Atomic
In chemistry an atom something that cannot be divided") is the
smallest particle still characterizing a chemical element.
An atom consists of a dense nucleus of positively-charged protons and
electrically-neutral neutrons, surrounded by a much larger electron
cloud consisting of negatively-charged electrons. An atom is
electrically neutral if it has the same number of protons as electrons.
The number of protons in an atom defines the chemical element to
which it belongs, while the number of neutrons determines the isotope
of the element.
Subatomic particles
Though the word atom originally denoted a particle that cannot be cut
into smaller particles, in modern scientific usage the 'atom' is
composed of various subatomic particles. The basic particles of an
atom consist of the electron, the proton and, for atoms other than
hydrogen-1, the neutron.
The electron is by far the least massive of these particles at 9.11×10 -
31
kg, with a negative electrical charge and a size that is so small as to
be currently unmeasurable. Protons have a positive charge and a mass
1,836 times that of the electron, at 1.67×10 -27 kg, although atomic
binding energy changes can reduce this. Neutrons have no electrical
charge and have a free mass of 1,839 times the mass of electrons.
Neutrons and protons have comparable dimensions—on the order of
2.5×10-15 m—although the 'surface' of these particles is not very
sharply defined.
Both protons and neutrons are themselves now thought to be composed
of even more elementary particles, called quarks. The quark forms one
of the two basic constituents of matter, the other being the lepton, of
which the electron is an example. There are six different types of
quarks, and each has a fractional electric charge of either +2/3 or
−1/3. Protons are composed of two up quarks and one down quark, while
a neutron consists of one up quark and two down quarks. The quarks
are held together by the strong nuclear force, mediated by
elementary particles called gluons.
Nucleus
All of the bound protons and neutrons in an atom make up a dense,
massive atomic nucleus, and are collectively called nucleons. Although
the positive charge of protons causes them to repel each other, they
are bound together with the neutrons by a short-ranged attractive
potential called the residual strong force.
Atoms of the same element have the same number of protons, called
the atomic number. Within a single element, the number of neutrons
may vary, determining the isotope of that element. The number of
neutrons relative to the protons determines the stability of the
nucleus, with certain isotopes undergoing radioactive decay because of
the weak force.
A nuclear fusion process that forms a deuterium nucleus from two
protons. A positron (e+)—an antimatter electron—is emitted along with
an electron neutrino.
The number of protons and neutrons in the atomic nucleus can be
modified, although this can require very high energies because of the
strong force. Nuclear fusion occurs when additional protons or
neutrons collide with the nucleus. Nuclear fission is the opposite
process, causing the nucleus to emit some amount of nucleons—usually
through radioactive decay. The nucleus can also be modified through
bombardment by high energy subatomic particles or photons. In such
processes which change the number of protons in a nucleus, the atom
becomes an atom of a different chemical element.
The fusion of two nuclei that have lower atomic numbers than iron and
nickel is an exothermic process that releases more energy than is
required to bring them together. It is this energy-releasing process
that makes nuclear fusion in stars a self-sustaining reaction. The net
loss of energy from the fusion reaction also means that the mass of
the fused nuclei is lower than the combined mass of the individual
nuclei. The energy released (E) is described by Albert Einstein's mass–
energy equivalence formula, E = mc², where m is the mass loss and c is
the speed of light.
The binding energy per nucleon increases with increasing atomic
number until iron or nickel is reached. For heavier nuclei, the binding
energy begins to decrease. That means fusion processes with nuclei
that have higher atomic numbers is an endothermic process. These
more massive nuclei can not undergo an energy-producing fusion
reaction that can sustain the hydrostatic equilibrium of a star.
Eventually, at sufficiently high atomic numbers, the binding energy
becomes negative, resulting in an unstable nucleus.
Electron cloud
The electrons form a much larger electron cloud surrounding the
nucleus. These electrons are bound to the protons in the nucleus by
the electromagnetic force. The number of electrons associated with
an atom is most easily changed, due to the lower energy of binding of
electrons.
Atoms are electrically neutral if they have an equal number of protons
and electrons. Atoms which have either a deficit or a surplus of
electrons are called ions. Electrons that are furthest from the nucleus
may be transferred to other nearby atoms or shared between atoms.
By this mechanism atoms are able to bond into molecules and other
types of chemical compounds like ionic and covalent network crystals.
Elements
An element consists of all atoms that have the same number of
protons in their nuclei. Each element can have multiple isotopes—nuclei
with specific numbers of protons and neutrons. Even hydrogen, the
simplest of elements, has isotopes deuterium and tritium. The known
elements form a continual range of atomic numbers from hydrogen up
to element 118, ununoctium. All known isotopes of elements with atomic
numbers greater than 82 are radioactive.
The chemical elements are often displayed in a periodic table that is
laid out to display recurring chemical properties. Elements with similar
chemical properties are aligned in vertical columns. The horizontal
rows correspond to the filling of a quantum shell of electrons. Thus
the elements at the far right have their outer shell completely filled
with electrons, which results in chemically very inert elements known
as the noble gases.
Size
Atoms lack a well-defined outer boundary, so the dimensions are
usually described in terms of the distances between two nuclei when
the atoms are bonded. The radius varies with the location of an atom
on the atomic chart. The smallest atom is helium with a radius of
31 pm, while the largest known is caesium at 298 pm. Although
hydrogen has a lower atomic number than helium, the calculated radius
of the hydrogen atom is about 70% larger.
Various analogies have been used to demonstrate the minuteness of
the atom. A typical human hair is about 1 million carbon atoms in width.
An HIV virion is the width of 800 carbon atoms and contains about 100
million atoms total. An E. coli bacterium contains perhaps 100 billion
atoms, and a typical human cell roughly 100 trillion atoms. A speck of
dust might contain 3 trillion atoms. A single drop of water contains
about 2 sextillion (2×1021) atoms of oxygen, and twice as many
hydrogen atoms. If an apple was magnified to the size of the Earth,
then the atoms in the apple would be approximately the size of the
original apple.
Origin
The first nuclei, including most of the hydrogen, helium, lithium, and
essentially all of the deuterium and helium-3 in the universe, were
theoretically created during big bang nucleosynthesis, about 3 minutes
after the big bang. The first atoms were theoretically created
380,000 years after the big bang; an epoch called recombination, when
the expanding universe cooled enough to allow electrons to become
attached to nuclei. Since then, atomic nuclei have been combined in
stars through the process of nuclear fusion to generate atoms up to
iron. Some atoms such as lithium-6 are generated in space through
cosmic ray spallation. Elements heavier than iron were generated in
supernovae through the r-process and in AGB stars through the s-
process, both of which involve the capture of neutrons by atomic
nuclei. Some elements, such as lead, formed largely through the
radioactive decay of heavier elements.
Most of the atoms that currently make up the Earth and all its
inhabitants were present in their current form in the nebula that
collapsed out of a molecular cloud to form the solar system. The rest
are the result of radioactive decay, and their relative proportion can
be used to determine the age of the earth through radiometric dating.
Most of the helium on earth is a product of alpha-decay.
There are a few trace atoms on Earth that were not present at the
beginning, nor are results of radioactive decay. Carbon-14 is
continuously generated by cosmic rays in the atmosphere. Some atoms
on Earth have been artificially generated either deliberately or as by-
products of nuclear reactors or explosions, including all the plutonium
and technetium on the earth.
Atomism
In natural philosophy, atomism is the theory that all the objects in the
universe are composed of very small, indestructible building blocks -
atoms. Or, stated in other words, that all of reality is made of
indivisible basic building blocks. The word atomism derives from the
ancient Greek word atomos which can be parsed in to a-tomos (not
cuttable) - tomos being a form of the Greek verb temnein (to cut) -
meaning that which cannot be cut into smaller pieces . Atomists are
sometimes called Later Ionians.
Of importance to the philosophical concept of atomism is the historical
accident that the particles that chemists and physicists of the early
19th century thought were indivisible, and therefore identified with
the uncuttable a-toms of long tradition, were found in the 20th
century to be composed of even smaller entities: electrons, neutrons,
and protons. Further experiments showed that protons and neutrons
are made of even more fundamental quarks. These particles at present
show no experimental evidence of size or substructure. However, the
trend of empirical evidence for ever-smaller subatomic particles raises
the question: "Is matter infinitely divisible?" Since absence of
evidence does not amount to evidence of absence, experiment cannot
answer this question.
Thus, as regards quarks, electrons, and other fundamental leptons are
concerned, the possibility that they too are composed of smaller
particles cannot be ruled out. In the mean-time, however, it is these
particles (not chemical atoms) which remain the best candidates for
the traditional indivisible objects, with which historical atomism has
concerned itself.
Atomic theory
In chemistry and physics, atomic theory is a theory of the nature of
matter, which states that matter is composed of discrete units called
atoms, as opposed to obsolete beliefs that matter could be divided
into any arbitrarily small quantity.
Atomic theory began hundreds of years ago as a philosophical concept,
and in the 19th century achieved widespread scientific acceptance
thanks to discoveries in the field of stoichiometry. The chemists of
the era believed the basic units of the elements were also the
fundamental particles of nature and named them atoms (derived from
the Greek word atomos, meaning "indivisible"). However, around the
turn of the 20th century, through various experiments with
electromagnetism and radioactivity, physicists discovered that the so-
called "indivisible atom" was actually a conglomerate of various
subatomic particles (chiefly, electrons, protons and neutrons) which
can exist separately from each other. In fact, in certain extreme
environments such as neutron stars, extreme temperature and
pressure prevents atoms from existing at all. The field of science
which studies subatomic particles is particle physics, and it is in this
field that physicists hope to discover the true fundamental nature of
matter.
Introduction to quantum mechanics
Quantum mechanics (QM, or quantum theory) is a physical science
dealing with the behaviour of matter and energy on the scale of atoms
and subatomic particles / waves. QM also forms the basis for the
contemporary understanding of how very large objects such as stars
and galaxies, and cosmological events such as the Big Bang, can be
analyzed and explained. Quantum mechanics is the foundation of
several related disciplines including nanotechnology, condensed matter
physics, quantum chemistry, structural biology, particle physics, and
electronics.
The term "quantum mechanics" was first coined by Max Born in 1924.
The acceptance by the general physics community of quantum
mechanics is due to its accurate prediction of the physical behaviour
of systems, including systems where Newtonian mechanics fails. Even
general relativity is limited—in ways quantum mechanics is not—for
describing systems at the atomic scale or smaller, at very low or very
high energies, or at the lowest temperatures. Through a century of
experimentation and applied science, quantum mechanical theory has
proven to be very successful and practical.
Planck's constant
Classical physics predicted that a black-body radiator would produce
infinite energy, but that result was not observed in the laboratory. If
black-body radiation was dispersed into a spectrum, then the amount
of energy radiated at various frequencies rose from zero at one end,
peaked at a frequency related to the temperature of the radiating
object, and then fell back to zero. In 1900, Max Planck developed an
empirical equation that could account for the observed energy curves,
but he could not harmonize it with classical theory. He concluded that
the classical laws of physics do not apply on the atomic scale as had
been assumed.
In this theoretical account, Planck allowed all possible frequencies, all
possible wavelengths. However, he restricted the energy that is
delivered. "In classical physics,... the energy of a given oscillator
depends merely on its amplitude, and this amplitude is subject to no
restriction." But, according to Planck's theory, the energy emitted by
an oscillator is strictly proportional to its frequency. The higher the
frequency, the greater the energy. To reach this theoretical
conclusion, he postulated that a radiating body consisted of an
enormous number of elementary oscillators, some vibrating at one
frequency and some at another, with all frequencies from zero to
infinity being represented. The energy E of any one oscillator was not
permitted to take on any arbitrary value, but was proportional to some
integral multiple of the frequency f of the oscillator. That is,
where n =1, 2, 3,... The proportionality constant h is called Planck's
constant.
One of the most direct applications is finding the energy of photons.
If you know h, and you know the frequency of the photon, then you can
calculate the energy of the photons. For instance, if a beam of light
illuminated a target, and the light frequency was 540 × 1012 hertz,
then the energy of each photon would be h × 540 × 1012 joules. The
value of h itself is exceedingly small, about 6.6260693 × 10-34 joule
seconds. This means that the photons in the beam of light have an
energy of about 3.58 × 10-19 joules or approximately 2.23 eV.
When you describe the energy of a wave in this manner, it seems that
the wave is carrying its energy in a certain number of little packets
per second. This discovery then seemed to remake the wave into a
particle. These packets of energy carried along with the wave were
called quanta by Planck. Quantum mechanics began with the discovery
that energy is delivered in packets whose size is related to the
frequencies of all electromagnetic waves (and to the color of visible
light since in that case frequency determines color). Be aware,
however, that these descriptions in terms of wave and particle import
macro-world concepts into the quantum world, where they have only
provisional relevance or appropriateness.
In early research on light, there were two competing ways to describe
light, either as a wave propagated through empty space, or as small
particles traveling in straight lines. Because Planck showed that the
energy of the wave is made up of packets, the particle analogy became
favored to help understand how light delivers energy in multiples of
certain set values designated as quanta of energy. Nevertheless, the
wave analogy is also indispensable for helping to understand other light
phenomena. In 1905, Albert Einstein used Planck's constant to
postulate that the energy in a beam of light occurs in concentrations
that he called photons. According to that account, a single photon of a
given frequency delivers an invariant amount of energy. In other
words, individual photons can deliver more or less energy, but only
depending on their frequencies. Although the description that
stemmed from Planck's research sounds like Newton's corpuscular
account, Einstein's photon was still said to have a frequency, and the
energy of the photon was accounted proportional to that frequency.
The particle account had been compromised once again.
Both the idea of a wave and the idea of a particle are models derived
from our everyday experience. We cannot see individual photons. We
can only investigate their properties indirectly. We look at some
phenomena, such as the rainbow of colors that we see when a thin film
of oil rests on the surface of a puddle of water, and we can explain
that phenomenon to ourselves by comparing light with waves. We look
at other phenomena, such as the way a photoelectric meter in our
camera works, and we explain it by analogy to particles colliding with
the detection screen in the meter. In both cases we take concepts
from our everyday experience and apply them to a world we have never
seen.
Neither form of explanation is entirely satisfactory. In general any
model can only approximate that which it models. A model is useful only
within the range of conditions where it is able to predict the real thing
with accuracy. Newtonian physics is still a good predictor of many of
the phenomena in our everyday life. To remind us that both "wave" and
"particle" are concepts imported from our macro world to explain the
world of atomic-scale phenomena, some physicists such as George
Gamow have used the term "wavicle" to refer to whatever it is that is
really there. In the following discussion, "wave" and "particle" may
both be used depending on which aspect of quantum mechanical
phenomena is under discussion.
Bohr atom
The Bohr model of the atom, showing electron quantum jumping to
ground state n=1
In 1897 the particle called the electron was discovered. By means of
the gold foil experiment physicists discovered that matter is, volume
for volume, largely space. Once that was clear, it was hypothesized
that negative charge entities called electrons surround positively
charged nuclei. So at first all scientists believed that the atom must
be like a miniature solar system. But that simple analogy predicted
that electrons would, within about one hundredth of a microsecond,
crash into the nucleus of the atom. The great question of the early
20th century was, "Why do electrons normally maintain a stable orbit
around the nucleus?"
In 1913, Niels Bohr removed this substantial problem by applying the
idea of discrete (non-continuous) quanta to the orbits of electrons.
This account became known as the Bohr model of the atom. Bohr
basically theorized that electrons can only inhabit certain orbits
around the atom. These orbits could be derived by looking at the
spectral lines produced by atoms.
Bohr explained the orbits that electrons can take by relating the
angular momentum of electrons in each "permitted" orbit to the value
of h, Planck's constant. He held that an electron in the lowest orbital
has an angular momentum equal to h/2π. Each orbit after the initial
orbit must provide for an electron's angular momentum being an
integer multiple of that lowest value. He depicted electrons in atoms
as being analogous to planets in a solar orbit. However, he took
Planck's constant to be a fundamental quantity that introduces special
requirements at this subatomic level and that explains the spacing of
those "planetary" orbits.
Bohr considered one revolution in orbit to be equivalent to one cycle in
an oscillator (as in Planck's initial measurements to define the constant
h) which is in turn similar to one cycle in a wave. The number of
revolutions per second is (or defines) what we call the frequency of
that electron or that orbital. Specifying that the frequency of each
orbit must be an integer multiple of Planck's constant h would only
permit certain orbits, and would also fix their size.
Bohr generalized Balmer's formula for hydrogen by replacing
denominator in the term 1/4 with an explicit squared variable:
m=1,2,3,4,5,..., and n > m
where λ is the wavelength of the light and RH is the Rydberg constant
for hydrogen. This generalization predicted many more line spectra
than had been previously detected, and experimental confirmation of
this prediction followed.
It follows almost immediately that if λ is quantized as the formula
above indicates, then the momentum of any photon must be quantized.
The frequency of light, ν, at a given wavelength λ is given by the
relationship
and : and multiplying by h/h = 1,
, and we know that
E = hν so which we can rewrite as:
, and E/c = p (momentum) so
or
Beginning with line spectra, physicists were able to deduce empirically
the rules according to which the orbits of electrons are determined
and to discover something vital about the momentums involved--that
they are quantized.
Bohr next realized how the angular momentum of an electron in its
orbit, L, is quantized, i.e., he determined that there is some constant
value K such that when it is multiplied by Planck’s constant, h, it will
yield the angular momentum that pertains to the lowest orbital. When
it is multiplied by successive integers it will then give the values of
other possible orbitals. He later determined that K = 1/2π .
Bohr's theory represented electrons as orbiting the nucleus of an
atom in a way that was amazingly different from what we see in the
world of our everyday experience. He showed that when an electron
changed orbits it did not move in a continuous trajectory from one
orbit around the nucleus to another. Instead, it suddenly disappeared
from its original orbit and reappeared in another orbit. Each distance
at which an electron can orbit is a function of a quantized amount of
energy. The closer to the nucleus an electron orbits, the less energy it
takes to remain in that orbital. Electrons that absorb a photon gain a
quantum of energy, so they jump to an orbit that is farther from the
nucleus, while electrons that emit a photon lose a quantum of energy
and so jump to an inner orbital. Electrons cannot gain or lose a
fractional quantum of energy, and so, it is argued, they cannot have a
position that is at a fractional distance between allowed orbitals.
Allowed orbitals were designated as whole numbers using the letter n
with the innermost orbital being designated n = 1, the next out being n
= 2, and so on. Any orbital with the same value of n is called an
electron shell.
Bohr's model of the atom was essentially two-dimensional because it
depicts electrons as particles in circular orbits. In this context, two-
dimensional means something that can be described on the surface of
a plane. One-dimensional means something that can be described by a
line. Because circles can be described by their radius, which is a line
segment, sometimes Bohr's model of the atom is described as one-
dimensional.
Wave-particle duality
Niels Bohr determined that it is impossible to describe light
adequately by the sole use of either the wave analogy or of the
particle analogy. Therefore he enunciated the principle of
complementarity, which is a theory of pairs, such as the pairing of
wave and particle or the pairing of position and momentum. Louis de
Broglie worked out the mathematical consequences of these findings.
In quantum mechanics, it was found that electromagnetic waves could
react in certain experiments as though they were particles and in
other experiments as though they were waves. It was also discovered
that subatomic particles could sometimes be described as particles
and sometimes as waves. This discovery led to the theory of wave-
particle duality by Louis-Victor de Broglie in 1924, which states that
subatomic entities have properties of both waves and particles at the
same time.
The Bohr atom model was enlarged upon with the discovery by de
Broglie that the electron has wave-like properties. In accord with de
Broglie's conclusions, electrons can only appear under conditions that
permit a standing wave. A standing wave can be made if a string is
fixed on both ends and made to vibrate (as it would in a stringed
instrument). That illustration shows that the only standing waves that
can occur are those with zero amplitude at the two fixed ends. The
waves created by a stringed instrument appear to oscillate in place,
simply changing crest for trough in an up-and-down motion. A standing
wave can only be formed when the wave's length fits the available
vibrating entity. In other words, no partial fragments of wave crests
or troughs are allowed. In a round vibrating medium, the wave must be
a continuous formation of crests and troughs all around the circle.
Each electron must be its own standing wave in its own discrete
orbital.
The Pauli exclusion principle
There was a doublet, meaning a pair of lines, in the spectrum of a
hydrogen atom that was unaccounted for. This meant that there was
more energy in the electron orbital from magnetic moment than had
previously been described. Wolfgang Pauli, when studying alkali metals,
had introduced what he called a "two-valued quantum degree of
freedom" associated with the electron in the outermost shell.
"Degrees of freedom" simply means the number of possible
independent ways a particle may move. This led to the Pauli Exclusion
Principle, which predicted that no more than two electrons can inhabit
the same orbital. It also predicted that any neutron, electron, or
proton (types of fermions) could not exist in the same quantum state
within an atom. In early 1925, the young physicists Uhlenbeck and
Goudsmit introduced a theory that the electron rotates in space in the
same way that the earth rotates on its axis. This would account for
the missing magnetic moment and allow for two electrons in the same
orbital to be different if their spin was in opposite directions to each
other, thus satisfying the Exclusion Principle. probability distribution
of the electron further defining the number of cells in its phase space.
The minimum limit is the limit of the Uncertainty Principle and the
Exclusion Principle states that no two electrons can be within this
same minimum space defined by the Uncertainty Principle. Therefore,
a single electron in its orbital when defined by its quantum state which
is its wavefunction which is defined by its four quantum numbers
cannot have the same four quantum numbers of another electron in
that atom. Where two electrons are in the same n-sphere and
therefore share the same principal quantum number, they must then
have some other unique quantum number of shape l, magnetic moment
m or spin s. Even in the formation of degenerate gases where the
electrons are not in an orbital around the nucleus of an atom, they
must still follow the Pauli Exclusion Principle when in a confined space.