orbital, or subshell, and the number of electrons in each suborbital, shows that similarities in electron configuration appear in each family of the periodic table. Orbital diagrams are figures that show the electron configuration, and also indicate the number of subshell available and the spin of electrons that fill the orbitals. This more detailed listing of electrons can be used to explain more specific details of the order of electrons in atoms, such as the exception of Cr, chromium, and Cu, copper.

    Contributors


    This page titled Unit 1: Atomic and Molecular Structure is shared under a CC BY-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Kenneth Pringle.

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