(a)
Interpretation: Valence electrons has to be defined and the electronic configuration for the given elements has to written to prove the number of valence electrons is equal to the group number
Concept Introduction: In the periodic table the elements are grouped based on their valence electrons. Valence electrons or outer shell electron of an atom is the total number of electrons that is present in the outer most shell of the orbital.
Electronic configuration is the distribution of electrons of atoms or molecule in the orbital. Pauli Exclusion Principle, Hund’s rule and Aufbau’s principle has to be followed to write the electronic configuration of an atom.
Pauli Exclusion Principle:
No two electrons having the same spin can occupy the same orbital. To occupy the same orbital, two electrons must have opposite spins.
Hund’s rule:
When electrons occupy orbital, one electron enters each orbital until all the orbitals contain one electron. When the orbitals are singly filled, all the electrons have same spin where as in the doubly filled orbitals, electrons have opposite spin.
Aufbau’s Principle:
Lowest energy level orbitals are filled first before occupying the higher energy level
The order in which the electrons should be filled is
1s,2s,3s,3p,4s,3d,4p,5s,4d,5p,6s,4f,5d,6p,7s,5f,6d….
Electronic configuration of Si can be represented as [Ar]
Hence the number of valence electrons is equal to the group number.
To define valence electrons
(a)
Explanation of Solution
(b)
Interpretation: Valence electrons has to be defined and the electronic configuration for the given elements has to written to prove the number of valence electrons is equal to the group number
Concept Introduction: In the periodic table the elements are grouped based on their valence electrons. Valence electrons or outer shell electron of an atom is the total number of electrons that is present in the outer most shell of the orbital.
Electronic configuration is the distribution of electrons of atoms or molecule in the orbital. Pauli Exclusion Principle, Hund’s rule and Aufbau’s principle has to be followed to write the electronic configuration of an atom.
Pauli Exclusion Principle:
No two electrons having the same spin can occupy the same orbital. To occupy the same orbital, two electrons must have opposite spins.
Hund’s rule:
When electrons occupy orbital, one electron enters each orbital until all the orbitals contain one electron. When the orbitals are singly filled, all the electrons have same spin where as in the doubly filled orbitals, electrons have opposite spin.
Aufbau’s Principle:
Lowest energy level orbitals are filled first before occupying the higher energy level
The order in which the electrons should be filled is
1s,2s,3s,3p,4s,3d,4p,5s,4d,5p,6s,4f,5d,6p,7s,5f,6d….
Electronic configuration of Si can be represented as [Ar]
Hence the number of valence electrons is equal to the group number.
To write electronic configuration and find the group of Na
(b)
Explanation of Solution
Na has one valence electron and it belongs to group 1A
Hence the number of valence electron is equal to the group number is proved.
(c)
Interpretation: Valence electrons has to be defined and the electronic configuration for the given elements has to written to prove the number of valence electrons is equal to the group number
Concept Introduction: In the periodic table the elements are grouped based on their valence electrons. Valence electrons or outer shell electron of an atom is the total number of electrons that is present in the outer most shell of the orbital.
Electronic configuration is the distribution of electrons of atoms or molecule in the orbital. Pauli Exclusion Principle, Hund’s rule and Aufbau’s principle has to be followed to write the electronic configuration of an atom.
Pauli Exclusion Principle:
No two electrons having the same spin can occupy the same orbital. To occupy the same orbital, two electrons must have opposite spins.
Hund’s rule:
When electrons occupy orbital, one electron enters each orbital until all the orbitals contain one electron. When the orbitals are singly filled, all the electrons have same spin where as in the doubly filled orbitals, electrons have opposite spin.
Aufbau’s Principle:
Lowest energy level orbitals are filled first before occupying the higher energy level
The order in which the electrons should be filled is
1s,2s,3s,3p,4s,3d,4p,5s,4d,5p,6s,4f,5d,6p,7s,5f,6d….
Electronic configuration of Si can be represented as [Ar]
Hence the number of valence electrons is equal to the group number.
To write electronic configuration and find the group of Ca
(c)
Explanation of Solution
Na has 2 valence electrons and it belongs to group 2A
Hence the number of valence electron is equal to the group number is proved.
(d)
Interpretation: Valence electrons has to be defined and the electronic configuration for the given elements has to written to prove the number of valence electrons is equal to the group number
Concept Introduction: In the periodic table the elements are grouped based on their valence electrons. Valence electrons or outer shell electron of an atom is the total number of electrons that is present in the outer most shell of the orbital.
Electronic configuration is the distribution of electrons of atoms or molecule in the orbital. Pauli Exclusion Principle, Hund’s rule and Aufbau’s principle has to be followed to write the electronic configuration of an atom.
Pauli Exclusion Principle:
No two electrons having the same spin can occupy the same orbital. To occupy the same orbital, two electrons must have opposite spins.
Hund’s rule:
When electrons occupy orbital, one electron enters each orbital until all the orbitals contain one electron. When the orbitals are singly filled, all the electrons have same spin where as in the doubly filled orbitals, electrons have opposite spin.
Aufbau’s Principle:
Lowest energy level orbitals are filled first before occupying the higher energy level
The order in which the electrons should be filled is
1s,2s,3s,3p,4s,3d,4p,5s,4d,5p,6s,4f,5d,6p,7s,5f,6d….
Electronic configuration of Si can be represented as [Ar]
Hence the number of valence electrons is equal to the group number.
To write electronic configuration and find the group of lithium
(d)
Explanation of Solution
Na has 1 valence electrons and it belongs to group 1A
Hence the number of valence electron is equal to the group number is proved.
(e)
Interpretation: Valence electrons has to be defined and the electronic configuration for the given elements has to written to prove the number of valence electrons is equal to the group number
Concept Introduction: In the periodic table the elements are grouped based on their valence electrons. Valence electrons or outer shell electron of an atom is the total number of electrons that is present in the outer most shell of the orbital.
Electronic configuration is the distribution of electrons of atoms or molecule in the orbital. Pauli Exclusion Principle, Hund’s rule and Aufbau’s principle has to be followed to write the electronic configuration of an atom.
Pauli Exclusion Principle:
No two electrons having the same spin can occupy the same orbital. To occupy the same orbital, two electrons must have opposite spins.
Hund’s rule:
When electrons occupy orbital, one electron enters each orbital until all the orbitals contain one electron. When the orbitals are singly filled, all the electrons have same spin where as in the doubly filled orbitals, electrons have opposite spin.
Aufbau’s Principle:
Lowest energy level orbitals are filled first before occupying the higher energy level
The order in which the electrons should be filled is
1s,2s,3s,3p,4s,3d,4p,5s,4d,5p,6s,4f,5d,6p,7s,5f,6d….
Electronic configuration of Si can be represented as [Ar]
Hence the number of valence electrons is equal to the group number.
To write electronic configuration and find the group of iodine
(e)
Explanation of Solution
Iodine has 7 valence electrons and it belongs to group 7A
Hence the number of valence electron is equal to the group number is proved.
(f)
Interpretation: Valence electrons has to be defined and the electronic configuration for the given elements has to written to prove the number of valence electrons is equal to the group number
Concept Introduction: In the periodic table the elements are grouped based on their valence electrons. Valence electrons or outer shell electron of an atom is the total number of electrons that is present in the outer most shell of the orbital.
Electronic configuration is the distribution of electrons of atoms or molecule in the orbital. Pauli Exclusion Principle, Hund’s rule and Aufbau’s principle has to be followed to write the electronic configuration of an atom.
Pauli Exclusion Principle:
No two electrons having the same spin can occupy the same orbital. To occupy the same orbital, two electrons must have opposite spins.
Hund’s rule:
When electrons occupy orbital, one electron enters each orbital until all the orbitals contain one electron. When the orbitals are singly filled, all the electrons have same spin where as in the doubly filled orbitals, electrons have opposite spin.
Aufbau’s Principle:
Lowest energy level orbitals are filled first before occupying the higher energy level
The order in which the electrons should be filled is
1s,2s,3s,3p,4s,3d,4p,5s,4d,5p,6s,4f,5d,6p,7s,5f,6d….
Electronic configuration of Si can be represented as [Ar]
Hence the number of valence electrons is equal to the group number.
To write electronic configuration and find the group of nitrogen
(f)
Explanation of Solution
Nitrogen has 5 valence electrons and it belongs to group 5A
Hence the number of valence electron is equal to the group number is proved.
(g)
Interpretation: Valence electrons has to be defined and the electronic configuration for the given elements has to written to prove the number of valence electrons is equal to the group number
Concept Introduction: In the periodic table the elements are grouped based on their valence electrons. Valence electrons or outer shell electron of an atom is the total number of electrons that is present in the outer most shell of the orbital.
Electronic configuration is the distribution of electrons of atoms or molecule in the orbital. Pauli Exclusion Principle, Hund’s rule and Aufbau’s principle has to be followed to write the electronic configuration of an atom.
Pauli Exclusion Principle:
No two electrons having the same spin can occupy the same orbital. To occupy the same orbital, two electrons must have opposite spins.
Hund’s rule:
When electrons occupy orbital, one electron enters each orbital until all the orbitals contain one electron. When the orbitals are singly filled, all the electrons have same spin where as in the doubly filled orbitals, electrons have opposite spin.
Aufbau’s Principle:
Lowest energy level orbitals are filled first before occupying the higher energy level
The order in which the electrons should be filled is
1s,2s,3s,3p,4s,3d,4p,5s,4d,5p,6s,4f,5d,6p,7s,5f,6d….
Electronic configuration of Si can be represented as [Ar]
Hence the number of valence electrons is equal to the group number.
To write electronic configuration and find the group of selenium
(g)
Explanation of Solution
Se has 6 valence electrons and it belongs to group 6A
Hence the number of valence electron is equal to the group number is proved.
(h)
Interpretation: Valence electrons has to be defined and the electronic configuration for the given elements has to written to prove the number of valence electrons is equal to the group number
Concept Introduction: In the periodic table the elements are grouped based on their valence electrons. Valence electrons or outer shell electron of an atom is the total number of electrons that is present in the outer most shell of the orbital.
Electronic configuration is the distribution of electrons of atoms or molecule in the orbital. Pauli Exclusion Principle, Hund’s rule and Aufbau’s principle has to be followed to write the electronic configuration of an atom.
Pauli Exclusion Principle:
No two electrons having the same spin can occupy the same orbital. To occupy the same orbital, two electrons must have opposite spins.
Hund’s rule:
When electrons occupy orbital, one electron enters each orbital until all the orbitals contain one electron. When the orbitals are singly filled, all the electrons have same spin where as in the doubly filled orbitals, electrons have opposite spin.
Aufbau’s Principle:
Lowest energy level orbitals are filled first before occupying the higher energy level
The order in which the electrons should be filled is
1s,2s,3s,3p,4s,3d,4p,5s,4d,5p,6s,4f,5d,6p,7s,5f,6d….
Electronic configuration of Si can be represented as [Ar]
Hence the number of valence electrons is equal to the group number.
To write electronic configuration and find the group of Si
(h)
Explanation of Solution
Hence the number of valence electron is equal to the group number is proved.
Valence electrons have defined, electronic configuration of the given elements has been written and the number of valence electron is equal to the group number has been proved.
Pair 1: (a)
Pair 2: (b)
Pair 3: (c)
(a)
To Know the reactivity of an element (a) with ‘
(a)
Explanation of Solution
(b)
To Know the reactivity of an element (b) with ‘
(b)
Explanation of Solution
(c)
To Know the reactivity of an element (c) with ‘
(c)
Explanation of Solution
(d)
To Know the reactivity of an element (d) with ‘
(d)
Explanation of Solution
(e)
To Know the reactivity of an element (e) with ‘
(e)
Explanation of Solution
(f)
To Know the reactivity of an element (f) with ‘
(f)
Explanation of Solution
(g)
To group the properties of the elements with given electron configuration
(g)
Explanation of Solution
Pair 1: (a)
Pair 2: (b)
Pair 3: (c)
Want to see more full solutions like this?
Chapter 4 Solutions
Chemistry: Atoms First
- Please correct answer and don't used hand raitingarrow_forwardQ2. Consider the hydrogenation of ethylene C2H4 + H2 = C2H6 The heats of combustion and molar entropies for the three gases at 298 K are given by: C2H4 C2H6 H2 AH comb/kJ mol¹ -1395 -1550 -243 Sº / J K¹ mol-1 220.7 230.4 131.1 The average heat capacity change, ACP, for the reaction over the temperature range 298-1000 K is 10.9 J K¹ mol¹. Using these data, determine: (a) the standard enthalpy change at 800 K (b) the standard entropy change at 800 K (c) the equilibrium constant at 800 K.arrow_forward13. (11pts total) Consider the arrows pointing at three different carbon-carbon bonds in the molecule depicted below. Bond B Bond A Bond C a. (2pts) Which bond between A-C is weakest? Which is strongest? Place answers in appropriate boxes. Weakest Bond Strongest Bond b. (4pts) Consider the relative stability of all cleavage products that form when bonds A, B, AND C are homolytically cleaved/broken. Hint: cleavage products of bonds A, B, and C are all carbon radicals. i. Which ONE cleavage product is the most stable? A condensed or bond line representation is fine. ii. Which ONE cleavage product is the least stable? A condensed or bond line representation is fine. c. (5pts) Use principles discussed in lecture, supported by relevant structures, to succinctly explain the why your part b (i) radical is more stable than your part b(ii) radical. Written explanation can be no more than one-two succinct sentence(s)! Googlearrow_forward
- Print Last Name, First Name Initial Statifically more chances to abstract one of these 6H 11. (10pts total) Consider the radical chlorination of 1,3-diethylcyclohexane depicted below. 4 4th total • 6H total 래 • 4H total 21 total ZH 2H Statistical H < 3° C-H weakest - product abstraction here bund leads to thermo favored a) (6pts) How many unique mono-chlorinated products can be formed and what are the structures for the thermodynamically and statistically favored products? Product 6 Number of Unique Mono-Chlorinated Products Thermodynamically Favored Product Statistically Favored Product b) (4pts) Draw the arrow pushing mechanism for the FIRST propagation step (p-1) for the formation of the thermodynamically favored product. Only draw the p-1 step. You do not need to include lone pairs of electrons. No enthalpy calculation necessary H H-Cl Waterfoxarrow_forward10. (5pts) Provide the complete arrow pushing mechanism for the chemical transformation → depicted below Use proper curved arrow notation that explicitly illustrates all bonds being broken, and all bonds formed in the transformation. Also, be sure to include all lone pairs and formal charges on all atoms involved in the flow of electrons. CH3O II HA H CH3O-H H ①arrow_forwardDo the Lone Pairs get added bc its valence e's are a total of 6 for oxygen and that completes it or due to other reasons. How do we know the particular indication of such.arrow_forward
- NGLISH b) Identify the bonds present in the molecule drawn (s) above. (break) State the function of the following equipments found in laboratory. Omka) a) Gas mask b) Fire extinguisher c) Safety glasses 4. 60cm³ of oxygen gas diffused through a porous hole in 50 seconds. How long w 80cm³ of sulphur(IV) oxide to diffuse through the same hole under the same conditions (S-32.0.0-16.0) (3 m 5. In an experiment, a piece of magnesium ribbon was cleaned with steel w clean magnesium ribbon was placed in a crucible and completely burnt in oxy cooling the product weighed 4.0g a) Explain why it is necessary to clean magnesium ribbon. Masterclass Holiday assignmen PB 2arrow_forwardHi!! Please provide a solution that is handwritten. Ensure all figures, reaction mechanisms (with arrows and lone pairs please!!), and structures are clearly drawn to illustrate the synthesis of the product as per the standards of a third year organic chemistry course. ****the solution must include all steps, mechanisms, and intermediate structures as required. Please hand-draw the mechanisms and structures to support your explanation. Don’t give me AI-generated diagrams or text-based explanations, no wordy explanations on how to draw the structures I need help with the exact mechanism hand drawn by you!!! I am reposting this—ensure all parts of the question are straightforward and clear or please let another expert handle it thanks!!arrow_forwardIn three dimensions, explain the concept of the velocity distribution function of particles within the kinetic theory of gases.arrow_forward
- In the kinetic theory of gases, explain the concept of the velocity distribution function of particles in space.arrow_forwardIn the kinetic theory of gases, explain the concept of the velocity distribution function of particles.arrow_forwardHi!! Please provide a solution that is handwritten. this is an inorganic chemistry question please answer accordindly!! its just one question with parts JUST ONE QUESTION with its parts spread out till part (g), please answer EACH part till the end and dont just provide wordy explanations wherever asked for structures, please DRAW DRAW them on a paper and post clearly!! answer the full question with all calculations step by step EACH PART CLEARLY please thanks!! im reposting this please solve all parts and drawit not just word explanations!!arrow_forward
- Chemistry: The Molecular ScienceChemistryISBN:9781285199047Author:John W. Moore, Conrad L. StanitskiPublisher:Cengage LearningLiving By Chemistry: First Edition TextbookChemistryISBN:9781559539418Author:Angelica StacyPublisher:MAC HIGHERGeneral Chemistry - Standalone book (MindTap Cour...ChemistryISBN:9781305580343Author:Steven D. Gammon, Ebbing, Darrell Ebbing, Steven D., Darrell; Gammon, Darrell Ebbing; Steven D. Gammon, Darrell D.; Gammon, Ebbing; Steven D. Gammon; DarrellPublisher:Cengage Learning
- General, Organic, and Biological ChemistryChemistryISBN:9781285853918Author:H. Stephen StokerPublisher:Cengage LearningChemistry: Principles and PracticeChemistryISBN:9780534420123Author:Daniel L. Reger, Scott R. Goode, David W. Ball, Edward MercerPublisher:Cengage LearningChemistry & Chemical ReactivityChemistryISBN:9781133949640Author:John C. Kotz, Paul M. Treichel, John Townsend, David TreichelPublisher:Cengage Learning