Quantum mechanics/Atomic spectra
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Combination of two orbital angular momenta (different orbitals)
editIn classical physics, the total angular momentum is the (vector) sum of the angular momenta of the particles present in the system; the resulting total depends on the orientation of the components. In quantum mechanics, if a system has two particles with angular momentum L1 and L2 and angular momentum quantum numbers l1 and l2, we can define a total angular momentum L=L1+L2. L behaves as any angular momentum and the eigenvalues of are ħ²L(L+1), i.e.
(Eq. 1)
L is the total angular momentum quantum number and can take values |l1 - l2|, |l1 - l2|+1, ..., l1 + l2.
Example 1. Consider an atom with one electron in orbital 2p (l1=1) and one electron in orbital 3d (l2=2). The total angular momentum quantum number for this system can be L=1,2,3. States with different total angular momentum have different energy so that there are (at least) 3 different states deriving from a configuration 2p3d.
Example 2. Consider the excited He atom with configuration 1s2p. The allowed quantum number for this configuration is just L=1.
The component along the z axis of the angular momentum is and its eigenvalues can take the values ħmL with mL = -L, -L+1, ..., L.
Wavefunctions with L=0, 1, 2, 3,... are indicated with the capital letters S, P, D, F,...
Combination of two spin angular momenta (different orbitals)
editIn a system with two electrons in different orbitals, you can define that total spin as the sum of the individual spins: . The total spin behaves as any angular momentum, and the eigenvalues of are ħ²S(S+1), i.e.
(Eq. 2)
S is the total spin quantum number and takes the value between |s1 - s2| and s1 + s2, i.e. between 0 and 1 in the case of 2 electrons, because the individual spin quantum numbers are each equal to ½.
The component along the z axis of the total spin is and its eigenvalues can take the values ħmS with mS = -S, -S+1, ..., S. There are in total 2S+1 eigenvalues. 2S+1 is called spin multiplicity. States with multiplicity 1, 2, 3, 4,... are called singlet, doublet, triple, quartet, etc.
In the two examples in the section above, the total spin can take the value of 0 and 1 and so the configuration gives rise to a singlet and a triplet. The energy of a wavefunction depends on the spin multiplicity (or S).
Spectroscopic term
editThe electronic configuration is not enough to describe the wavefunction, because for each configuration there are different ways to combine the orbital and spin angular momenta of the electrons (different combinations have different energies). The labels of a wavefunction which indicate the total angular momentum (S, P, D,...) and the spin multiplicity (singlet, doublet, triplet) are called spectroscopic terms.
The spectroscopic terms originating from the configuration 2p3d of the example 1 above are 1P, 1D, 1F, 3P, 3D, 3F.
The spectroscopic terms originating from the configuration 1s2p of the excited helium atom are 1P and 3P.
You can neglect the electrons in filled sub-shells, so that the spectroscopic term of the ground state of lithium 1s22s is 2S. The spectroscopic terms of the excited configuration of beryllium 1s22s2p are 1P and 3P.
Electrons in equivalent orbitals
editIn sections 1 and 2 we considered electrons in different orbitals. If they are in the same orbital the calculation of the allowed spectroscopic terms is slightly more laborious. Consider atomic carbon with 2 electrons in 2p. You have to arrange the electrons in all possible ways allowed by the Pauli principle and then identify by inspection the spectroscopic terms on the basis of the values of mS and mL The spectroscopic terms of atomic carbon are 1D, 3P, 1S.
Hund's empirical rule
editIt is useful to know what is the lowest energy spectroscopic term originating from a given configuration. Hund's rule states that:
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The ground state of atomic carbon is 3P (which has the largest multiplicity). This is why in elementary textbooks, electrons in partially filled shells have parallel spin.
The last complication: spin-orbit coupling
editEverything said so far implied that the spin does not appear in the Hamiltonian and its only effect is to change the structure of the spatial wavefunction. It is true that this is the main role of spin, but there is a very small term in the Hamiltonian that depends on the spin and this is called the spin-orbit coupling (which will not be written explicitly). Spin orbit coupling is important only for heavy atoms or when very accurate energy levels are needed (spectroscopy). The effect of spin orbit coupling is to split the spectroscopic terms in energy levels. The number of energy levels originating from a spectroscopic term is given by the possible values of the total angular momentum J = L + S (angular plus spin) with eigenfunction
The quantum number J can take the values |L - S|, |L - S|+1, ..., L + S.
The spectroscopic term 3P (L=1, S=1) can have J=0,1,2 and therefore 3 finely spaced energy levels indicated as 3P0, 3P1, 3P2.
Summary
editLessons 12-13 give an example of how quantum mechanics is used when the problem is too difficult to be solved exactly. You have to proceed by successive approximations, each time more refined. The aim is to understand the experiment (in this case, how many energy levels are present in an atom) and not to predict the exact value of the energy levels.
- The first level of approximation is the independent electron approximation. Each electron is in an orbital and the energy is determined only by the orbital occupation or electronic configuration.
- The second level of approximation is considering that the energy is different if the total orbital angular momentum and spin angular momentum are different. We differentiate the energy in spectroscopic terms depending on the values of L and S.
- The most accurate level takes into account the spin orbit coupling. The energy levels are identified by the total angular momentum J.
Exercise
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Next: Lesson 13 - Introduction to molecular orbital theory