Atoms & Nuclei
Apply concepts from Atoms & Nuclei to problem-solving. Focus on numerical practice and real-world applications.
Concept Core
Rutherford's scattering experiment (1911): Alpha particles fired at a thin gold foil showed that most passed through undeflected, a few were scattered at large angles, and very rarely some bounced back (180 deg). Conclusions: (1) the atom is mostly empty space, (2) all positive charge and nearly all mass are concentrated in a tiny nucleus ( m), (3) electrons orbit the nucleus at relatively large distances (~ m).
The distance of closest approach for a head-on collision: d = , where k = 9 x N , Z = atomic number of target, e = 1.6 x C, = kinetic energy of particle; [d] = [L], SI unit: m. This gives an upper limit on nuclear size.
Bohr model postulates: (1) Electrons revolve in fixed circular orbits (stationary states) without radiating energy.
(2) Angular momentum is quantized: L = nh/() = n hbar, where n = 1, 2, 3, ...
(3) Photons are emitted or absorbed during transitions: = h = - .
Bohr model results for hydrogen-like atoms (atomic number Z):
- Radius: = 0.529 x /Z angstrom = /Z, where = 0.529 angstrom (Bohr radius); [r] = [L], SI unit: m. Radius increases as and decreases with Z.
- Velocity: = 2.18 x x Z/n m/s; [v] = [L ], SI unit: m/s. Velocity decreases with n.
- Energy: = -13.6 eV; [E] = [M ], SI unit: J or eV. The negative sign indicates a bound state. Ground state (n = 1) is most tightly bound.
Energy relationships: KE = - = 13.6 eV (positive).
PE = = -27.2 eV (negative).
Total energy E = KE + PE.
Key relation: KE = -E (magnitude of total energy), PE = 2E (twice the total energy, negative).
Hydrogen spectrum: 1/ = (1/ - 1/), where R = 1.097 x is the Rydberg constant; [R] = []. Spectral series:
- Lyman ( = 1, = 2, 3, ...): UV region.
Shortest (series limit): = infinity. - Balmer ( = 2, = 3, 4, ...): Visible region (most tested in NEET).
- Paschen ( = 3, = 4, 5, ...): Infrared region.
- Brackett ( = 4) and Pfund ( = 5): Far infrared.
The number of spectral lines possible from the nth energy level: N = n(n - 1)/2.
Nucleus: Composed of Z protons and (A - Z) neutrons, where A = mass number, Z = atomic number.
Nuclear radius: R = A^(), where = 1.2 fm = 1.2 x m; [R] = [L]. Nuclear density is constant (~2.3 x kg/) for all nuclei because volume proportional to A and mass proportional to A.
Mass defect: m = [Z + (A - Z) ] - M, where M is the actual nuclear mass; [ m] = [M], SI unit: kg or u (1 u = 931.5 MeV/).
Binding energy: BE = m x 931.5 MeV; [BE] = [M ], SI unit: MeV or J. The BE per nucleon curve peaks at Fe-56 (~8.75 MeV/nucleon): lighter nuclei can release energy by fusion (combining), heavier nuclei by fission (splitting).
Radioactive decay: N = e^(- t), where is the decay constant; [] = [], SI unit: .
Half-life: = 0.693/ = ln 2/; [] = [T], SI unit: s.
After n half-lives: N = ^n.
Activity: A = N = e^(- t); [A] = [], SI unit: becquerel (Bq).
Mean life: = 1/ = /0.693.
Decay types: Alpha (emits He-4: A decreases by 4, Z by 2), Beta-minus (neutron to proton + electron + antineutrino: Z increases by 1, A unchanged), Gamma (nucleus de-excites by emitting photon: no change in A or Z).
The key testable concept is the Bohr model energy level calculations, spectral series identification, and half-life calculations using the radioactive decay law.
Solved Numericals
N1. Find the radius, velocity, and energy of an electron in the 3rd orbit of hydrogen. Compare with ground state values.
Given: Z = 1 (hydrogen), n = 3, = 0.529 angstrom, = 2.18 x m/s, = -13.6 eV.
Radius: = x /Z = 0.529 x = 4.761 angstrom = 4.761 x m. Compared to ground state: = 0.529 angstrom. Ratio = 9 (increases as ).
Velocity: = x Z/n = 2.18 x x = 7.27 x m/s.
Compared: = 2.18 x m/s.
Ratio = (decreases as 1/n).
Energy: = x = -13.6 x = -1.511 eV. Compared: = -13.6 eV. Ratio = (less tightly bound in higher orbits).
Also: = - = +1.511 eV.
= = -3.022 eV.
Check: + = 1.511 + (-3.022) = -1.511 eV = . Verified.
N2. Calculate the wavelength of the first line (longest wavelength) and series limit (shortest wavelength) of the Balmer series for hydrogen.
Balmer series: = 2. R = 1.097 x .
First line (longest wavelength): = 3 (smallest energy transition in the series). 1/ = R(1/ - 1/) = 1.097 x ( - ) = 1.097 x x = 1.097 x x 0.1389 = 1.524 x . = .524 x = 6.563 x m = 656.3 nm (red light — H- line).
Series limit (shortest wavelength): = infinity. 1/ = R(1/ - 0) = R/4 = 1.097 x = 2.7425 x . = .7425 x = 3.646 x m = 364.6 nm (near UV — series limit).
The Balmer series spans from 656.3 nm (red) to 364.6 nm (near UV). The visible lines are H- (656.3 nm, red), H- (486.1 nm, blue-green), H- (434.0 nm, violet), and H- (410.2 nm, deep violet).
N3. A radioactive sample has a half-life of 10 days. Find: (a) fraction remaining after 30 days, (b) time for activity to drop to of initial, (c) decay constant and mean life.
Given: = 10 days.
(a) Number of half-lives in 30 days: n = t/ = = 3. Fraction remaining: N/ = ^n = 1/ = . So of the original sample remains (or has decayed).
(b) Activity drops to of initial: A/ = = 1/. Number of half-lives: n = 4. Time: t = n x = 4 x 10 = 40 days.
(c) Decay constant: = 0.693/ = 0. days = 0.0693 per day. In SI: = 0.0693/(86400 s) = 8.02 x .
Mean life: = 1/ = /0.693 = .693 = 14.43 days.
Note: Mean life is always greater than half-life (by a factor of .693 = 1.443).
Key Testable Concept
Note: Mean life is always greater than half-life (by a factor of 1/0.693 = 1.443).
Comparison Tables
A) Bohr Model Formulas
| Quantity | Formula | Proportionality (n, Z) | Value for H (Z=1, n=1) | Dimensional Formula | SI Unit |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Radius | = /Z | proportional to /Z | 0.529 angstrom = 5.29 x m | [L] | m |
| Velocity | = (2.18 x ) Z/n | proportional to Z/n | 2.18 x m/s | [L ] | m/s |
| Energy | = -13.6 eV | proportional to - | -13.6 eV | [M ] | eV or J |
| Kinetic energy | KE = - = 13.6 eV | proportional to | +13.6 eV | [M ] | eV |
| Potential energy | PE = = -27.2 eV | proportional to - | -27.2 eV | [M ] | eV |
| Angular momentum | L = nh/() = n hbar | proportional to n | 1.055 x J s | [M ] | J s |
| Time period | proportional to | proportional to | 1.52 x s | [T] | s |
| Current | proportional to | proportional to | 1.05 mA | [A] | A |
B) Spectral Series
| Series | Lower Level | Upper Levels | Spectral Region | Longest (first line) | Shortest (series limit) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lyman | 1 | 2, 3, 4, ... | Ultraviolet | 121.6 nm ( = 2) | 91.2 nm ( = infinity) |
| Balmer | 2 | 3, 4, 5, ... | Visible | 656.3 nm ( = 3, red) | 364.6 nm ( = infinity) |
| Paschen | 3 | 4, 5, 6, ... | Infrared | 1875 nm ( = 4) | 820.4 nm ( = infinity) |
| Brackett | 4 | 5, 6, 7, ... | Far infrared | 4051 nm ( = 5) | 1458 nm ( = infinity) |
| Pfund | 5 | 6, 7, 8, ... | Far infrared | 7458 nm ( = 6) | 2279 nm ( = infinity) |
C) Nuclear Formulas
| Quantity | Formula | Variables | Dimensional Formula | SI Unit |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nuclear radius | R = A^() | = 1.2 fm, A = mass number | [L] | m (or fm) |
| Mass defect | m = [Zm_p + (A-Z)] - M | Z = protons, A-Z = neutrons, M = nuclear mass | [M] | kg or u |
| Binding energy | BE = m x 931.5 MeV | 1 u = 931.5 MeV/ | [M ] | MeV |
| Decay law | N = e^(- t) | = initial nuclei, = decay constant | — | — |
| Half-life | = 0.693/ | = decay constant | [T] | s |
| Activity | A = N = e^(- t) | = initial activity | [] | Bq (becquerel) |
| Mean life | = 1/ = /0.693 | — | [T] | s |
D) Radioactive Decay Types
| Type | Particle Emitted | Change in A | Change in Z | Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alpha () | He-4 nucleus (2p + 2n) | A decreases by 4 | Z decreases by 2 | U-238 to Th-234 + He-4 |
| Beta-minus (-) | Electron + antineutrino | A unchanged | Z increases by 1 | C-14 to N-14 + e- + antineutrino |
| Beta-plus (+) | Positron + neutrino | A unchanged | Z decreases by 1 | Na-22 to Ne-22 + e+ + neutrino |
| Gamma () | High-energy photon | A unchanged | Z unchanged | Excited nucleus to ground state |
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