Utilisateur
Zeff is the amount of nuclear charge experienced by an electron in an atom and is given by Zeff = Z − S.
Z represents the actual nuclear charge, equal to the number of protons in the nucleus.
S is the screening (shielding) constant that accounts for electron–electron repulsion reducing the nuclear attraction felt by an electron.
Hydrogen has only one proton and one electron, so there is no electron–electron repulsion and orbital energy depends only on the principal quantum number n.
Multi-electron atoms experience electron–electron repulsion and screening, so orbital energies depend on both n and Zeff.
Inner (core) electrons repel outer electrons and reduce the effective nuclear charge experienced by the outer electrons.
Valence electrons are the electrons involved in chemical reactions and determine the chemistry of the atom.
Increasing the number of protons increases the nuclear charge and generally increases Zeff if shielding does not increase proportionally.
The two 1s core electrons shield the 2s valence electron from the full +3 nuclear charge.
The 2s orbital has an inner lobe that penetrates closer to the nucleus, experiences higher Zeff, and is therefore lower in energy than the 2p orbitals.
Penetration refers to how much an orbital allows electron density to extend close to the nucleus; greater penetration leads to higher Zeff and lower energy.
In hydrogen-like atoms, 2s and 2p orbitals have the same energy because energy depends only on n.
In multi-electron atoms, 2s is lower in energy than 2p due to greater penetration and higher Zeff.
1s2 2s1 or [He] 2s1.
It is shielded by the 1s2 core electrons and experiences a reduced effective nuclear charge.
The Aufbau principle, Pauli exclusion principle, and Hund’s rule determine orbital filling.
Electrons fill orbitals in order of increasing energy.
No two electrons in an atom can have the same four quantum numbers, and each orbital can hold a maximum of two electrons with opposite spins.
Electrons occupy degenerate orbitals singly with parallel spins before pairing.
Parallel spins provide exchange stabilization energy and reduce electron–electron repulsion.
Additional stabilization that occurs when electrons with parallel spins occupy degenerate orbitals.
1s2 2s2 2p2 or [He] 2s2 2p2.
They occupy separate 2p orbitals with parallel spins before pairing.
Nitrogen has a half-filled 2p subshell (2p3), maximizing exchange stabilization energy.
s: 1 orbital, 2 electrons; p: 3 orbitals, 6 electrons; d: 5 orbitals, 10 electrons; f: 7 orbitals, 14 electrons.
The 4s and 3d orbitals are very close in energy, and half-filled or fully filled d subshells provide additional stability.
The 4s orbital has lower energy than 3d in neutral atoms due to penetration and shielding effects.
There is no electron–electron repulsion, so energy depends solely on the principal quantum number.
Principal quantum number and effective nuclear charge (including screening and electron–electron repulsion).
s > p > d > f.
s orbitals penetrate closer to the nucleus and have greater electron density near the nucleus.
Poor shielding by filled d orbitals increases Zeff on outer electrons, leading to smaller-than-expected atomic radii.
Poor shielding by f orbitals increases Zeff across the lanthanides, causing atomic radii to be smaller than expected.
It causes third-row transition metals to have sizes similar to second-row transition metals, affecting bonding and reactivity.
The energy required to remove the outermost electron from a gaseous atom.
Protons increase left to right while electrons are added to the same valence shell, and screening increases slower than nuclear charge, so Zeff increases.
Principal quantum number increases, orbitals become larger, shielding increases, and valence electrons are held less tightly.
Boron removes a 2p electron (higher energy), whereas beryllium removes a 2s electron (lower energy).
Oxygen has one paired 2p electron, increasing electron–electron repulsion and lowering ionization energy compared to half-filled nitrogen.
They have full valence shells and high exchange stabilization energy.
Atomic radius increases due to higher principal quantum number and increased shielding.
Atomic radius decreases because Zeff increases left to right, pulling electrons closer to the nucleus.
Covalent radius, van der Waals radius, and ionic radius.
The relative ability of an atom to attract electrons in a bond.
It increases from left to right.
It decreases down a group.
Covalent, polar covalent, ionic, and metallic bonding.
Atoms share electrons through overlapping valence orbitals.
Electrons are transferred due to large electronegativity differences, forming oppositely charged ions held by electrostatic attraction.
Delocalized valence electrons form overlapping bands of electron density across closely packed metal atoms.
Degree of orbital overlap and electrostatic attraction between atoms.
Greater overlap lowers energy more and strengthens the bond.
Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion.
Electron pairs repel each other and adopt geometries that minimize electron–electron repulsion.
Linear, 180°.
Trigonal planar, 120°.
Tetrahedral, 109.5°.
Trigonal bipyramidal, with 90° and 120° angles.
Axial positions are above and below the trigonal plane; equatorial positions lie in the trigonal plane.
Equatorial positions are less crowded than axial positions.
Lone pairs prefer equatorial positions because they are less crowded.
Octahedral, with all bond angles 90°.
The mixing of atomic orbitals to form equivalent hybrid orbitals oriented to match VSEPR geometry.
Mixing one s and one p orbital to form two equivalent sp orbitals arranged linearly at 180°.
Mixing one s and two p orbitals to form three equivalent sp2 orbitals arranged trigonal planar at 120°.
Mixing one s and three p orbitals to form four equivalent sp3 orbitals arranged tetrahedrally at 109.5°.
Formation of five hybrid orbitals arranged trigonal bipyramidal.
Formation of six hybrid orbitals arranged octahedral.
Carbon’s ground state is 2s2 2p2, so promotion to 2s1 2p3 provides four unpaired electrons for bonding.
No, it is a model used to visualize bonding; bond formation energy compensates promotion energy.
Sigma (σ) bonds formed by end-to-end orbital overlap.
One sigma bond and one pi bond.
One sigma bond and two pi bonds.
Mulliken electronegativity is based on measurable quantities related to ionization energy and electron affinity and applies to molecular bonding.
Electronegativity generally increases from left to right across a period and decreases down a group.
They have higher Zeff and smaller atomic radii, allowing them to attract bonding electrons more strongly.
Hydrogen can be either acidic (Hδ+) when bonded to more electronegative atoms or hydridic (Hδ−) when bonded to less electronegative atoms.
The relative electronegativity of the atom bonded to hydrogen determines the direction of bond polarization.
An electron-rich area.
An electron-poor area.
A larger electronegativity difference increases bond polarity and ionic character.
Orbital overlap becomes poor and electrons are effectively transferred, forming ionic solids.
Delocalization of valence electrons forming overlapping bands of electron density across many atoms.
Photoelectron spectroscopy.
It measures ionization energies and can eject inner core electrons when using high-energy photons such as X-rays.
Covalent bonds form by overlap of valence atomic orbitals to create molecular orbitals.
Energy decreases due to electrostatic attraction between electrons and nuclei.
Electron–electron and nucleus–nucleus repulsion become dominant, increasing energy.
The internuclear distance at which energy is minimized and stabilization is maximum.
The extent of orbital overlap and electrostatic attraction between atoms.
Similar size orbitals allow more effective spatial overlap, lowering energy more significantly.
Orbitals within the same row are closer in size and energy.
Maximum overlap occurs when orbitals are aligned along the internuclear axis.
Strong electrostatic attraction due to high bond polarity outweighs the orbital size mismatch between Si and F.
Good orbital overlap and high electronegativity of fluorine provide strong covalent and electrostatic contributions.
Partial charges attract each other, adding ionic character that strengthens the bond.
Lone pairs are localized closer to the central atom and occupy more space, increasing repulsion.
Electron pair repulsion that influences molecular geometry.
To minimize electron–electron repulsion between bonding pairs and lone pairs.
Equatorial positions have 120° separation and fewer 90° interactions compared to axial positions.
