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Questions tagged [electrons]

Electrons are subatomic particles with the symbol e−. They have a negative electric charge (-1 elementary charge. )

98 questions with no upvoted or accepted answers
14 votes
1 answer
4k views

Inter electronic repulsion in s and d orbitals

This was written in a lecture slide: Two electrons present in the same d-orbital repel each other more strongly than do two electrons in the same s-orbital. Why is there a difference in the amount ...
Aditya Dev's user avatar
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8 votes
0 answers
392 views

What exactly is an "electron-sponge"?

What exactly an "electron-sponge" [behavior/action/property/system] nickname is, and what makes a material an "electron-sponge" (preferably, quantitatively)? From what I found, it's typically a ...
andselisk's user avatar
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8 votes
1 answer
308 views

Are there bonds which share single electron?

Are there bonds which share single electron? During chemical bonding, I asked our teacher why there are only 2 electrons shared in a bond. He said that because it's that one orbital can accommodate ...
Iceberry's user avatar
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7 votes
0 answers
101 views

Why do nuclei move considerably slower than electrons

I've been trying to learn quantum chemistry at an introductionary level. While reading I've found out that the Born-Oppenheimer approximation seems to be the reason for the basic and crucial model of ...
Atsjo's user avatar
  • 79
7 votes
0 answers
349 views

Electron promotion in hybridisation: A misconception

Recently, I read through a short article on Nature Chemistry, written by Michelle Francl, titled "Talking to Pauling's ghost". The article talks about how electron promotion was never something that ...
Tan Yong Boon's user avatar
6 votes
0 answers
12k views

NO coordination linear vs bent - valence electron

I'd like to count the total valence electron of following neutral complex in the ionic counting (=donor-pair): Electron count: $$\begin{align} \ce{Cp-} : \ce{6e-} \\ \ce{CH3-}: \ce{2e-} \\ \ce{PPh3} :...
laminin's user avatar
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5 votes
0 answers
1k views

Why does diamagnetic current induce a downfield while the paramagnetic current induces an upfield shift?

I know that aromatic rings exhibit diamagnetic ring currents which causes the protons outside the ring to go downfield in H-NMR. Antiaromatic compounds exhibit paramagnetic ring currents which have ...
EJC's user avatar
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4 votes
0 answers
732 views

Did JJ Thomson know about Eugen Goldstein’s experiment discovering canal rays?

We learn that JJ Thomson discovered the electron in 1897. Several years EARLIER in 1886, Eugen Goldstein performs the same experiment but with the anode and cathode switched to produce positively ...
suse's user avatar
  • 803
4 votes
0 answers
176 views

Has a concept of temperature ever been defined in the context of a single atom?

I wonder if this answer to What would happen if we supercool and then superheat an atom very abruptly? goes far enough. I almost wrote the comment: I don't think we can even talk about the ...
uhoh's user avatar
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4 votes
0 answers
1k views

State symbol for electron

Is it correct to write a state symbol of "g" or "l" for an electron? In the textbook I am currently reading, the state symbol "g" was used for the electron when it described the electron gain by a ...
Tan Yong Boon's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
234 views

Difference between change in energy level and hyperfine energy level?

The second is the duration of 9 192 631 770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between the two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the cesium 133 atom. --> This ...
PandoraU.U.D's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
160 views

Is the surface electron affinity of (tribasic) sodium- or calcium phosphate higher?

Let's imagine we have two polycrystalline samples: $\ce{Ca3(PO4)2}$ and $\ce{Na3PO4}$. A free electron is added to both. Some heat is released. I wanted to check whether my reasoning about this ...
Paul Kolk's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
61 views

Is double excitation of nitrogen possible, and would it be able to use it as a central atom in a coordination complex?

I’m 17 and in my 2nd year of high-school (we have it a tad different here in the Czech Republic) and am interested in theoretical chemistry so that’s the explanation of the nature of my question. So, ...
Prokop Hoza's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
477 views

Shielding vs electron-electron repulsion

Example of shielding: (source) The last electron in the 6s subshell of $\ce {Cs}$ is shielded from the nucleus by the inner electrons. Example of electron-electron repulsion: The electron affinity of ...
user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
101 views

Why is the bond angle of sulphur difluoride greater than that of hydrogen sulphide?

Why is the bond angle of $\ce{SF_2 (98.05^\circ) > SH_2 (92.11^\circ)}$? Isn't this contradicting Bent's rule or otherwise electron repulsion rule ? Fluorine is more electronegative and hence it ...
Ashish's user avatar
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3 votes
0 answers
52 views

Do Hartree-Fock (or other model Hamiltonian) electron densities fullfill the Kato theorem?

I have done Hartree-Fock calculations on a single He atom and now I tried to check numerically if the electron density fulfills the Kato theorem. It apparently doesn't. Instead I obtain a cusp ...
Raphael J.F. Berger's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
2k views

Confused about identifying delocalized electron pairs in Isoniazid

I have to identify delocalized electron pairs in Isoniazid (pairs not shown in the image below): I know the nitrogen in the ring has a localized electron pair, since it already forms a pi bond. I'm ...
W. E. B. Du Bois's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
48 views

how can I tell compton versus coherent scatter apart?

I am trying to get a better understanding of compton and coherent scatting, along with all the other interactions. It has seemed like a lot to memorize and I am trying to find ways to more easily ...
Maddy's user avatar
  • 37
2 votes
0 answers
60 views

Question about reaction in battery

I made a battery like this. $\ce{(-)Al|HCl,CuSO4|Cu(+)}$ By piling up 6 battery of this(actually I made this using 10 yen and 1 yen coins:10yen coin is Cu and 1 yen coin is Al.) I could turn on an LED ...
satoru kurita's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
107 views

Magnetic moment of an electron not parallel to its angular momentum?

For the total angular momentum of an electron $\vec{J} = \vec{L} + \vec{S}$, we're often shown a picture like this where I assume that the $\vec{L}$ and $\vec{S}$ cones are centred on the $J$ axis ...
Furrier Transform's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
36 views

How do the spin-matrices change in systems without spherical symmetry?

The (non-relativistic) spin matrices of a free electron, with $z$ as the quantization axis, read: $$ \boldsymbol{S}_{x}=\frac{\hbar}{2}\left[\begin{array}{ll} 0 & 1 \\ 1 & 0 \end{array}\right],...
Logi's user avatar
  • 181
2 votes
0 answers
769 views

AlCl3 and water

While reading Clayden's (et al) Organic Chemistry I stumbled upon a reaction on page 120 that I just fail to wrap my brain around. It describes a reaction of AlCl3 with water and states that, quote, &...
NaughtyPeroxide's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
249 views

What will the correct value of spin quantum number for last electron of Na+ ion?

Electronic configuration of $Na^+$ ion is $1s^2,2s^2,2p^6,3s^0$. I have noticed usually , we take spin quantum number as +1/2 first & then -1/2. So , like for the above Q:It is for first 3e=+1/2 &...
Goku777's user avatar
  • 49
2 votes
0 answers
75 views

Number of π electrons in all trans-2,4,6-octatrienoic acid

Sketch the Lewis structure of all trans-2,4,6-octatrienoic acid. (a) Consider the delocalized π electrons. Employ the particle-in-a-box model. Drawing on your knowledge about the occupation of ...
user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
91 views

Excitation states of neon (or other gas) inside neon lights

I'm interested in the spectra of gas discharge tubes. Taking neon as an example, when I look up on NIST the spectra for neon, I find excitation states up to Ne IX. Where do I find/how do I work out ...
Beanman's user avatar
  • 21
2 votes
0 answers
70 views

Ionic radius for tetrahedral metal–ligand complexes

The ionic radii for metal–ligand complexes that are in an octahedral coordination are easy to find. I understand that when the $\mathrm{e_g}$ orbital is filled, the ionic radius increases because the ...
bobsburger's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
130 views

Direction of electron density in p orbitals

$\mathrm{s}$ orbitals are spherically symmetric while $\mathrm{p}$ orbitals are not. For Boron, the electronic configuration is $\mathrm{1s^2 2s^2 2p^1}$. In which p orbital does the most energetic ...
Apoorv Potnis's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
31 views

Free Electron-Bond Electron Interactions

I am reading an introductory textbook on electronics: Practical Electronics for Inventors by Paul Scherz and Simon Monk. In a section discussing the motion of electrons in circuits, the textbook ...
The Pointer's user avatar
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2 votes
0 answers
80 views

How are second and third electron affinities of atoms measured?

Wikipedia data page on electron affinities shows second and third electron affinities. Of course, they are negative, because one tries to attach electron to anion. But how are they measured or ...
Alexander Olikevich's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
97 views

As an atom get's bigger (on increasing atomic no.) , electrons have to move faster and faster around the nucleus, Why?

Does speed even make sense at such small scales ? Heisenbergs Uncertainty principle ?
theenigma017's user avatar

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