Chemistry > Structure of Atom > 14.0 Electronic Configuration of Elements
Structure of Atom
1.0 Introduction
2.0 Cathode Ray Discharge Tube
3.0 Thomson Model of Atom
4.0 Rutherford Model of Atom
5.0 Atomic Number and Mass Number and It's Relation
6.0 Planck's Quantum Theory
7.0 Bohr’s Atomic Model
8.0 Dual Behaviour of Matter
9.0 Heisenberg Uncertainity Principle
10.0 Photoelectric Effect
11.0 Atomic Spectra
12.0 Quantum Mechanical Model of Atom
13.0 Quantum Number
14.0 Electronic Configuration of Elements
14.1 Aufbau (or building up) Principle
14.2 Pauli’s Exclusion Principle
14.3 Hund’s Rule
14.4 Stability of Completely Filled and Half Filled Subshells
14.4 Stability of Completely Filled and Half Filled Subshells
14.2 Pauli’s Exclusion Principle
14.3 Hund’s Rule
14.4 Stability of Completely Filled and Half Filled Subshells
- The ground state electronic configuration of the atom of an element always corresponds to the state of the lowest total electronic energy.
- in certain elements such as Cu, or Cr, where the two subshells (4s and 3d) differ slightly in their energies, an electron shifts from a subshell of lower energy (4s) to a subshell of higher energy (3d), provided such a shift results in all orbitals of the subshell of higher energy getting either completely filled or half filled.
- It has been found that there is extra stability associated with these electronic configurations.