Introduction

Atomic structure: arrangement and properties of atoms, basic units of matter. Composed of nucleus containing protons and neutrons, surrounded by electron cloud. Determines chemical behavior, physical properties, and interactions. Essential for chemistry, physics, material science, and nanotechnology.

"If the atoms did not exist, the universe as we know it would not exist." -- Richard Feynman

Historical Development

Early Atomic Theories

Democritus (5th century BC): proposed indivisible units called atoms. Dalton (1803): atomic theory, elements composed of atoms, conservation of mass explained.

Discovery of Electrons

J.J. Thomson (1897): cathode ray experiments, discovered electrons, plum pudding model proposed.

Rutherford Model

Ernest Rutherford (1911): gold foil experiment, nucleus discovery, dense positive center, electrons orbit nucleus.

Bohr Model

Niels Bohr (1913): quantized electron orbits, discrete energy levels, explained atomic spectra of hydrogen.

Quantum Mechanical Model

Schrödinger, Heisenberg (1920s): wave mechanics, uncertainty principle, probability orbitals replaced fixed orbits.

Subatomic Particles

Protons

Charge: +1e, mass ≈ 1.6726 × 10⁻²⁷ kg, located in nucleus, defines atomic number (Z), determines element identity.

Neutrons

Charge: 0, mass ≈ 1.6749 × 10⁻²⁷ kg, located in nucleus, contributes to atomic mass, isotope variation.

Electrons

Charge: -1e, mass ≈ 9.1094 × 10⁻³¹ kg, orbit nucleus in electron cloud, involved in chemical bonding.

Particle Properties Table

ParticleCharge (e)Mass (kg)Location
Proton+11.6726 × 10⁻²⁷Nucleus
Neutron01.6749 × 10⁻²⁷Nucleus
Electron-19.1094 × 10⁻³¹Electron cloud

Atomic Nucleus

Composition and Size

Contains protons and neutrons, radius ~1.2 fm × A^(1/3), where A = mass number. Volume ~10⁻⁴⁵ m³, extremely dense.

Nuclear Charge and Mass Number

Charge = +Ze (Z = proton count). Mass number A = protons + neutrons. Determines isotope identity.

Nuclear Binding Energy

Energy holding nucleons together, mass defect converts to binding energy via E=mc². Stability depends on neutron-proton ratio.

Nuclear Forces

Strong nuclear force: short-range, attractive, overcomes electrostatic repulsion. Residual strong force binds nucleons.

Electron Structure

Electron Cloud Concept

Electrons not fixed orbits but probabilistic distribution around nucleus. Density corresponds to likelihood of electron presence.

Energy Levels and Shells

Discrete energy levels labeled by principal quantum number n = 1, 2, 3... Electrons occupy shells with increasing energy.

Subshells and Orbitals

Each shell contains subshells (s, p, d, f) with defined shapes and orientations. Orbitals hold max two electrons with opposite spins.

Quantum Mechanics and Orbitals

Wave-Particle Duality

Electrons exhibit both particle and wave properties. De Broglie wavelength λ = h/p connects momentum and wave nature.

Schrödinger Equation

Time-independent equation describes electron wavefunction ψ, solutions give orbitals and energy eigenvalues.

 - ℏ²/2m ∇²ψ + Vψ = Eψwhere:ℏ = reduced Planck's constant,m = electron mass,V = potential energy,E = total energy

Quantum Numbers

Four numbers define electron state: n (principal), l (angular momentum), m_l (magnetic), m_s (spin). Determine orbital shape, orientation, spin direction.

Atomic Models

Plum Pudding Model

Thomson’s model (1904): electrons embedded in uniform positive sphere. Invalidated by Rutherford experiment.

Rutherford Model

Central nucleus with orbiting electrons. Failed to explain atomic stability and discrete spectra.

Bohr Model

Quantized orbits with fixed radii and energies. Explained hydrogen spectrum but not multi-electron atoms.

Quantum Mechanical Model

Electron described by probability cloud, orbitals derived from wavefunctions. Basis of modern atomic theory.

Electron Configuration

Aufbau Principle

Electrons fill lowest energy orbitals first. Order determined by (n + l) rule.

Pauli Exclusion Principle

No two electrons share identical quantum states within an atom. Maximum two electrons per orbital with opposite spins.

Hund’s Rule

Electrons occupy degenerate orbitals singly before pairing to minimize repulsion.

Example: Oxygen Configuration

1s² 2s² 2p⁴n=1 shell: 2 electrons in 1s orbitaln=2 shell: 2 electrons in 2s, 4 electrons in 2p orbitals

Spectroscopic Techniques

Atomic Emission Spectroscopy

Electrons excited to higher levels emit photons on return. Emission lines characteristic of element.

Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy

Atoms absorb specific wavelengths, used for qualitative and quantitative analysis.

Photoelectron Spectroscopy

Measures kinetic energy of electrons emitted by photon impact, reveals electron binding energies.

Line Spectra and Energy Transitions

Discrete spectral lines correspond to energy differences between orbitals: ΔE = hf.

TechniquePrincipleApplication
Emission SpectroscopyElectron relaxation photon emissionElement identification
Absorption SpectroscopyPhoton absorption by electronsConcentration measurement
Photoelectron SpectroscopyPhoton-induced electron ejectionElectron energy level analysis

Nuclear Forces and Stability

Strong Nuclear Force

Short-range attractive force between nucleons, dominates over electrostatic repulsion within ~1 fm.

Binding Energy per Nucleon

Indicator of nucleus stability, peaks near iron (Fe). Calculated from mass defect.

Nuclear Shell Model

Nucleons occupy energy levels in nucleus, magic numbers correspond to extra stable configurations.

Nuclear Instability and Radioactivity

Excess neutrons/protons cause instability. Decay modes: alpha, beta, gamma emission to reach stable state.

Isotopes and Nuclear Decay

Isotopes Defined

Atoms with same proton number Z but different neutron number N. Varying mass and nuclear properties.

Types of Radioactive Decay

Alpha decay: emission of helium nucleus. Beta decay: neutron-proton conversion with electron/positron emission. Gamma decay: photon emission.

Decay modes:α: (A,Z) → (A-4,Z-2) + ⁴Heβ⁻: n → p + e⁻ + ν̅ₑβ⁺: p → n + e⁺ + νₑγ: excited nucleus → ground state + γ photon

Half-Life

Time for half of radioactive nuclei to decay. Characteristic for each isotope, used in dating and medicine.

Applications of Atomic Structure

Chemical Bonding

Electron arrangement determines bond type: ionic, covalent, metallic. Shapes predict molecular geometry.

Material Science

Atomic packing and defects affect conductivity, strength, magnetism. Nanotechnology exploits atomic control.

Nuclear Energy

Fission and fusion processes harness nuclear binding energy. Reactor design depends on isotope behavior.

Medical Imaging and Treatment

Radioisotopes used in diagnostics (PET, SPECT) and radiotherapy. Atomic structure knowledge guides isotope selection.

Analytical Techniques

Atomic spectroscopy, electron microscopy, and mass spectrometry rely on atomic structure principles for analysis.

References

  • J.J. Sakurai, "Modern Quantum Mechanics," Addison-Wesley, Vol. 1, 1994, pp. 45-78.
  • E. Rutherford, "The Scattering of α and β Particles by Matter and the Structure of the Atom," Philosophical Magazine, Vol. 21, 1911, pp. 669-688.
  • N. Bohr, "On the Constitution of Atoms and Molecules," Philosophical Magazine, Vol. 26, 1913, pp. 1-25.
  • R.P. Feynman, R.B. Leighton, M. Sands, "The Feynman Lectures on Physics," Addison-Wesley, Vol. 3, 1965, pp. 2-15.
  • C. Cohen-Tannoudji, B. Diu, F. Laloë, "Quantum Mechanics," Wiley-Interscience, Vol. 1, 1977, pp. 125-179.