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Date: 8-1-2017
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Date: 29-1-2018
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Date: 14-5-2020
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The aufbau principle
Ground state electronic configurations
In the previous two sections, we have considered experimental electronic configurations and have seen that the organization of the elements in the periodic table depends on the number, and arrangement, of electrons that each element possesses. Establishing the ground state electronic configuration of an atom is the key to understanding its chemistry, and we now discuss the aufbau principle (aufbau means ‘building up’ in German) which is used in conjunction with Hund’s rules and the Pauli exclusion principle to determine electronic ground state configurations:
Worked example 1.5 Using the aufbau principle
Determine (with reasoning) the ground state electronic configurations of (a) Be (Z = 4) and (b) P (Z = 15).
The value of Z gives the number of electrons to be accommodated in atomic orbitals in the ground state of
the atom.
Assume an order of atomic orbitals (lowest energy first) as follows: 1s < 2s < 2p < 3s < 3p
(a) Be Z = 4 Two electrons (spin-paired) are accommodated in the lowest energy 1s atomic orbital.
The next two electrons (spin-paired) are accommodated in the 2s atomic orbital. The ground state electronic configuration of Be is therefore 1s2 2s2.
(b) P Z = 15 Two electrons (spin-paired) are accommodated in the lowest energy 1s atomic orbital.
The next two electrons (spin-paired) are accommodated in the 2s atomic orbital.
The next six electrons are accommodated in the three degenerate 2p atomic orbitals, two spin-paired electrons per orbital. The next two electrons (spin-paired) are accommodated in the 3s atomic orbital.
Three electrons remain and applying Hund’s rule, these singly occupy each of the three degenerate 3p atomic orbitals. The ground state electronic configuration of P is therefore
1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p3.
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دراسة تحدد أفضل 4 وجبات صحية.. وأخطرها
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العتبة العباسية تستعدّ لتكريم عددٍ من الطالبات المرتديات للعباءة الزينبية في جامعات كركوك
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