- Hydrogen-like atom
A hydrogen-like atom is an
atom with oneelectron and thus isisoelectronic withhydrogen . Except for thehydrogen atom itself (which is neutral) these atoms carry the positive charge "e(Z-1)", where "Z" is theatomic number of the atom. Examples of hydrogen-like ions are He+, Li2+, Be3+ and B4+. Because hydrogen-like atoms are two-particle systems with an interaction depending only on the distance between the two particles, their (non-relativistic) Schrödinger equation can be solved in analytic form. The solutions are one-electron functions and are referred to as "hydrogen-like atomic orbitals". [In quantum chemistry an orbital is synonymous with "a one-electron function", a square integrable function of "x", "y", and "z".]Hydrogen-like atomic orbitals are eigenfunctions of the one-electron angular momentum operator "l" and its "z" component "l"z. The energy eigenvalues do not depend on the corresponding quantum numbers, but solely on the principal quantum number "n". Hence, a hydrogen-like atomic orbital is uniquely identified by the values of:
principal quantum number "n", angular momentum quantum number "l", andmagnetic quantum number "m". To this must be added the two-valuedspin quantum number "ms" = ±½ in application of theAufbau principle . This principle restricts the allowed values of the four quantum numbers inelectron configuration s of more-electron atoms. In hydrogen-like atoms all degenerate orbitals of fixed "n" and "l", "l"z and "s" varying between certain values (see below) form an atomic shell.The Schrödinger equation of atoms or atomic ions with more than one electron has not been solved analytically, because of the computational difficulty imposed by the Coulomb interaction between the electrons. Numerical methods must be applied in order to obtain (approximate) wavefunctions or other properties from quantum mechanical calculations. Due to the spherical symmetry (of the
Hamiltonian ), the total angular momentum "L" of an atom is a conserved quantity. Many numerical procedures start from products of atomic orbitals that are eigenfunctions of the one-electron operators "l" and "l"z. The radial parts of these atomic orbitals are sometimes numerical tables or are sometimesSlater orbitals . Byangular momentum coupling many-electron eigenfunctions of "L"2 (and possibly "S"2) are constructed.In quantum chemical calculations hydrogen-like atomic orbitals cannot serve as an expansion basis, because they are not complete. The non-square-integrable continuum (E > 0) states must be included to obtain a complete set, i.e., to span all of one-electron Hilbert space. [This was observed as early as 1929 by E. A. Hylleraas, Z. f. Physik vol. 48, p. 469 (1929). English translation in H. Hettema, "Quantum Chemistry, Classic Scientific Papers", p. 81, World Scientific, Singapore (2000). Later it was pointed out again by H. Shull and P.-O. Löwdin, J. Chem. Phys. vol. 23, p. 1362 (1955).]
Mathematical characterization
The atomic orbitals of hydrogen-like atoms are solutions to the Schrödinger equation in a spherically symmetric potential. In this case, the
potential term is the potential given byCoulomb's law ::
where
* ε0 is the permittivity of the vacuum,
* "Z" is theatomic number (number of protons in the nucleus),
* "e" is theelementary charge (charge of an electron),
* "r" is the distance of the electron from the nucleus.After writing the wave function as a product of functions::(in
spherical coordinates ), where arespherical harmonics , we arrive at the following Schrödinger equation::where is, approximately, themass of theelectron . More accurately, it is thereduced mass of the system consisting of the electron and the nucleus.Different values of "l" give solutions with different
angular momentum , where "l" (a non-negative integer) is thequantum number of the orbitalangular momentum . Themagnetic quantum number "m" (satisfying ) is the (quantized) projection of the orbital angular momentum on the "z"-axis. See here for the steps leading to the solution of this equation.Non-relativistic Wave function and energy
In addition to "l" and "m", a third integer "n" > 0, emerges from the boundary conditions placed on "R". The functions "R" and "Y" that solve the equations above depend on the values of these integers, called "
quantum number s". It is customary to subscript the wave functions with the values of the quantum numbers they depend on. The final expression for the normalized wave function is::
:
where:
* are the generalized Laguerre polynomials in the definition given here.
* :Note that is approximately equal to (theBohr radius ). If the mass of the nucleus is infinite then and .
* .
* function is aspherical harmonic .Quantum numbers
The quantum numbers "n", "l" and "m" are integers and can have the following values::
:
:
See for a group theoretical interpretation of these quantum numbers this article. Among other things, this article gives group theoretical reasons why and .
Angular momentum
Each atomic orbital is associated with an
angular momentum l. It is a vector operator, and the eigenvalues of its square "l"2 ≡ l"x"2 + l"y"2 + l"z"2 are given by::
The projection of this vector onto an arbitrary direction is quantized. If the arbitrary direction is called "z", the quantization is given by:
:
where "m" is restricted as described above. Note that "l"2 and "l""z" commute and have a common eigenstate, which is in accordance with Heisenberg's
uncertainty principle . Since "l""x" and "l""y" do not commute with "l""z", it is not possible to find a state which is an eigenstate of all three components simultaneously. Hence the values of the "x" and "y" components are not sharp, but are given by a probability function of finite width. The fact that the "x" and "y" components are not well-determined, implies that the direction of the angular momentum vector is not well determined either, although its component along the "z"-axis is sharp.These relations do not give the total angular momentum of the electron. For that, electron spin must be included.
This quantization of angular momentum closely parallels that proposed by
Niels Bohr (seeBohr model ) in 1913, with no knowledge of wavefunctions.Including spin-orbit interaction
In a real atom the spin interacts with the
magnetic field created by the electron movement around the nucleus, a phenomenon known asspin-orbit interaction . When one takes this into account, the spin andangular momentum are no longer conserved, which can be pictured by theelectron precess ing. Therefore one has to replace the quantum numbers "l", "m" and the projection of the spin "ms" by quantum numbers which represent the total angular momentum (including spin), "j" and "mj", as well as thequantum number of parity.Notes
ee also
*
Rydberg atom
*Positronium
*Exotic atom References
* Tipler, Paul & Ralph Llewellyn (2003). "Modern Physics" (4th ed.). New York: W. H. Freeman and Company. ISBN 0-7167-4345-0
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