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Atoms are the basic building blocks of matter. They are composed of subatomic particles, including protons, neutrons, and electrons.
- Atoms consist of a nucleus at the center, made up of protons and neutrons, surrounded by orbiting electrons.
- The nucleus carries a positive charge due to protons, while electrons carry a negative charge and orbit around the nucleus.
- Atoms are electrically neutral, meaning the number of protons in the nucleus equals the number of electrons orbiting around it.
- The arrangement and movement of these subatomic particles determine the chemical properties of an element.
Structure of an atom given by different scientists are discussed below
- Thomson's Plum Pudding Model: Proposed by J.J. Thomson in 1898, the plum pudding model suggested that atoms have a positively charged mass with negatively charged electrons scattered within it.
- It resembles "seeds in a watermelon."
- Rutherford's Nuclear Model: Ernst Rutherford's 1906 experiment, later conducted by Geiger and Marsden, led to the formulation of the nuclear model of the atom.
- In this model, the positive charge and most of the mass are concentrated in a small nucleus, with electrons orbiting around it, akin to planets around the sun.
- Despite its advancement, Rutherford's model failed to explain why atoms emit light of only discrete wavelengths, particularly seen in hydrogen.
Read More:
| Additional Resources for Preparation | |
|---|---|
| Atoms | NCERT Solutions for Class 12 Physics Chapter 12 |
| Atoms MCQs | Atoms Important Questions |
Class 12 Physics Chapter 12 Notes – Atoms
Alpha-Particle Scattering And Rutherford’s Nuclear Model Of Atom
- Conducted in 1911, Geiger and Marsden's experiment involved bombarding a thin gold foil with alpha particles emitted from a radioactive source.
- Observations revealed that most alpha particles passed through the foil, while a small fraction underwent significant deflections.
- This indicated the presence of a dense, positively charged nucleus.
- Based on the experimental results, Rutherford proposed a nuclear model of the atom, where the majority of the atom's mass and positive charge are concentrated in a tiny nucleus, with electrons orbiting around it.
- Rutherford estimated the size of the nucleus to be about 10-15 to 10−14 meters, significantly smaller than the overall size of the atom.
- Despite the dense nucleus, atoms are mostly empty space, with electrons orbiting far away from the nucleus.
- Most alpha particles pass through atoms unaffected due to this emptiness, while those interacting with the nucleus experience significant deflections.
Alpha-Particle Trajectory
- The trajectory of an alpha particle during scattering depends on its impact parameter.
- Impact parameter is the perpendicular distance between the initial velocity vector of the particle and the center of the nucleus.
Impact Parameter Formula
-
Formula:
b = ze2 cot(θ/2) / 4πϵoE
Where
- z is the atomic number
- e is the charge
- θ is the scattering angle
- E is the kinetic energy
- Different impact parameters result in various scattering outcomes, ranging from large deflections for particles close to the nucleus to minimal deflections for those with larger impact parameters.
- The small fraction of alpha particles that rebound back suggests that head-on collisions, where the impact parameter is minimal, are infrequent.
- This indicates that the mass and positive charge of the atom are concentrated in a small volume, allowing for a determination of the nucleus's upper size limit through Rutherford scattering.
Electron Orbits
- Rutherford Model Description: The Rutherford nuclear model depicts the atom as a neutral sphere with a small, massive, positively charged nucleus at the center, surrounded by electrons orbiting in stable paths.
- Electrostatic Balance in Orbits: In a hydrogen atom, the electrostatic force of attraction between the electrons and the nucleus balances the centripetal force required to keep the electrons in their orbits.
- Energy Considerations: The total energy of the electron in a hydrogen atom is negative, indicating its bound state to the nucleus. If the total energy were positive, the electron would not maintain a closed orbit around the nucleus.
Atomic Spectra
- Excited atomic gases emit radiation with specific wavelengths, creating an emission line spectrum characterized by bright lines against a dark background.
- Each element has a unique emission line spectrum, serving as a distinctive "fingerprint" for gas identification.
- When white light passes through a gas, dark lines appear in the spectrum, corresponding to wavelengths absorbed by the gas, mirroring those found in its emission line spectrum.
- This phenomenon is known as the absorption spectrum.
Bohr Model Of Hydrogen Atom
- The classical model proposed by Rutherford portrays the atom as a miniature solar system, but it faces critical issues due to classical electromagnetic theory.
- Niels Bohr introduced key modifications to Rutherford's model by incorporating quantum concepts.
- He postulated three fundamental ideas to explain atomic structure and spectra.
- First Postulate: Electrons can revolve in stable orbits without emitting radiation, contrary to classical predictions.
- Second Postulate: Electrons orbit only in quantized orbits where angular momentum is an integral multiple of h/2π.
- Third Postulate: Electrons can transition between non-radiating orbits, emitting photons with energy equal to the energy difference of the initial and final states.
Bohr’s Theory of Hydrogen atom
- Radius of an orbit Formula:
rn = n2ro
Where
- rn is the radius of nth orbit
- n is the principal quantum number
- ro is Bohr’s radius
- Speed of electron in an orbit Formula:
vn = (2.18 x 106) / n
Where vn is the speed of the electron in nth orbit
- Enery of an electron in an orbit Formula:
En = - (13.6 / n2) eV
Where En is the total energy of an electron in nth orbit
Drawbacks of Bohr’s Atomic Model
- It is only valid for one electron atoms.
- Orbits were taken as circular but according to Sommerfield these are elliptical.
- Intensity of spectral lines could not be explained.
- Nucleus was taken as stationary but it also rotates on its own axis.
- It could explain the fine structure in spectrum line.
- It does explain the Zeeman effect and Strak effect.
Energy Levels
- The energy of a hydrogen atom in nth orbit is given by
En = -(13.6 / n2) eV
- In Bohr's model, energy decreases as the electron orbits closer to the nucleus, with the ground state possessing the lowest energy at n = 1 and progressively higher energy levels for larger n.
- The ionization energy of hydrogen, predicted by Bohr's model as 13.6 eV, is the energy required to free an electron from the ground state.
- When hydrogen atoms absorb energy, electrons transition to higher energy states (excited states).
- As they return to lower energy states, photons are emitted.
- The energy difference between states determines photon energy.
Line Spectra Of Hydrogen Atom
- Electrons in hydrogen atoms emit photons when transitioning from higher to lower energy states.
- This results in discrete frequencies known as emission lines.
- Absorption occurs when atoms absorb photons matching the energy needed for electron transitions.
- It produces dark absorption lines in a continuous spectrum.
- Bohr's model successfully explains the hydrogen atom spectrum, distinguishing between emission and absorption phenomena.
Rydberg Formula for Hydrogen Atom
- Formula:
1/λ = RZ2 (1/n2f - 1/n2i)
Where
- λ is the wavelength of the emitted light
- R is Rydberg’s constant = 1.097 x 107 m-1
- Z is the atomic number
- ni is the initial energy state
- nf is the final energy state
Spectral Series of Hydrogen Atom
- Lyman Series: Spectral lines emitted when electrons travels from ni = 2, 3, 4…. to nf = 1.
- Balmer Series: Spectral lines emitted when electrons travels from ni = 3, 4, 5…. to nf = 2.
- Paschen Series: Spectral lines emitted when electrons travels from ni = 4, 5, 6…. to nf = 3.
- Brackett Series: Spectral lines emitted when electrons travels from ni = 5, 6, 7…. to nf = 4.
- Pfund Series: Spectral lines emitted when electrons travels from ni = 6, 7, 8…. to nf = 5.
De Broglie’s Explanation Of Bohr’s Second Postulate Of Quantisation
- De Broglie proposed that electrons in Bohr's model behave like particle waves, forming standing waves in circular orbits.
- Standing waves occur when the circumference of the electron's orbit equals an integer multiple of its de Broglie wavelength.
- De Broglie's hypothesis yields the quantum condition mvrn = nh/2π, explaining the quantization of angular momentum in electron orbits.
Important Terms Related to Atom
- Excitation: The process of absorption of energy by an electron.
- Excitation Energy: Amount of energy required by an electron to jump from ground energy state to higher energy state.
- Excitation Potential: Potential difference through which an electron must be accelerated to go from ground energy state to higher energy state.
- Ionization: The process of detaching an electron from an atom.
- Ionization Energy: The energy required to detach an electron from an atom.




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