BIGpedia.com - Bohr model - Encyclopedia and Dictionary Online
encyclopedia search

Bohr model

(Redirected from Bohr atom)
The Bohr model of the atom
Enlarge
The Bohr model of the atom
The Bohr model is a physical model that depicts the atom as a small positively charged nucleus with electrons in orbit at different levels, similar in structure to the solar system. Because of its simplicity, the Bohr model is still commonly used and taught today.

In the early part of the 20th century, experiments by Ernest Rutherford and others had established that atoms consisted of a small dense positively charged nucleus surrounded by orbiting negatively charged electrons. However, physics at that time was unable to explain why the orbiting electrons did not spiral into the nucleus.

The simplest possible atom is hydrogen, which consists of a nucleus and one orbiting electron. Since the nucleus is positive and the electron are oppositely charged they will attract one another by coulomb force, in much the same way that the sun attracts the earth by gravitational force. However, if the electron orbits the nucleus in a classical orbit, it ought to emit electromagnetic radiation (light) according to well established theories of electromagnetism.

If the orbiting electron emits light, it must lose energy and spiral into the nucleus, so why do atoms even exist? What's more, the spectra of atoms show that the orbiting electrons can emit light but only at certain frequencies. This made no sense at all to the scientists of the time.

These difficulties were resolved in 1913 by Niels Bohr who proposed that:

  • (1) The orbiting electrons existed in orbits that had discrete quantized energies. That is, not every orbit is possible but only certain specific ones. The exact energies of the allowed orbits depends on the atom in question.
  • (2) The laws of classical mechanics do not apply when electrons make the jump from one allowed orbit to another
  • (3) When an electron makes a jump from one orbit to another the energy difference is carried off (or supplied) by a single quantum of light (called a photon) which has a frequency that directly depends on the energy difference between the two orbitals.
f = E / h
where f is the frequency of the photon, E the energy difference, and h is a constant of proportionality known as Planck's constant. Defining \hbar = h/(2 \pi) we can write
E = \hbar \omega
where ω is the angular frequency of the photon.
  • (4) The allowed orbits depend on quantized (discrete) values of orbital angular momentum, L according to the equation
\mathbf{L} = n \cdot \hbar = n \cdot {h \over 2\pi}
Where n = 1,2,3,… and is called the angular momentum quantum number.

These assumptions explained many of the observations seen at the time, such as why spectra consist of discrete lines. Assumption (4) states that the lowest value of n is 1. This corresponds to a smallest possible radius of 0.0529 nm (for the mathematics see Hans Ohanian, Principles of Physics or any large introductory college physics textbook). This is known as the Bohr radius, and explains why atoms are stable. Once an electron is in the lowest orbit, it can go no further. It cannot emit any more light because it would need to go into a lower orbit, but it can't do that if it is already in the lowest allowed orbit.

The Bohr model is sometimes known as the semiclassical model because although it does include some ideas of quantum mechanics it is not a full quantum mechanical description of the atom. Assumption (2) states that the laws of classical mechanics don't apply during a quantum jump but doesn't state what laws should replace classical mechanics. Assumption (4) states that angular momentum is quantised but does not explain why.

In order to fully describe an atom we need to use the full theory of quantum mechanics, which was worked out by a number of people in the years following the Bohr model. This theory treats the electrons as waves, which create 3D standing wave patterns in the atom. (This is why quantum mechanics is sometimes called wave mechanics.) This theory considers that idea of electrons as being little billiard ball like particles that travel round in orbits as absurdly wrong; instead electrons form probability clouds. You might find the electron here with a certain probability; you might find it over there with a different probability. However, it is interesting to note that if you work out the average radius of an electron in the lowest possible energy state it turns out to be exactly equal to the Bohr radius (although it takes many more pages of mathematics to work it out).

The full quantum mechanics theory is a beautiful theory that has been experimentally tested and found to be incredibly accurate, but it is mathematically much more advanced, and often using the much simpler Bohr model will get you the results with much less hassle. The thing to remember is that it is only a model, an aid to understanding. Atoms are not really little solar systems. Bohr's genius, though, was to begin a breakaway from this view that continues to this day.

See also

External resources



The contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License.
How to see transparent copy

01-04-2007 01:21:04