Electron Configurations Powerpoint
Electron Configurations Powerpoint
Configurations
Electron Arrangement in an Atom
• The arrangement of electrons in an atom is its
electron configuration.
• It is impossible to know where an electron is
or how fast it is traveling at any given time
(Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle? Walter White?).
• Models of the atom, such as the Bohr model are
very inaccurate (oops!) according to modern
atomic theory.
• Atoms and electrons are more
complicated than planets orbiting
the Sun.
Energy Levels
• There are “shells” or energy levels around an
atom. The farther away an energy level is
from the nucleus, the more energy the
sublevel has.
Electron Orbitals
• Orbitals are clouds of probability within an
energy level, so an actual orbital is a region of
space, where an electron might be found.
• Two orbital clouds are pictured below. There
are more dots near the center of the picture,
because an electron is most likely to be near
the nucleus (center) of the atom (the electron
which is negative is attracted to the positive
protons).
Types of Orbitals
• Within the energy shells are different shaped
orbitals (represented by the letters s, p, d, and
f) that can contain different total numbers of
electrons. A number can be placed in front of
the orbital letter to represent the energy level
that an orbital belongs to.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Practice!
• Fill in the electron orbitals corresponding to
He, then write out the complete electron
configuration.
More Practice
• Fill in the electron orbitals for Si, then write
out the complete electron configuration.
1s22s22p63s23p2
Electron Configs
with Elements in the d Block
– Chlorine [Ne]3s23p5
– Beryllium [He]2s2
More Practice
• Which element has the following
configuration: [Xe]6s2?
Barium
Electron Configurations
and Valence Electrons
• The outermost shell of electrons in an atom is the
valence shell and it contains the valence
electrons.
• The outermost shell contains the electrons that
can interact most with the rest of the world.
• A full valence shell contains 8 electrons (2 from
an s orbital and 6 from a p orbital), unless you’re
hydrogen or helium (only want 2 to fill their
outermost s shell to become stable).
How many valence electrons in….
• Oxygen - 1s2 2s2 2p4