Definition and Importance

What is Electron Configuration?

Electron configuration: arrangement of electrons in atomic orbitals. Determines atom’s electronic structure. Influences chemical behavior, bonding, magnetism.

Historical Context

Developed through quantum mechanics in early 20th century. Linked to atomic spectra analysis. Basis for modern atomic theory.

Significance in Chemistry

Predicts chemical properties, valence electrons, reactivity. Explains periodic trends: ionization energy, electronegativity, atomic radius.

"Understanding electron configuration is crucial for unraveling the complexities of atomic interactions." -- Linus Pauling

Quantum Numbers and Orbitals

Principal Quantum Number (n)

Defines shell energy level. Integer values n=1,2,3... Higher n = higher energy, larger orbital radius.

Azimuthal Quantum Number (l)

Defines subshell shape. Values: 0 to n-1. l=0 (s), 1 (p), 2 (d), 3 (f), etc.

Magnetic Quantum Number (ml)

Orbital orientation in space. Values from -l to +l, including zero.

Spin Quantum Number (ms)

Electron spin direction. Values +½ or -½.

Atomic Orbitals

Regions where electrons likely found. Types: s (sphere), p (dumbbell), d (cloverleaf), f (complex).

Aufbau Principle

Definition

Electrons fill orbitals starting from lowest energy. Builds up electron configuration sequentially.

Energy Order

Order: 1s < 2s < 2p < 3s < 3p < 4s < 3d < 4p < 5s < 4d < 5p < 6s...

Diagonal Rule

Mnemonic for filling order: arrows diagonally over subshells.

Limitations

Approximate guideline; exceptions occur due to electron-electron interactions.

1s2s 2p3s 3p 4s3d 4p 5s4d 5p 6s... (continue as per diagonal filling)

Pauli Exclusion Principle

Statement

No two electrons in an atom can have identical four quantum numbers.

Implication

Each orbital can hold max 2 electrons with opposite spins.

Spin Pairing

Electrons in same orbital must have opposite spin quantum numbers (+½, -½).

Effect on Electron Configuration

Limits electron occupancy; shapes configuration patterns.

Hund’s Rule

Statement

Electrons fill degenerate orbitals singly with parallel spins before pairing.

Reason

Minimizes electron repulsion, maximizes total spin, stabilizes atom.

Application

Explains electron distribution in p, d, f subshells.

Example

Oxygen (1s2 2s2 2p4): two 2p orbitals singly occupied, one paired.

Electron Shells and Subshells

Shells (Energy Levels)

Defined by principal quantum number n. n=1 to 7 in elements.

Subshells

Within shells, subshells identified by l: s, p, d, f.

Electron Capacity

Formula: 2n2 electrons max per shell. Subshell capacities: s=2, p=6, d=10, f=14.

Table: Subshells and Electron Capacity

Subshelll ValueNumber of OrbitalsMax Electrons
s012
p136
d2510
f3714

Orbital Notation and Diagrams

Orbital Notation Symbols

Arrows represent electrons: ↑ spin up, ↓ spin down. Boxes represent orbitals.

Electron Configuration Notation

Format: n(l)x, e.g. 1s2, 2p6. Shows subshell and electron count.

Orbital Diagrams

Visual depiction of electron distribution in orbitals.

Example: Carbon (Z=6)

1s ↑↓2s ↑↓2p ↑ ↑ 

Electron Configuration of Carbon

1s2 2s2 2p2

Exceptions in Electron Configuration

Transition Metals

Configurations deviate due to stability of half/full d subshells.

Examples

Chromium: [Ar] 3d5 4s1 instead of 3d4 4s2

Copper: [Ar] 3d10 4s1 instead of 3d9 4s2

Causes

Electron-electron repulsion, exchange energy, subshell energy proximity.

Other Notable Exceptions

Elements like Mo, Ag, Nb, Ru also show similar anomalies.

Electron Configuration and Periodic Table

Periodic Trends

Electron configurations explain group and period properties.

Blocks of the Periodic Table

s-block: groups 1-2; p-block: groups 13-18; d-block: transition metals; f-block: lanthanides, actinides.

Valence Electrons

Electrons in outermost shell/shells determine chemical reactivity.

Table: Periodic Table Blocks and Electron Filling

BlockOrbital TypeGroups
s-blocks1-2
p-blockp13-18
d-blockd3-12
f-blockfLanthanides/Actinides

Electron Configuration of Ions

Cations

Electrons removed from highest energy shell/subshell first. Generally outermost s before d.

Anions

Electrons added to lowest available orbital following Aufbau.

Example: Fe3+

Neutral Fe: [Ar] 3d6 4s2. Fe3+: remove 2 from 4s, 1 from 3d → [Ar] 3d5.

Transition Metal Ion Exception

4s electrons removed before 3d despite 4s filling first in neutral atom.

Applications and Significance

Chemical Bonding

Valence electron arrangement predicts bonding type: ionic, covalent, metallic.

Magnetism

Electron spin arrangements determine paramagnetism, diamagnetism.

Spectroscopy

Electronic transitions depend on configuration; basis for absorption/emission spectra.

Material Science

Electron configuration influences conductivity, optical properties.

Summary and Key Points

Core Concepts

Electron configuration defines electron distribution in orbitals. Governed by quantum numbers, Pauli, Aufbau, Hund rules.

Periodic Table Relevance

Configuration underpins periodic trends, element classification, chemical behavior.

Exceptions Exist

Not all elements follow predicted order due to subshell stability factors.

Utility

Essential for predicting reactivity, magnetism, spectroscopy, and material properties.

References

  • Atkins, P., & de Paula, J. Physical Chemistry, 10th ed., Oxford University Press, 2014, pp. 150-195.
  • Pauling, L. The Nature of the Chemical Bond, Cornell University Press, 1960, pp. 25-70.
  • Housecroft, C. E., & Sharpe, A. G. Inorganic Chemistry, 4th ed., Pearson, 2012, pp. 80-120.
  • Petrucci, R. H., Herring, F. G., Madura, J. D., & Bissonnette, C. General Chemistry: Principles and Modern Applications, 11th ed., Pearson, 2017, pp. 210-245.
  • Becker, J. S. Quantum Chemistry, Wiley-VCH, 2020, pp. 95-140.