Title: The Electromagnetic Spectrum and the Model of the Atom Part I
1The Electromagnetic Spectrum and the Model of the
AtomPart I
2The Purpose of Science
- The purpose of science to make models that
explain natural phenomena.
3Scientific Models
- A model is the best possible explanation which
accounts for all observed phenomenon and has
predictability. - 1) An unanswered question means change the
model. - 2) Predictability is the test of a good or
true model.
4Radioactivity and Light have been tools to
discover the structure of atoms.
- Do you Remember?
- Thompsons Cathode Ray Experiment
- Rutherfords Gold foil Experiment
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6Thomsons Plum-Pudding Model
7Ernest Rutherfords Gold Foil Experiment
8- Results of the Rutherford experiment
(a) The results that the metal foil experiment
would have yielded if the plum pudding model had
been correct
(b) Actual results
9- Rutherfords Nuclear Model of the atom
- Small, dense, positively charged nucleus
- Contains protons (1 charge)
- Contains neutrons (no charge)
- Remainder of the atom is mostly empty space
- Contains electrons (-1 charge) in the empty
space
10New Evidence Continuous and Line Spectra
White light
is actually made up of many colors
11White Light
- Given off by objects heated to a very high
temperature. - When an object is heated, it first gives off a
red glow then, as more energy is added it begins
to glow white hot.
12When white light is passed through a prism, the
light refracts, or bends to display all of its
component colors
13The Wave Nature of Light
- All waves exhibit similar characteristics and
properties - Crest the top of a wave
- Trough the bottom of the wave
- (on next slide)
- Origin the center line through which the wave
oscillates
Wave crest or peak
14The Wave Nature of Light
Crest ?
Origin ?
?trough
Amplitude distance from the origin to the crest
or the origin to the trough of a wave. (Indicates
intensity) Frequency (?) the number of waves
that pass a given point in a given amount of
time Wavelength (?) - distance from crest to
crest or trough to trough Speed (Velocity) the
amount of distance covered in a specified amount
of time.
15The Wave Nature of Light
16Wave Behaviors
- Reflection a wave strikes an object and bounces
off - Refraction the bending of waves
- Diffraction the bending of waves around an
opening or around the edge of an object - Interference the ability of two or more waves
to add together forming regions of large or small
amplitude.
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18Wave Interference patterns
19Light Exhibits Interference
- Constructive interference waves in-phase
create waves of greater amplitude ( they add) - Destructive interference waves out-of-phase
create waves of lower amplitude (they cancel out)
20The Electromagnetic Spectrum
- Visible light is one type of electromagnetic
radiation. - The arrangement of electromagnetic waves by their
wavelength is called the electromagnetic spectrum - The spectrum ranges from high energy, shorter
wavelengths of radiation to long wavelength,
lower energy radiation. - The visible portion of the spectrum is very
small.
21The Wave Nature of Light
22? Ionizing Radiation ?
? Nonionizing Radiation ?
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24X-rays
25Units for Wave Characteristics
- Wavelength (? lambda) meters with a Greek
prefix (nanometers , nm) - Frequency (? nu) cycles per second or Hertz
- (1/s, sec-1, Hz)
- Speed meters per second
- (m/s)
26Wave Calculations
- All electromagnetic radiation travels at the same
speed through the vacuum of space - 3.00 x 108 m/s (c)
- Wavelength and frequency are inversely
proportional ? c/? - Energy and frequency are directly proportional
- E h?
- E energy in joules,
- h Planks constant 6.626 ? 10-34 Js
27The Dual Nature of Light
- Light behaves as both a wave and as a particle.
- Evidence
-
- 1) The glowing of heated metals
- (first infra red, then visible as Tº?)
- 2) The photoelectric effect
28The Work of Max Planck(1858-1947)
- Able to predict the wavelengths of light changes
with temperature - Energy must be emitted in a Quantized way, or
restricted to certain quantities. - Quantum (singular) or Quanta (Plural)
- A quantum is a packet of energy
- VERY SMALL
- Related through Plancks Constant
- h 6.626 ? 10-34 Js, E h?
29The Photoelectric Effect
- When light is shined on a piece of metal,
electrons are ejected from the metal - Only light containing enough energy (of a certain
wavelength and frequency) works
30The Photoelectric Effect
31Einstein and the Photoelectric effect
- Albert Einstein (1879-1955) proposes that light
has a particle nature too. - He relates Plancks idea of quantized energy to
light. - Light energy quanta photons
- Photons transfer energy to electrons when light
strikes the metal. - Photons must be of sufficient energy for this to
occur.
32What do you see?
Depending on how you look at this it can be an
old lady or a young lady turning her head. The
picture has a dual nature
33Line Spectra of Elements
- A line spectrum is a spectrum that contains only
certain colors, or wavelengths of light. - The rainbow is a continuous spectrum
- Elements emit line spectra when they are
vaporized in an intense flame or with electricity.
34Continuous spectrum of white light
Line spectra of elements
35Line Spectra and the Quantization of Energy
36Neils Bohr (1885-1962)Planetary Model of the Atom
- Combines Rutherfords nuclear model and Plancks
quanta of energy. - Electrons must have certain energy levels in
which they travel. (Energy Level Postulate) - Energy of Electrons must be quantized to explain
line spectra. - (Transitions Between Energy Levels)
37Bohr Model
- Ground state energy level closest to the
nucleus - Excited state energy levels farther away from
the nucleus - Energy levels represented by quantum numbers ex.
n 1, n 2, n 3 etc.
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39Emission Spectrum of Hydrogen
- In general, the line spectrum of an element is
- rather complicated
- The line spectrum of hydrogen, with a single
electron, - is the simplest
http//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/4c
/Emission_spectrum-H.png
40The Evidence of Line Sprectra
- Atomic line spectra tell us that when an excited
atom loses energy, not just any arbitrary amount
can be lost - This is possible if the electron is restricted to
certain energy levels - The energy of the electron is said to be
quantized
41- Radiation absorbed electron moves from the
ground state to an excited state. - Cant maintain this higher energy level
- Electron falls back down to the ground state
- Radiation is emitted as it returns to the
ground state - The energy emitted or absorbed ? energy levels
42Emission of Light During Movement of Electrons
http//iws.collin.edu/biopage/faculty/mcculloch/14
06/outlines/chapter2010/Ma10-8b.JPG
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44- J.J. Balmer equation for visible spectrum of
Hydrogen - v 1/? 1.097 x 107/m (1/n12 - 1/n22)
- Which led to..
- The Rydberg equation can be used to calculate all
the spectral lines of hydrogen
45Rydberg Equation
Rydberg constant 109,678 cm-1
- Used to calculate the wavelengths of all the
spectral lines of hydrogen. - Atomic spectra indicate that when an excited atom
loses energy, the energy is in discrete amounts
- or quantized. - n1 and n2 are positive integers
46- Bohr proposed that the electrons moved around the
nucleus is fixed paths or orbits much like the
planets move around the sun - The orbits, labeled with the integer n, have
energy -
- This equation allows the calculation of the
energy of any orbit
47Bohr was able to use this model to calculate the
energies of the light given off by the hydrogen.
E h?
Unfortunately, the model became too
mathematically complicated for any element with
more electrons than hydrogen. Also, electrons not
completely explained as particles
48Limitations of the Bohr Model
It cannot explain the spectra of atoms other
than hydrogen. Electrons do not move about the
nucleus in circular orbits. However - the
model introduces two important ideas The
energy of an electron is quantized electrons
exist only in certain energy levels described by
quantum numbers. Energy gain or loss is
involved in moving an electron from one energy
level to another.
49Matter Waves
- Louis DeBroglie (1892-1897)
- Electrons (matter) have a dual nature just like
light. - Proved it mathematically
- Evidence diffraction patterns produced by beams
of electrons
50Electron Diffraction Patterns
http//www.microscopy.ethz.ch/TEM_ED_examples.htm
51Matter Wave Equations
E mc2 and E h? ? c/? (solve
for ?) ? c/ ? (Replace ? with c/ ?) E
h c/ ? (Both sides of the equation equal E so
you can equate one to the other) hc/ ?
mc2 (solve for ?) ? hc h mc2
mc (replace the speed of light with the speed of
the particle) ? h ms You can calculate
the wavelength of any object!
52 ? h ms Why do we not see these
waves? Because for relatively large objects
their mass is too large and their speed too slow
for the wavelengths to be observed. Remember, h
6.626 x 10-34 J s Electrons - small mass
(9.109 x 10-28 g) - travel REALLY fast so we
can observe the wave behaviors
53To be Continued