What is Ground-state and Excited state of an atom?Thanks..
1 Answer
It is essentially the difference between an atom with extra energy (excited-state) and the same atom in its most stable state, with no extra energy (ground-state).
Let's say we looked at sodium (
#1s^2 2s^2 2p^6 3s^1#
If we shine a light source onto sodium that successfully excites the
The new configuration is:
#1s^2 2s^2 2p^6 3p^1#
Of course, we should recognize that the
HOW TO PREDICT EXCITED STATES?
By what's known as the "selection rules", we can predict possible excitation pathways.
- An electron can only jump up into an orbital that retains the total electron spin (
#DeltaS = 0# ) - We must make sure the total change in angular momentum
#l# is exactly#pm1# (#DeltaL = pm1# ).
Thus, for
For instance:
#3s -> 3p# is allowed.#l# changed by exactly#pm1# .#3s -> 5p# is allowed, if you have enough energy.#3s -> 4s# and#3s -> 5s# are forbidden, because you did not change#l# by#pm1# in one step.#3s -> 3d# is forbidden, because#l# changed by more than#pm1# at a time. However,#3s -> 3p -> 3d# is allowed.#3s -> 3p -> 5s# is allowed, because you changed#l# by#pm1# each time.
Let's put this into a picture.
SODIUM ENERGY LEVEL DIAGRAM
