1.1 Atomic Structure
1.1 Atomic Structure
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Subatomic Particles
Subatomic particles are the particles an element is made up of and include protons, neutrons and Your notes
electrons
These subatomic particles are so small that it is not possible to measure their masses and charges
using conventional units (such as grams and coulombs)
Instead, their masses and charges are compared to each other using ‘relative atomic masses’ and
‘relative atomic charges’
These are not actual charges and masses but they are charges and masses of particles relative to each
other
Protons and neutrons have a very similar mass so each is assigned a relative mass of 1 whereas
electrons are 1836 times smaller than a proton and neutron
Protons are positively charged, electrons negatively charged and neutrons are neutral
The relative mass and charge of the subatomic particles are:
Relative mass & charge of subatomic particles table
Proton +1 1
Neutron 0 (neutral) 1
1
Electron -1
1836
Exam Tip
The relative mass of an electron is almost negligible.
The charge of a single electron is -1.602 x 10-19 coulombs whereas the charge of a proton is +1.602 x
10-19 coulombs, however, relative to each other, their charges are -1 and +1 respectively.
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Exam Tip
The mass (nucleon) and atomic (proton) number are given for each element in the Periodic Table
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The mass of the atom is concentrated in the positively charged nucleus which is attracted to the
negatively charged electrons orbiting around it
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Worked example
Determine the number of protons of the following ions and atoms:
1. Mg2+ ion
2. Carbon atom
3. An unknown atom of element X with mass number 63 and 34 neutrons
Answers:
1. The atomic number of a magnesium atom is 12 indicating that the number of protons in the
magnesium element is 12
Therefore the number of protons in a Mg2+ ion is also 12
2. The atomic number of a carbon atom is 6 indicating that a carbon atom has 6 protons in its nucleus
3. Use the formula to calculate the number of protons
Number of protons = mass number - number of neutrons
Number of protons = 63 - 34
Number of protons = 29
Element X is therefore copper
Electrons
An atom is neutral and therefore has the same number of protons and electrons
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Ions have a different number of electrons to their atomic number depending on their charge
A positively charged ion has lost electrons and therefore has fewer electrons than protons
A negatively charged ion has gained electrons and therefore has more electrons than protons Your notes
Worked example
Determine the number of electrons of the following ions and atoms:
1. Mg2+ ion
2. Carbon atom
3. An unknown atom of element X with mass number 63 and 34 neutrons
Answers:
1. The atomic number of a magnesium atom is 12 suggesting that the number of protons in the
neutral magnesium atom is 12
However, the 2+ charge in Mg2+ ion suggests it has lost two electrons
It only has 10 electrons left now
2. The atomic number of a carbon atom is 6 suggesting that the neutral carbon atom has 6 electrons
orbiting around the nucleus
3. The number of protons of element X can be calculated by:
Number of protons = mass number - number of neutrons
Number of protons = 63 - 34
Number of protons = 29
The neutral atom of element X therefore also has 29 electrons
Neutrons
The mass and atomic numbers can be used to find the number of neutrons in ions and atoms:
Number of neutrons = mass number (A) - number of protons (Z)
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Worked example
Your notes
Determine the number of neutrons of the following ions and atoms:
1. Mg2+ ion
2. Carbon atom
3. An unknown atom of element X with mass number 63 and 29 protons
Answers:
1. The atomic number of a magnesium atom is 12 and its mass number is 24
Number of neutrons = mass number (A) - number of protons (Z)
Number of neutrons = 24 - 12
Number of neutrons = 12
The Mg2+ ion has 12 neutrons in its nucleus
2. The atomic number of a carbon atom is 6 and its mass number is 12
Number of neutrons = mass number (A) - number of protons (Z)
Number of neutrons = 12 - 6
Number of neutrons = 6
The carbon atom has 6 neutrons in its nucleus
3. The atomic number of an element X atom is 29 and its mass number is 63
Number of neutrons = mass number (A) - number of protons (Z)
Number of neutrons = 63 - 29
Number of neutrons = 34
The neutral atom of element X has 34 neutrons in its nucleus
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Isotopes
What are isotopes? Your notes
Isotopes are atoms of the same element that contain the same number of protons and electrons but a
different number of neutrons
The symbol for an isotope is the chemical symbol (or word) followed by a dash and then
the mass number
E.g. carbon-12 and carbon-14 are isotopes of carbon containing 6 and 8 neutrons respectively
Isotopes of hydrogen
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Worked example
Your notes
Calculating relative atomic mass of oxygen
A sample of oxygen contains the following isotopes:
Answer
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Worked example
Your notes
Calculating relative atomic mass of boron
Calculate the relative atomic mass of boron using its mass spectrum, to 1dp:
Answer
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Your notes
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Since all 1+ ions will have the same kinetic energy, their velocity will depend on their mass
Lighter ions will move faster and heavier ions will move slower
Your notes
Stage 3: Ion Drift (in the flight tube)
The 1+ ions will pass through a hole in the negatively charged plate and move into a flight tube
This is where the name 'Time of Flight' comes from
The time of flight of each 1+ ion in this tube depends on their velocity
Again, this is important to remember when completing calculations
Stage 4: Detection
Once they have pass through the mass spectrometer, the 1+ ions will hit a negatively charged
'detector' plate
As they hit this electric plate, they gain an electron
This gaining of an electron discharges the ion, and causes a current to be produced
This size of the current is proportional to the abundance of those ions hitting the plate and gaining
an electron
The detector plate is connected to a computer, which produces the mass spectrum
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Exam Tip
Your notes
Remember: All particles in the mass spectrometer are accelerated to the same kinetic energy.
The time of flight is proportional to the square root of the mass of the ions, showing that the lighter the
ion the faster it will pass through and the quicker it will hit the detector.
The heavier the ion, the slower it will travel and the longer it will take to hit the detector.
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Your notes
Electrons are arranged in principal quantum shells, which are numbered by principal quantum numbers
Orbitals
Subshells contain one or more atomic orbitals
Orbitals exist at specific energy levels and electrons can only be found at these specific levels, not in
between them
Each atomic orbital can be occupied by a maximum of two electrons
This means that the number of orbitals in each subshell is as follows:
s : one orbital (1 x 2 = total of 2 electrons)
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Your notes
Representation of orbitals (the dot represents the nucleus of the atom) showing spherical s orbitals (a),
p orbitals containing ‘lobes’ along the x, y and z axis
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Your notes
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Your notes
The ground state of an atom is achieved by filling the lowest energy subshells first
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Your notes
Exam Tip
The three p orbitals are labelled px, py and pz, but you do not need to include this in your electron
configurations!
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The principal quantum shells increase in energy with increasing principal quantum number
E.g. n = 4 is higher in energy than n = 2
The subshells increase in energy as follows: s < p < d < f
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The only exception to these rules is the 3d orbital which has slightly higher energy than the 4s
orbital
Because of this, the 4s orbital is filled before the 3d orbital Your notes
All the orbitals in the same subshell have the same energy and are said to be degenerate
E.g. px, py and pz are all equal in energy
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Your notes
The electron configuration shows the number of electrons occupying a subshell in a specific shell
Writing out the electron configuration tells us how the electrons in an atom or ion are arranged in their
shells, subshells and orbitals
This can be done using the full electron configuration or the shorthand version
The full electron configuration describes the arrangement of all electrons from the 1s subshell up
The shorthand electron configuration includes using the symbol of the nearest preceding noble
gas to account for however many electrons are in that noble gas
Ions are formed when atoms lose or gain electrons
Negative ions are formed by adding electrons to the outer subshell
Positive ions are formed by removing electrons from the outer subshell
The transition metals fill the 4s subshell before the 3d subshell but lose electrons from the 4s first
and not from the 3d subshell (the 4s subshell is lower in energy
Full Electron Configurations
Hydrogen has 1 single electron
The electron is in the s orbital of the first shell
Its electron configuration is 1s1
Potassium has 19 electrons
The first 2 electrons fill the s orbital of the first shell
They then continue to fill subsequent orbitals and subshells in order of increasing energy
The 4s orbital is lower in energy than the 3d subshell, so it is therefore filled first
The full electron configuration of potassium is 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s1
Shorthand Electron Configurations
Using potassium as an example again:
The nearest preceding noble gas to potassium is argon
This accounts for 18 electrons of the 19 electrons that potassium has
The shorthand electron configuration of potassium is [Ar] 4s1
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Worked example
Your notes
Write down the full and shorthand electron configuration of the following elements:
1. Calcium
2. Gallium
3. Mg2+
Answer 1:
Calcium has has 20 electrons so the full electronic configuration is:
1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s2
The 4s orbital is lower in energy than the 3d subshell and is therefore filled first
The shorthand version is [Ar] 4s2 since argon is the nearest preceding noble gas to calcium which
accounts for 18 electrons
Answer 2:
Gallium has 31 electrons so the full electronic configuration is:
1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 3d10 4s2 4p1
The shorthand electronic configuration is:
[Ar] 3d10 4s2 4p1
Even though the 4s is filled first, the full electron configuration is often written in numerical order.
So, if there are electrons in the 3d sub-shell, then these will be written before the 4s
Answer 3:
A magnesium atom has 12 electrons so its electronic configuration would be
1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2
To form a magnesium ion, it loses its two outer electrons so the electronic configuration for the ion
is:
1s2 2s2 2p6
Using the shorthand, the electronic configuration is:
[Ne]
Exceptions
Chromium and copper have the following electron configurations, which are different to what you may
expect:
Cr is [Ar] 3d5 4s1 not [Ar] 3d4 4s2
Cu is [Ar] 3d10 4s1 not [Ar] 3d9 4s2
This is because the [Ar] 3d5 4s1 and [Ar] 3d10 4s1 configurations are energetically stable
Presenting the Electron Configuration
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Electrons can be imagined as small spinning charges which rotate around their
own axis in either a clockwise or anticlockwise direction Your notes
The spin of the electron is represented by its direction
Electrons with similar spin repel each other which is also called spin-pair repulsion
Electrons will therefore occupy separate orbitals in the same subshell where possible, to minimize this
repulsion and have their spin in the same direction
E.g. if there are three electrons in a p subshell, one electron will go into each px, py and pz orbital
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Your notes
The electrons in titanium are arranged in their orbitals as shown. Electrons occupy the lowest energy
levels first before filling those with higher energy
Exam Tip
You can use full headed arrows or half headed arrows to represent electrons in your box notations.
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Your notes
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Oxygen has a first ionisation energy of 1310 kJ mol-1 as its electron configuration is 1s2 2s2 2px2 2py1
2pz1
In oxygen, there are 2 electrons in the 2px orbital, so the repulsion between those electrons makes Your notes
it slightly easier for one of those electrons to be removed
From one period to the next
There is a large decrease in ionisation energy between the last element in one period, and the first
element in the next period
This is because:
There is increased distance between the nucleus and the outer electrons as you have added a new
shell
There is increased shielding by inner electrons because of the added shell
These two factors outweigh the increased nuclear charge
Ionisation energy down a group
The ionisation energy down a group decreases due to the following factors:
The number of protons in the atom is increased, so the nuclear charge increases
But, the atomic radius of the atoms increases as you are adding more shells of electrons, making
the atoms bigger
So, the distance between the nucleus and outer electron increases as you descend the group
The shielding by inner shell electrons increases as there are more shells of electrons
These factors outweigh the increased nuclear charge, meaning it becomes easier to remove the
outer electron as you descend a group
So, the ionisation energy decreases
Ionisation Energy Trends across a Period & going down a Group Table
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Your notes
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Exam Tip
Remember: Equations representing ionisation energies must have gaseous (g) state symbols for the
atoms and ions but not for the electrons.
You will lose the mark in your exam if you do not include the state symbols, even if the question does
not specify for you to include them.
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Your notes
The first electron removed has a low IE1 as it is easily removed from the atom due to the spin-pair
repulsion of the electrons in the 4s orbital
The second electron is more difficult to remove than the first electron as there is no spin-pair repulsion
The third electron is much more difficult to remove than the second one corresponding to the fact that
the third electron is in a principal quantum shell which is closer to the nucleus (3p)
Removal of the fourth electron is more difficult as the orbital is no longer full, and there is less spin-pair
repulsion
The graph shows there is a large increase in successive ionisation energy as the electrons are being
removed from an increasingly positive ion
The big jumps on the graph show the change of shell and the small jumps are the change of subshell
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Exam Tip
Your notes
It gets more difficult to remove electrons from principal quantum shells that get closer to the nucleus,
as there is less shielding and an increase in attractive forces between the electrons and nuclear
charge.
Be careful with interpreting successive ionisation energy graphs, especially if you are not given every
successive ionisation energy and are just shown part of the graph - you should count the electrons
from left to right!
It is a good idea to label the shells and subshells on ionisation energy graphs in an exam so that you do
not make the mistake of reading the graph backwards.
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Sodium
For sodium, there is a huge jump from the first to the second ionisation energy, indicating that it is Your notes
much easier to remove the first electron than the second
Therefore, the first electron to be removed must be the last electron in the valence shell thus Na
belongs to group I
The large jump corresponds to moving from the 3s to the full 2p subshell
Na 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s1
Magnesium
There is a huge increase from the second to the third ionisation energy, indicating that it is far easier to
remove the first two electrons than the third
Therefore the valence shell must contain only two electrons indicating that magnesium belongs to
group II
The large jump corresponds to moving from the 3s to the full 2p subshell
Mg 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2
Aluminium
There is a huge increase from the third to the fourth ionisation energy, indicating that it is far easier to
remove the first three electrons than the fourth
The 3p electron and 3s electrons are relatively easy to remove compared with the 2p electrons which
are located closer to the nucleus and experience greater nuclear charge
The large jump corresponds to moving from the third shell to the second shell
Al 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p1
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